Governor altered policy speech in Assembly, says Kerala CM
Governor Altered Policy Speech in Kerala Assembly — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Governor Rajendra Vishwanath Arlekar of Kerala deviated from the Cabinet-approved policy address (customary opening speech) in the Kerala Legislative Assembly on 20 January 2026, triggering a constitutional confrontation. [S2]
- The episode is a live illustration of Governor–State Government tensions, a recurring theme tested in GS-II (Polity) under federalism, role of Governor, and constitutional conventions. [S1]
- The dispute hinges on Article 176 of the Constitution: the Governor's address at the first session of each year is the government's speech, not the Governor's personal statement. [S1]
- This is part of a broader pattern of Governor–State standoffs seen across Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, and other Opposition-ruled states (2021–2026). [S2]
2. Why in the News
- On Tuesday, 20 January 2026, Governor Arlekar delivered the customary policy address at the start of the first session of the Kerala Legislative Assembly for the New Year. [S3]
- CM Pinarayi Vijayan, returning to the House after seeing off the Governor, stated that paragraphs 12, 15, and 16 of the Cabinet-approved text had been altered — certain sections omitted, others added. [S3]
- Paragraph 12 originally criticised "adverse Union Government actions that undermine constitutional principles of fiscal federalism"; the Governor replaced this with the phrase "curtailment of advances." [S2]
- Omitted portions included references to Bills passed by the state legislature remaining pending with the Governor/President for prolonged periods, and the state's approach to the Supreme Court on such constitutional issues. [S2]
- CM Vijayan urged Speaker A.N. Shamseer to recognise the Cabinet-approved version as the sole official text. [S3]
- The State sent a detailed reply to the Governor on 9 February 2026, citing constitutional provisions, Assembly rules, precedents, and Supreme Court judgments. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
- Constitutional origin: Articles 175 and 176 of the Constitution of India govern the Governor's power/duty to address the state legislature. [S1]
- Article 175(1): Governor may address either House or both Houses — discretionary right.
- Article 176(1): Governor shall address the assembled legislature at the commencement of the first session after each general election and at the commencement of the first session of each year — a constitutional duty, not discretion. [S1]
- The address under Article 176 is the government's policy statement, prepared by the Cabinet and merely delivered by the Governor — analogous to the President's address to Parliament under Article 87. [S1]
- Precedent in Kerala: Legislative and parliamentary convention firmly holds that the Cabinet-approved version alone carries constitutional validity; the Chair (Speaker) may accept this version on the floor of the House. [S3]
- Comparable earlier episodes:
- Tamil Nadu (2023–24): Governor R.N. Ravi skipped portions of the policy address, triggering Assembly resolutions and legal debates.
- Kerala (Republic Day speech): Governor Arlekar deviated from the prepared Republic Day speech earlier, deepening friction. [S2]
- West Bengal, Telangana, Punjab (2022–25): Multiple Governors faced allegations of deviating from Cabinet-approved speeches or withholding assent to Bills. [S2]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Relevant Articles | Art. 175 (address — discretionary), Art. 176 (address — mandatory, first session each year) |
| Analogous Central provision | Art. 87 (President's address to Parliament) |
| Nature of speech | Government's statement; prepared by Cabinet; Governor acts as a constitutional figurehead |
| Who approves the text | State Cabinet |
| Authority to settle dispute | Speaker (Presiding Officer of Assembly); floor of the House |
| Kerala Governor (2026) | Rajendra Vishwanath Arlekar |
| Kerala CM (2026) | Pinarayi Vijayan (CPI-M) |
| Kerala Speaker (2026) | A.N. Shamseer |
| Paragraphs altered | 12, 15, 16 (of Cabinet-approved text) |
| Key omission (Para 12) | Criticism of Centre's "adverse actions undermining fiscal federalism"; replaced with "curtailment of advances" |
| Other omissions | Reference to Bills pending with Governor/President; State's approach to Supreme Court |
| State reply to Governor | 9 February 2026 — citing Constitution, Assembly rules, precedents, SC judgments |
