A State without an Opposition
A State Without an Opposition — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Core issue: After June 21, 2026, Gujarat will have zero Opposition representation in the Rajya Sabha for the first time since its formation in 1960 — a direct consequence of the BJP's electoral dominance in the State Assembly. [S1]
- Constitutional linkage: Rajya Sabha members from states are elected by the elected members of the State Legislative Assembly by proportional representation via single transferable vote (Article 80 of the Constitution). [S3]
- Relevance: Tests UPSC themes of federalism, functioning of Parliament, role of Opposition, and health of Indian democracy.
- Exam angle: Sits at the intersection of GS-II (polity, Parliament, federalism) and broader questions about democratic competition and accountability.
2. Why in the News
- June 21, 2026: Congress leader Shaktisinh Gohil's Rajya Sabha term expires, leaving Gujarat with no Opposition member in the Upper House — unprecedented since State formation. [S1]
- Trigger: BJP's historic 156/182 seat victory in the 2022 Gujarat Assembly elections — its strongest-ever performance — meant no opposition party could cross the threshold required for official Opposition status. [S1][S2]
- BJP's three Rajya Sabha candidates from Gujarat (including External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar) were elected unopposed, as opposition parties lacked the numbers to field competitive candidates. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1960 | Gujarat formed (bifurcated from Bombay State); multiparty competition initially present |
| 1995 | BJP comes to power in Gujarat; continuous rule begins |
| 2002 | BJP returns with large majority after post-Godhra elections |
| 2012 | BJP wins 115/182 seats; Congress remains principal opposition with ~61 seats |
| 2017 | BJP wins 99/182 seats — reduced majority; Congress rises to 77 seats, raises expectations |
| 2017–2021 | Patidar agitation, OBC mobilisation, Hardik Patel/Alpesh Thakor/Jignesh Mevani factor create anti-incumbency expectations |
| 2022 | BJP wins 156/182 — its highest ever tally; Congress falls to 17 seats, AAP to 5 seats [S1] |
| 2026 | Last Congress Rajya Sabha member's term ends; Gujarat achieves "zero Opposition" in Upper House [S1] |
4. Core Static Facts
Constitutional/Procedural Framework - Article 80: Rajya Sabha comprises representatives of States elected by elected MLAs of the State Legislative Assembly via Single Transferable Vote (proportional representation). - Rajya Sabha total strength: 245 (233 elected + 12 President-nominated). [S3] - Gujarat's Rajya Sabha seat allocation: 11 seats (based on population of the State). - Leader of the Opposition (Rajya Sabha): Recognised by the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha; must be leader of the party with greatest numerical strength among opposition parties. [S4] - No constitutionally mandated minimum for LoP recognition in Rajya Sabha — it is a conventional/procedural recognition; the Salary and Allowances of Leaders of Opposition in Parliament Act, 1977 governs emoluments.
Gujarat Assembly Facts - Total seats: 182 - Official Opposition recognition threshold in State Assembly: 1/10th of total seats = ~18 seats (Rules of Procedure, Gujarat Legislative Assembly). - 2022 result: BJP — 156; INC — 17 (below 18-seat threshold); AAP — 5. [S1] - BJP in power in Gujarat since: 1995 (31+ years continuously). [S1]
Key Persons - Shaktisinh Gohil — Congress, last Opposition Rajya Sabha member from Gujarat; term ended June 21, 2026. [S1] - S. Jaishankar — External Affairs Minister, elected unopposed to Rajya Sabha from Gujarat (second term). [S2]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 80 ties Rajya Sabha composition directly to State Assembly outcomes; dominance at state level cascades into erasure of federal-level opposition voice.
- The Salary and Allowances of Leaders of Opposition in Parliament Act, 1977 requires a recognised LoP — with no Gujarat Opposition MP in Rajya Sabha, no such position is possible from this state's contingent.
- No constitutional bar prevents a state from sending exclusively single-party representatives; the design assumes competitive elections as a self-correcting mechanism.
Ethical / Governance
- Rajya Sabha's constitutional role as a deliberative Upper House and a check on the Lok Sabha is weakened when entire states send only government-aligned voices.
- Accountability deficit: Committee representation, question sessions, and debate quality are diminished when opposition voices are absent.
- Risk of majoritarian entrenchment — sustained single-party dominance can crowd out institutional checks even within a formally democratic framework.
Political / Historical
- Gujarat's trajectory contrasts with earlier diversity: the state produced Morarji Desai (Prime Minister, Janata Dal) and was a Congress bastion pre-1990s.
- The Patidar agitation (2015–17) demonstrated that social mobilisation does not automatically translate into electoral opposition gains — a key lesson in the limits of protest politics. [S1]
- Comparable phenomenon visible in other states: West Bengal (TMC dominance), Odisha (BJD era) — but Gujarat's duration (31+ years) is exceptional.
Administrative / Federal
- Rajya Sabha = "Council of States": designed to represent states' interests and provide a deliberative check. A state sending zero opposition voices tilts this balance.
- State-level delimitation and first-past-the-post effects amplify seat-share disparities (156/182 seats on ~52% vote share in 2022).
- Whip system: Even if a dissenting MP exists, party whip limits independent voting; total single-party delegation eliminates even informal dissent.
Social
- Gujarat's Patidar, OBC, Dalit communities' political mobilisation in 2015–17 was eventually absorbed by the BJP through reservation negotiations and candidate co-option.
