The issues surrounding Governors’ address
Governors' Address to State Legislatures — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The Governor's address to the State legislature is the annual constitutional obligation/option at the commencement of each budget session — it sets out the government's legislative agenda.
- Articles 175 and 176 of the Constitution govern this address; they are direct analogues of Articles 86 and 87 applicable to the President and Parliament.
- The issue has emerged as a flashpoint in Centre-State relations, particularly when Governors in Opposition-ruled States refuse to read the Cabinet-approved address or substitute their own content — a constitutional impasse with no explicit remedy in the text. [S1]
- Tested under GS-II (Polity — Functions and responsibilities of the Union and States; issues and challenges pertaining to Federal structure).
2. Why in the News
- A series of confrontations in Opposition-ruled States (Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Telangana, West Bengal, Punjab, Karnataka) between 2022–2026 over Governors deviating from, skipping, or modifying the Cabinet-approved address to the legislature. [S1]
- Karnataka Governor Thaawarchand Gehlot presided over a joint session of the State legislature at Vidhana Soudha, Bengaluru, on January 22, 2026, amid controversy over the address content. [S1]
- The episode reignited debate on the scope of gubernatorial discretion vs. aid and advice of the Council of Ministers. [S1][S2]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1935 | Section 63, Government of India Act (GOI Act) — Governor may in his discretion address the provincial legislature (discretionary, not mandatory). [S1] |
| April 1937 | Provincial autonomy under GOI Act commenced; Governor's speech began to be prepared in consultation with the Council of Ministers, establishing the convention. [S1] |
| 1946–49 | Constituent Assembly debate: it was expressly understood that the Governor's address would reflect the policy of the elected Council of Ministers, not the Governor's personal views. [S1] |
| 1950 | Constitution of India enacted; Articles 175–176 incorporated (analogous to Articles 86–87 for Parliament). |
| 1988 | Sarkaria Commission report on Centre-State relations recommended that Governors act as constitutional heads and not interfere in matters within the domain of the elected government. [S2] |
| 2010 | Punchhi Commission report further recommended security of tenure, transparent appointment process, and that Governors should not be removed at the will of the Central government alone. [S2] |
| 2023–26 | Repeated stand-offs in Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Telangana, Karnataka, West Bengal — bringing the issue to a constitutional and judicial flashpoint. [S1] |
4. Core Static Facts
Constitutional Provisions
- Article 175 — Governor may address either House or both Houses of the State legislature assembled together. This is discretionary/non-mandatory; may be rarely used mid-session. [S1]
- Article 176 — Governor shall address the State legislature at the commencement of the first session after each general election and at the commencement of the first session of each year. This is mandatory. [S1]
- Equivalent Parliament provisions: Article 86 (President may address) and Article 87 (President shall address at first session after election and first session each year).
Historical Precursor
- Section 63, GOI Act 1935 — discretionary address by Governor; convention of ministerial consultation evolved from April 1937 onwards. [S1]
Commissions
| Commission | Year | Key Recommendations on Governor |
|---|---|---|
| Sarkaria Commission | 1988 | Governor should be eminent person from outside state; not recently in active politics; CM to be consulted before appointment; Governor to act on aid and advice of CoM in all non-discretionary matters. [S2] |
| Punchhi Commission | 2010 | "Pleasure doctrine" (removal at Centre's will) to be diluted; security of tenure; Governor removable only via state legislature resolution in certain circumstances; discretionary powers to be narrowly defined. [S2] |
Key Implementing Framework
- No standalone Act governs the Governor's address — flows from Constitutional mandate (Article 176) and Rules of Procedure of State legislatures.
- Article 163 — Council of Ministers to aid and advise the Governor except in matters where the Governor exercises discretion under the Constitution.
- Article 164 — Council of Ministers collectively responsible to the Legislative Assembly.
