Abrogation of Article 370 was Centre’s biggest policy mistake: Omar Abdullah


UPSC Study Note: Abrogation of Article 370 — Omar Abdullah's Critique & Constitutional Dimensions


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1949 Article 370 inserted into Part XXI of the Constitution as a "temporary provision"; negotiated by Sheikh Abdullah and Sardar Patel/Nehru.
1954 Constitution (Application to J&K) Order, 1954 — extended many constitutional provisions to J&K with modifications via Presidential Order.
1956 J&K Constituent Assembly dissolved after adopting J&K's own Constitution; Article 370 was meant to be transitional until then, but persisted.
2019 (Aug 5) Constitution (Application to J&K) Amendment Order, 2019 issued by President under Art. 370(1); superseded 1954 Order and applied all Constitutional provisions to J&K. [S7]
2019 (Aug 5–6) Parliament passes J&K Reorganisation Bill, 2019 — bifurcating J&K into two UTs. [S3]
2019 (Oct 31) J&K Reorganisation Act, 2019 comes into force; two new UTs formally created. [S3]
2023 (Dec 11) Supreme Court upholds abrogation in Dr. Shah Faesal & Ors. v. Union of India; directs elections in J&K by September 30, 2024. [S4]
2024 (Sep–Oct) J&K Assembly elections held; National Conference wins; Omar Abdullah sworn in as CM.
2026 (Jun 6) Omar Abdullah's public statement calling abrogation the "biggest policy mistake." [S5]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Political / Geopolitical

Social / Ethnic

Economic / Development

Administrative / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. Article 370 was in Part XXI of the Constitution — "Temporary, Transitional and Special Provisions." [S1]
  2. The J&K Reorganisation Act, 2019 came into force on October 31, 2019, creating two UTs. [S3]
  3. J&K was bifurcated into: (i) UT of J&K (with Legislature) and (ii) UT of Ladakh (without Legislature). [S3]
  4. The abrogation was effected via Presidential Order under Art. 370(1), not a constitutional amendment under Art. 368. [S7]
  5. Article 35A (defining permanent residents of J&K) was also simultaneously removed in August 2019.
  6. The Supreme Court upheld the abrogation in December 2023 (5-judge Constitution Bench). [S4]
  7. SC directed J&K elections to be held by September 30, 2024. [S4]
  8. Implementing ministry for J&K affairs: Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA). [S6]
  9. The Constitution (Application to J&K) Amendment Order, 2019 superseded the 1954 Presidential Order. [S7]
  10. J&K's Instrument of Accession was signed on October 26, 1947 by Maharaja Hari Singh.
  11. Post-abrogation, J&K's Legislative Assembly has 90 seats (increased from 83 via 2022 delimitation), with 6 ST-reserved seats.
  12. Omar Abdullah (National Conference) is the Chief Minister of UT of J&K as of 2024 — the youngest-ever J&K CM when first elected in 2009. [S5]
  13. Article 370 negotiations were primarily between Sheikh Abdullah on one side and Gopalaswami Ayyangar/Nehru on the other in the Constituent Assembly.
  14. The J&K Constitution (1956) was automatically abrogated upon implementation of the J&K Reorganisation Act, 2019.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Indian Constitution — Features, Amendments, Significant Provisions; Centre-State relations; Federalism; Special provisions for certain states
GS-I Post-independence consolidation and reorganization within the country
GS-IV Ethical concerns in governance — political ethics, democratic accountability

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The abrogation of Article 370 was constitutionally valid but politically contentious." Critically examine the constitutional mechanism used and its implications for federalism in India. (GS-II, 15M)

  2. "Downgrading a state to a Union Territory raises serious questions about the nature of Indian federalism." Analyse with reference to Jammu & Kashmir. (GS-II, 15M)

  3. "Development and special constitutional provisions need not be in conflict." Examine in the context of the debate around Article 370 and J&K's development trajectory. (GS-III/GS-II, 10M)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Article 371 and related special provisions Counterpart "special provisions" for NE states and others — helps understand the architecture of asymmetric federalism in India
Federalism in India — Centre-State relations Art. 370 abrogation is the sharpest test-case of Union power over states/UTs
Reorganisation of States (States Reorganisation Act, 1956 and beyond) Precedents for bifurcation; J&K reorganisation is legally distinct but politically comparable
Delimitation Commission and its role in J&K Post-abrogation delimitation is directly linked; 6 ST-reserved seats is examinable
Supreme Court on federalism — key judgments S.R. Bommai (1994), Shah Faesal (2023), NCT of Delhi v. Union (2018) — constitutional limits of Centre's power
Instrument of Accession and J&K's history Historical context essential for understanding why Art. 370 existed
One Nation, One Election Omar Abdullah's remarks at same event; GS-II topic on electoral reforms
National Conference / J&K political history Sheikh Abdullah, Farooq Abdullah, Omar Abdullah — context for Mains political questions

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. "Article 370 was permanent" — WRONG. It was in Part XXI as a temporary provision; SC (2023) confirmed this. Do not confuse with permanent provisions like Art. 371.

  2. "Art. 368 amendment was used to abrogate Art. 370" — WRONG. The mechanism was a Presidential Order under Art. 370(1), with Parliament's concurrence acting as the J&K Constituent Assembly. No Art. 368 amendment was needed.

  3. "Ladakh got a Legislative Assembly" — WRONG. UT of Ladakh has no Legislature; only UT of J&K has one. Ladakh is governed directly by Centre via LG.

  4. "Art. 370 abrogation was declared unconstitutional by SC" — WRONG. The SC upheld the abrogation in December 2023 (5-judge bench).

  5. "Art. 35A was a part of the original Constitution" — WRONG. Art. 35A was inserted via Presidential Order in 1954 (not through Parliament), under Art. 370(1); it never appeared in the main body of the Constitution — hence listed in the Appendix.

  6. Conflating statehood demand with anti-accession demand — Omar Abdullah's demand is for restoration of statehood (reverting from UT to state), not a challenge to J&K's accession to India. UPSC may test this nuance.


11. Sources