| Key SC context | Supreme Court has ruled on Governors' obligation to act on Cabinet advice (e.g., Nabam Rebia 2016, Punjab Governor 2023) |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 176 imposes a duty, not a right, on the Governor — the text is the government's, not the Governor's personal document. Deviation is constitutionally untenable. [S1]
- The Speaker's acceptance of the Cabinet version on the floor establishes it as the official record of the House — a well-settled parliamentary convention. [S3]
- Supreme Court in Nabam Rebia v. Deputy Speaker (2016) clarified limits of gubernatorial discretion; more recent rulings (Punjab Governor case, 2023) reinforced that Governors cannot sit on Bills or subvert legislative proceedings indefinitely. [S2]
- Altering a policy speech may amount to acting contrary to Cabinet advice, violating the constitutional scheme under Article 163 (Council of Ministers to aid and advise Governor). [S1]
Political / Governance (Ethical)
- Episode reflects the Centre–State fault line: Governors appointed by the Union government acting in ways perceived as aligned with central interests in Opposition-ruled states. [S2]
- Omission of fiscal federalism criticism signals a political dimension — the Governor, as Centre's representative, redacting criticism of the Centre. [S2]
- Raises questions of gubernatorial accountability: unlike Ministers, Governors have no direct democratic accountability. [S1]
- Tests the Sarkaria Commission (1983) and Punchhi Commission (2010) recommendations on limiting Governor's discretionary powers and ensuring that the appointment process is reformed. [S1]
Administrative / Federal
- Fiscal federalism grievance (para 12): Kerala has consistently flagged reduction in its borrowing limits, reduced devolution, and GST compensation issues — the omitted paragraph was a formal legislative record of these grievances. [S2]
- Bills pending (omitted): Several Kerala Bills — including university amendment Bills — had remained pending with the Governor/President, a separate constitutional flashpoint. [S2]
- The Speaker's role as custodian of the House record is critical — the Cabinet version, once accepted by the Speaker, becomes the official text for all purposes including Hansard. [S3]
Historical
- Constituent Assembly debates envisioned the Governor as a constitutional head acting on ministerial advice — not an independent policy actor. [S1]
- Similar tensions existed during Emergency (1975–77) and during Congress–state confrontations of the 1980s (use of Art. 356 threat), now recurring in a different form. [S2]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- January 2026: Governor Arlekar alters paragraphs 12, 15, 16 of Kerala policy speech; CM Vijayan challenges it on the floor; Speaker asked to recognise Cabinet version. [S3]
- February 9, 2026: Kerala government sends formal constitutional reply to Governor citing Assembly rules, precedents, and SC judgments. [S2]
- 2025 (Tamil Nadu): Continuing standoff over Governor's role in university appointments; SC intervenes. [S2]
- 2024 (Punjab Governor case): Supreme Court rules Governor cannot indefinitely withhold consent to Bills — strengthened constitutional position of elected governments. [S2]
- 2024–25 (Kerala): Governor Arlekar deviates from Republic Day prepared speech — earlier instance of the same friction. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Article 176 mandates the Governor to address the state legislature at the commencement of the first session each year — this is a duty, not a discretion.
- Article 175 gives the Governor the power to address the legislature at any time — this is a right (discretionary).
- The President's analogous provision is Article 87 (address to both Houses at commencement of first session after each general election and first session each year).
- The policy address is prepared by the Cabinet — the Governor is merely the constitutional deliverer, not the author.
- The Speaker of the Legislative Assembly is the authority who can accept the Cabinet-approved text as the official version when a dispute arises.
- Article 163: Council of Ministers headed by the Chief Minister shall aid and advise the Governor; Governor acts on advice except in matters where the Constitution requires him to act in his discretion.
- Nabam Rebia v. Deputy Speaker (2016): Landmark SC judgment limiting discretionary powers of the Governor, particularly regarding summoning/proroguing of Assembly.