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- The mandatory nature of Article 176 means the Governor cannot refuse to address the legislature at the first session of the year — but the Constitution is silent on what happens if the Governor modifies or reads only portions of the Cabinet-approved text. [S1]
- The Constituent Assembly intent is clear: the address must reflect Cabinet policy, not gubernatorial opinion — yet no penal or procedural remedy is available within constitutional text. [S1]
- Article 163(2) explicitly limits judicial review of any matter in which the Governor acts in his "discretion" — creating a zone of potential misuse.
- Supreme Court has held (various judgments) that the Governor is a constitutional head and cannot override the elected government, but enforcement mechanisms remain weak.
Ethical / Governance
- The Governor's address is the legislative programme of the elected government — deviation amounts to the unelected Governor substituting his political judgment for the people's mandate.
- Opposition-party Governors in states ruled by rival parties creates a structural conflict of interest that both Sarkaria and Punchhi Commissions flagged. [S2]
- Refusal or modification of the address effectively paralises the legislature's first session and delays budget and legislative business.
Administrative
- The Rules of Procedure of each State legislature typically require the address before the House can transact business — if the Governor deviates, it generates a procedural vacuum.
- There is no time-limit prescribed in the Constitution for the Governor to summon the session or deliver the address, enabling delays as a political tool.
- Several states (Tamil Nadu, Kerala) have moved to pass resolutions condemning the Governor — a political but not legally enforceable remedy. [S2]
Historical
- The convention of a Governor reading the Cabinet's address predates the Constitution — rooted in Westminster parliamentary practice and the 1937 provincial experience. [S1]
- Post-1967 (emergence of coalition politics and regional parties), tensions between Governors and State governments became recurrent — making this a structural, not episodic problem.
- The Bommai case (1994) (S.R. Bommai v. Union of India) curtailed arbitrary use of Article 356 but did not directly address the address issue; it reinforced floor-test supremacy of the Assembly.
Political / Federal
- The Governor is appointed by the President of India (i.e., Central Cabinet) under Article 155 — creating a perception of the Governor as a Centre's agent in states ruled by opposition parties.
- Both Sarkaria and Punchhi Commissions recommended consultation with the Chief Minister and appointment of persons not recently in active politics — recommendations largely unimplemented. [S2]
- The address controversy is a proxy battleground for Centre-State power tussles, especially since 2014 with the rise of non-Congress state governments facing Congress-appointed (or BJP-appointed) Governors.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- January 22, 2026 — Karnataka Governor Thaawarchand Gehlot addressed a joint session at Vidhana Soudha, Bengaluru, amid reported controversy over whether the address reflected the Congress-led Cabinet's agenda. [S1]
- 2025 — Multiple states (Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal) continued reporting friction with Governors over the annual address; some Governors reportedly skipped portions or added personal remarks.
- 2024 — Supreme Court took up petitions from Tamil Nadu and Kerala Governments challenging Governors' inaction/refusal on Bills and addresses; SC bench signalled that Governors cannot indefinitely sit on Bills (connected issue).
- Punchhi Commission recommendations remained unimplemented as of 2026, despite repeated parliamentary committee references. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Article 175 — Governor may (discretionary) address the State legislature; Article 176 — Governor shall (mandatory) address at commencement of first session of each year and post-election first session. [S1]
- The presidential equivalents of Articles 175 and 176 are Articles 86 and 87 respectively.
- Section 63, Government of India Act, 1935 first provided for Governor's address to provincial legislature — it was discretionary. [S1]
- Convention of preparing Governor's address in consultation with Council of Ministers dates to April 1937 when provincial autonomy commenced under GOI Act. [S1]
- Constituent Assembly intended the Governor's address to reflect the policy of the elected Council of Ministers, not the Governor's personal views. [S1]
- Sarkaria Commission (1988) and Punchhi Commission (2010) both examined Centre-State relations including the Governor's role and powers. [S2]
- Punchhi Commission recommended removal of the "pleasure doctrine" (removal of Governor at Centre's will) — replace with legislative resolution. [S2]
- Under Article 163, the Governor acts on aid and advice of the Council of Ministers except in matters where the Constitution explicitly grants discretion.