- The 2022 result suggests that caste arithmetic alone cannot sustain Opposition without organisational infrastructure.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- 2025–26 Rajya Sabha elections (Gujarat): All three BJP candidates elected unopposed; Opposition unable to field candidates. [S2]
- S. Jaishankar re-elected to Rajya Sabha from Gujarat for a second term as EAM. [S2]
- June 21, 2026: Shaktisinh Gohil's tenure expires — the formal inflection point marking Gujarat's "zero Opposition" status in Rajya Sabha. [S1]
- Congress's national trajectory: Party's decline in Gujarat mirrors its broader state-level erosion, though it has returned as LoP at the national Lok Sabha level (post-2024 general elections).
- AAP in Gujarat: Won 5 seats in 2022 Assembly but holds insufficient numbers to cross opposition threshold or earn Rajya Sabha representation.
7. Prelims Hooks
- Gujarat was formed in 1960 by bifurcation from Bombay State. [S1]
- BJP has been continuously in power in Gujarat since 1995 — over three decades. [S1]
- In the 2022 Gujarat Assembly elections, BJP won 156 out of 182 seats — its highest-ever tally in the state. [S1][S2]
- The Congress won only 17 seats in 2022, below the 18-seat threshold (~1/10th of 182) required for official Opposition recognition in the Gujarat Assembly. [S1]
- AAP won 5 seats in the 2022 Gujarat Assembly elections. [S1]
- Rajya Sabha members from states are elected by elected members of the State Legislative Assembly — under Article 80 of the Constitution, via Single Transferable Vote. [S3]
- Gujarat has 11 Rajya Sabha seats (allocation based on state population).
- The Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha is recognised by the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha — governed by the Salary and Allowances of Leaders of Opposition in Parliament Act, 1977.
- All three BJP candidates from Gujarat were elected unopposed to the Rajya Sabha, including S. Jaishankar. [S2]
- Shaktisinh Gohil (Congress) was Gujarat's last Opposition Rajya Sabha member; his term ended June 21, 2026. [S1]
- Gujarat's scenario is unprecedented since State formation in 1960. [S1]
- The Patidar agitation (post-2015) created expectations of anti-incumbency but did not translate into opposition electoral gains in 2022. [S1]
- Rajya Sabha's total current strength: 245 (233 elected + 12 nominated). [S3]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: Primarily GS-II Syllabus headings: - Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business - Functioning of Federal System in India - Role of Opposition in democracy - Issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The absence of an effective Opposition in state legislatures and its cascading effect on Parliamentary representation poses a structural challenge to Indian federalism. Discuss with reference to Gujarat's case." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "Sustained single-party dominance in Indian states raises questions about the health of democratic competition beyond electoral outcomes. Examine." (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. "The constitutional design of the Rajya Sabha as a federal chamber presupposes competitive multi-party state politics. How does the erosion of state-level opposition threaten this design?" (GS-II, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Article 80 & Rajya Sabha Composition | Direct constitutional basis for why state assembly outcomes determine Rajya Sabha membership |
| Leader of Opposition — recognition & status | How LoP is defined, what minimum threshold is needed, 1977 Act provisions |
| Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) | Limits ability of dissenting legislators within a dominant party to act as de facto opposition |
| Delimitation of Constituencies | FPTP + delimitation amplifies seat-share disparities that enable dominant-party sweeps |
| Patidar Agitation (2015–17) | Case study of social mobilisation that did not translate into durable electoral opposition |
| West Bengal / Odisha single-party dominance | Comparative cases of state-level electoral monopoly and its institutional implications |
| Electoral Bonds & Party Finance | Structural advantage of ruling parties in fund-raising that deepens opposition weakness |
| Federal features of the Indian Constitution | Theoretical basis for why diverse state representation in Rajya Sabha matters |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing LoP threshold: The 10% rule (1/10th of seats) applies to State Assemblies for recognition as official Opposition. In the Lok Sabha, the conventionally accepted threshold has been 55 seats (10% of 543) — though not codified in the Constitution. Don't conflate the two.
- Assuming Article 80 specifies a minimum opposition quota — it does not. The article only governs how members are elected (STV by MLAs); it has no provision guaranteeing opposition representation.
- Misattributing Gujarat's BJP tenure start: BJP first came to power in Gujarat in 1995, not 1991 or 1998 (national landmarks for BJP).
- Conflating "no recognised Opposition in Assembly" with "no opposition party at all": Congress (17 seats) and AAP (5) exist in the Gujarat Assembly; they simply don't meet the threshold for official Opposition status and its attendant rights (shadow cabinet, opposition leader salary, etc.).
- Assuming this is a constitutional violation: There is no constitutional requirement for a state to have opposition representation in Rajya Sabha. This is a democratic/normative concern, not a legal infirmity.
11. Sources
- [S1] "A State without an Opposition" — Abhinay Deshpande, The Hindu, June 10, 2026, Page 9 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-10/th_international/articleG6AG3H3N0-14895104.ece — (Tier 4 — article content/primary source)
- [S2] "Gujarat: All three BJP candidates elected unopposed to Rajya Sabha" — Newsonair.gov.in — https://www.newsonair.gov.in/gujarat-all-three-bjp-candidates-elected-unopposed-to-rajya-sabha — (Tier 1 — government broadcaster)
- [S3] Rajya Sabha Introduction — rajyasabha.nic.in — https://rajyasabha.nic.in/rsnew/about_parliament/rajya_sabha_introduction.asp — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "Digital Sansad — Practice & Procedure: Opposition" — rajyasabha.nic.in — https://rajyasabha.nic.in/rsnew/practice_procedure/oppo.asp — (Tier 1)