UCC Bill to be tabled in Monsoon Session of M.P. Assembly: CM

I now have sufficient facts from Tier 1/2 sources plus the article to compile the note.


UCC Bill to be Tabled in Monsoon Session of M.P. Assembly


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1835 Lex Loci Report — British suggested uniform law for crimes/evidence but excluded personal law of Hindus/Muslims
1947–49 Constituent Assembly debates on UCC; Dr B.R. Ambedkar pushed for it; ultimately placed in DPSP (Art. 44), not Fundamental Rights, due to political opposition
1985 Shah Bano case — SC upheld Muslim woman's right to maintenance; Parliament overturned via Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Divorce) Act, 1986 — reignited UCC debate
1995 Sarla Mudgal v. Union of India — SC directed government to consider UCC
2000s Law Commission examinations; no Central legislation enacted
2016 Law Commission of India invited public views on UCC [S2]
2018 Law Commission concluded UCC is "neither necessary nor desirable at this stage"
2023 22nd Law Commission re-opened consultations; BJP manifesto reaffirmed UCC commitment
Feb 2024 Uttarakhand enacted the Uniform Civil Code of Uttarakhand, 2024 (Act No. 3 of 2024) — first state to legislate UCC [S3]
2024 Gujarat passed its own UCC Bill — Home Minister Amit Shah congratulated Gujarat CM Bhupendra Patel [S4]
April 2026 M.P. forms 6-member high-level committee (J. Ranjana Prasad Desai) to draft UCC Bill [S5]
June–July 2026 MP CM announces tabling in Monsoon Session; public portal launched [S5]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Social

Ethical / Governance

Historical

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Article 44 of the Constitution contains the directive for a Uniform Civil Code — it falls under Part IV (DPSP), not Part III (Fundamental Rights). [S1]
  2. UCC is non-justiciable — courts cannot compel its enactment, though they can recommend it.
  3. Personal law (marriage, divorce, succession) falls under Entry 5 of the Concurrent List (Seventh Schedule). [S1]
  4. Uttarakhand was the first state in independent India to enact a UCC — Act No. 3 of 2024. [S3]
  5. Goa follows the Portuguese Civil Code (1867) — often cited as India's existing uniform civil code model.
  6. The 22nd Law Commission of India (reconstituted 2022) re-opened public consultation on UCC. [S2]
  7. The 21st Law Commission (2018) concluded UCC was "neither necessary nor desirable" at that stage.
  8. MP's UCC drafting committee is headed by Justice Ranjana Prasad Desai (retired Supreme Court judge). [S5]
  9. The MP Monsoon Session is scheduled for July 20–24, 2026 — five days. [S5]
  10. The Special Marriage Act, 1954 is a secular personal law already applicable to all citizens — sometimes called a partial UCC.
  11. Shah Bano case (1985) — Supreme Court upheld maintenance rights; Parliament responded with Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Divorce) Act, 1986.
  12. Uttarakhand UCC controversially exempts Scheduled Tribes — a likely issue in the MP draft as well. [S3]
  13. Gujarat is another BJP-ruled state that passed a UCC Bill (2024), following Uttarakhand. [S4]
  14. Under Article 254, a Central UCC would prevail over State UCCs in case of repugnancy.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: Primarily GS-II; secondary GS-I.

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Indian Constitution — significant provisions; Directive Principles; social justice
GS-II Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; issues arising out of their design and implementation
GS-I Social empowerment; communalism; regionalism; secularism

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The Uniform Civil Code is simultaneously a question of gender justice, minority rights, and federal architecture. Examine the constitutional and ethical tensions involved in its implementation." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "With Uttarakhand and Madhya Pradesh moving towards state-level Uniform Civil Codes, critically analyse whether piecemeal state UCCs serve the constitutional intent of Article 44." (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. "Discuss the historical evolution of the debate on Uniform Civil Code in India. What lessons can be drawn from the Goa model and the Uttarakhand UCC Act, 2024 for a national UCC?" (GS-I/GS-II, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Directive Principles of State Policy (Articles 36–51) UCC is Art. 44 DPSP; understanding the hierarchy and enforceability of DPSPs is essential
Seventh Schedule — Concurrent List Personal law sits in Concurrent List; Centre-State legislative relations matter for UCC validity
Uttarakhand UCC Act, 2024 First state UCC; template MP is likely studying; examines specific provisions on live-in, inheritance
Personal Law Reforms (Hindu Code Bills 1955–56, Muslim Women Acts) Historical baseline UCC seeks to replace/harmonise
Shah Bano & Shayara Bano Cases Landmark SC cases that shaped political/legal trajectory of UCC debate
Goa Civil Code (Portuguese Civil Code 1867) Only existing example of a functioning UCC in India; standard comparison in Mains answers
Tribal Rights & Fifth/Sixth Schedules Key exclusion issue — ST communities fear UCC displaces customary law protected under Schedules
Law Commission of India — role and recommendations 21st and 22nd Commissions' positions on UCC are MCQ-ready facts

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong placement: Aspirants confuse Art. 44 with Fundamental Rights — it is a DPSP (Part IV), not Part III; it is non-justiciable.
  2. "First state" confusion: Some believe Goa's Portuguese Civil Code makes Goa the "first UCC state" — technically Goa has a uniform civil code by default from colonial era, but Uttarakhand (2024) is the first state to enact a purpose-built UCC post-Independence. These are distinct facts.
  3. Schedule confusion: Personal law is in the Concurrent List (Entry 5), not the Union List or State List — a frequent MCQ trap.
  4. Committee head identity: The MP drafting committee is headed by Justice Ranjana Prasad Desai — do not confuse with other Law Commission or NALSA heads.
  5. Law Commission position flip: The 21st Commission (2018) said UCC "not desirable"; the 22nd Commission (2022–) re-opened consultation — aspirants often merge these as one uniform position.

11. Sources