- The Governor is appointed by the President of India under Article 155 and holds office during the pleasure of the President (Article 156).
- Article 163(2) bars courts from inquiring into whether a matter falls within the Governor's discretion — limiting judicial remedy in address disputes.
- Karnataka Governor at the centre of the January 2026 controversy: Thaawarchand Gehlot (venue: Vidhana Soudha, Bengaluru). [S1]
- The Governor's address is functionally the State equivalent of the President's address to the joint sitting of Parliament — it outlines the government's legislative agenda for the year.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II
Syllabus Headings: - Functions and responsibilities of the Union and the States; issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure - Separation of powers between various organs — dispute redressal mechanisms and institutions - Appointment to various constitutional posts, powers, functions and responsibilities of various constitutional bodies
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
-
"The Governor's address to the State legislature, though constitutionally mandated under Article 176, has become a site of Centre-State friction in recent years. Examine the constitutional provisions, established conventions, and the recommendations of the Sarkaria and Punchhi Commissions to suggest a way forward." (GS-II, 15 marks)
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"Critically examine the extent to which a Governor can deviate from a Cabinet-approved address. Does the absence of an explicit constitutional remedy create a democratic deficit?" (GS-II, 10 marks)
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"The Governor's role in the Indian federal system has been described as both a 'constitutional head' and a 'Centre's agent.' Analyse with reference to recent controversies over addresses and Bills." (GS-II, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Article 163 & 164 — Aid and Advice of Council of Ministers | Direct constitutional framework within which the address controversy arises. |
| Article 355, 356 (President's Rule) | Governor's report to the Centre is the trigger for President's Rule — same structural conflict of interest. |
| Sarkaria Commission Report (1988) | Comprehensive review of Centre-State relations; foundational for all Governor-related questions. |
| Punchhi Commission Report (2010) | Updated recommendations; frequently cited in recent controversies. |
| S.R. Bommai v. Union of India (1994) | Landmark SC ruling on Article 356; limits arbitrary dismissal of state governments; related governance principle. |
| Appointment and removal of Governor (Articles 155, 156) | Structural reason why Governors are seen as partisan; Punchhi Commission recommendations on reform. |
| Speaker's Role and Anti-Defection Law | Another constitutional post whose partisan functioning attracts similar federal-structure critique. |
| State Legislature Procedures & Rules | Procedural context within which the address is delivered and can be disrupted. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing Articles 175 and 176: Article 175 is discretionary (Governor may address); Article 176 is mandatory (Governor shall address at first session of year). Candidates flip these. [S1]
- Conflating Presidential and Gubernatorial provisions: Articles 86–87 apply to the President + Parliament; Articles 175–176 apply to Governor + State legislature. Not interchangeable in MCQs.
- Attributing Punchhi Commission to 1988: Sarkaria = 1983 (constituted)/1988 (report); Punchhi = 2007 (constituted)/2010 (report). Common year-mix in MCQs. [S2]
- Assuming the Governor has absolute discretion in the address: Constituent Assembly debates and established convention firmly vest content-control with the Cabinet, not the Governor — though no hard penalty exists in the text. [S1]
- Treating the address as equivalent to a Money Bill or ordinary Bill: The address itself is not a legislative instrument and cannot be voted down — it is a statement of intent; only the motion of thanks on the address is votable and can be turned into a confidence vote.
11. Sources
- [S1] "The issues surrounding Governors' address" — The Hindu, January 26, 2026, Page 10, International Print Edition (Article content provided as primary source) — (Tier 4)
- [S2] Governor versus state: Why tensions are rising again — PRS India — (Tier 1)
- [S3] Removal of Governors: What does the law say? — PRS India — (Tier 1)
- [S4] Explained: Role of Governor in Public Universities — PRS India — (Tier 1)