- Paragraphs altered by Kerala Governor in January 2026: 12, 15, and 16 of the Cabinet-approved policy address.
- The omitted paragraph 12 originally criticised the Centre's adverse actions undermining fiscal federalism — replaced with the neutral phrase "curtailment of advances."
- Sarkaria Commission (1983) and Punchhi Commission (2010) both recommended limiting gubernatorial discretion and reforming the appointment process for Governors.
- A Governor deviating from Cabinet-approved address effectively acts against Article 163 — the constitutional obligation to act on Cabinet advice.
- The Speaker's acceptance of the Cabinet version on the floor makes it the official Hansard record.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II (Governance, Constitution, Polity, Social Justice, International Relations)
Syllabus headings: - Structure, organisation and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary — Ministries and Departments of the Government. - Appointment to various Constitutional posts, powers, functions and responsibilities of various Constitutional Bodies. - Issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure, devolution of powers and finances up to local levels and challenges therein.
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The Governor's policy address is constitutionally the government's speech, not the Governor's. Critically examine this principle in light of recent Governor–State standoffs in India." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "Examine the constitutional provisions governing the Governor's address to the State Legislature. What remedies are available when a Governor deviates from the Cabinet-approved text?" (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. "Recent conflicts between Governors and elected state governments raise fundamental questions about federalism and constitutional propriety. Discuss with reference to Article 163 and Article 176." (GS-II, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Role of Governor (Arts. 153–167) | Core constitutional framework — powers, duties, discretion of Governor |
| Article 356 (President's Rule) | Governor's role in recommending President's Rule — most controversial discretionary power |
| Sarkaria & Punchhi Commission Recommendations | Both address Governor–State relations; frequently tested in Mains |
| Fiscal Federalism in India | The omitted paragraph 12 was about fiscal federalism — GST, borrowing limits, devolution |
| Speaker's Powers and Privileges | Speaker's role in accepting official text, Anti-Defection Law, Speaker vs. Governor jurisdiction |
| President's Address (Art. 87) | Direct constitutional parallel at the central level; tested as MCQ trap (Art. 86 vs. 87) |
| Pending Bills — Governor's Withholding Assent | Linked controversy; SC rulings on Governors' obligation regarding Bills sent for assent |
| Nabam Rebia Case (2016) & Punjab Governor Case (2023) | Key SC judgments limiting gubernatorial overreach |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing Art. 175 and Art. 176: Art. 175 is the Governor's right to address (discretionary); Art. 176 is the Governor's duty to address the first session each year — mandatory. Aspirants routinely conflate these.
- Confusing Art. 86 and Art. 87 (Centre-level): Art. 86 = President's right to address/send messages; Art. 87 = President's special address (first session after election + first session each year). Pair these carefully with Art. 175/176.
- Assuming the Governor writes the policy speech: The speech is entirely the Cabinet's text. The Governor has no constitutional authority to alter, add to, or omit from it.
- Overlooking the Speaker's authority: Many aspirants focus on the CM–Governor confrontation but miss that the Speaker's acceptance of the Cabinet version on the floor is the legally operative resolution mechanism.
- Treating this as solely a Kerala issue: Governor–State speech disputes have occurred in Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Punjab, Telangana — the constitutional principle is universal. Do not confine answers to one state in Mains.
11. Sources
- [S1] Explained: Why the President's Address Matters — PRS India — https://prsindia.org/articles-by-prs-team/explained-why-the-president%E2%80%99s-address-matters — (Tier 1)
- [S2] Kerala CM Accuses Governor of Omitting Criticism of the Union Govt From His Opening Address — The Wire / multiple corroborating results from search — https://m.thewire.in/article/politics/kerala-cm-accuses-governor-of-omitting-criticism-of-the-union-govt-from-his-opening-address — (Tier 4)
- [S3] Governor altered policy speech in Assembly, says Kerala CM — The Hindu (article content provided as primary source, dated 21 January 2026) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-01-21/ — (Tier 4)