Simultaneous polls do not violate Constitution’s Basic Structure: Justice Gavai
Simultaneous Elections & the Basic Structure Doctrine
UPSC Study Note — GS-II | Polity & Governance
1. At a Glance
- One Nation One Election (ONOE) proposes synchronising Lok Sabha and State Assembly elections so all are held simultaneously, reducing the perpetual election cycle India currently endures.
- The Constitution (One Hundred and Twenty-Ninth Amendment) Bill, 2024 and the Union Territories Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2024 are the twin legislative instruments for this reform. [S1]
- The Bills are under scrutiny of a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) chaired by Shri P.P. Chaudhary, with 27 Lok Sabha + 12 Rajya Sabha members. [S1]
- The Basic Structure doctrine — derived from Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala (1973) — is the central constitutional battleground; UPSC tests both the doctrine itself and its application to electoral reform.
2. Why in the News
- On 12–13 February 2026, former Chief Justice of India (CJI) B.R. Gavai deposed before the JPC and stated that simultaneous elections do not violate the Basic Structure of the Constitution or its federal framework. [S2][S4]
- Justice Gavai is the sixth former CJI to appear before the panel, completing the highest-profile judicial consultation phase of the committee's work. [S4]
- Divided judicial opinion among six former CJIs has made this a high-salience polity story for 2025–26. [S4]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1951–52 | First simultaneous general + state elections held. |
| 1952–1967 | Simultaneous elections continued for four election cycles. |
| 1967–68 | Cycle broken — mid-term dissolutions of several state assemblies. |
| 1983 | Election Commission of India first formally recommended synchronisation. |
| 2015 | Law Commission (170th Report, 1999; renewed 2015) recommended return to ONOE. |
| 2017 | NITI Aayog issued a working paper on ONOE implementation. |
| Sep 2023 | High-Level Committee under former President Ram Nath Kovind constituted. [S3] |
| Mar 2024 | Kovind Committee submits its report recommending ONOE in two phases. [S3] |
| Dec 2024 | Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 introduced in Lok Sabha. [S1] |
| Dec 2024 | Bills referred to a 39-member JPC chaired by P.P. Chaudhary. [S1] |
| 2025–26 | JPC holds successive sittings, records testimony of former CJIs, experts, and political parties. [S2] |
4. Core Static Facts
The Bills - Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 — amends the Constitution to synchronise Lok Sabha and State Assembly elections. [S1] - Union Territories Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2024 — companion bill extending synchronisation to UT legislatures (Delhi, Puducherry, J&K). [S1] - Implementing ministry: Ministry of Law & Justice.
Mechanism (as proposed) - President issues a notification on the date of the first sitting of Lok Sabha after a general election. [S1] - All State/UT Assemblies constituted after that notification date have their terms expire with the full term of Lok Sabha (i.e., truncated terms for some assemblies). [S1] - ONOE does not mean voting on a single day — elections held in phases as per Election Commission's convenience. [S1]
JPC Composition - 39 members: 27 from Lok Sabha, 12 from Rajya Sabha. [S1] - Chair: P.P. Chaudhary (BJP, Lok Sabha). [S2]
Public Consultation - 21,500+ responses received; 80% in favour. [S1] - 47 political parties submitted views; 32 supported ONOE. [S1]
Key Constitutional Provisions Implicated - Article 83 — Duration of Houses of Parliament. - Article 85 — Dissolution of Lok Sabha. - Article 172 — Duration of State Legislatures. - Article 174 — Dissolution of State Legislatures. - Article 356 — President's Rule (trigger for mid-term assembly dissolution). - Tenth Schedule — Anti-defection (relevant to stability argument).
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Basic Structure doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati, 1973): Parliament cannot amend the Constitution in a manner that destroys its basic features — federalism, democracy, judicial review, free & fair elections are recognised features. [S4]
- Pro-ONOE (4 former CJIs) — Justices Ranjan Gogoi, D.Y. Chandrachud, J.S. Khehar, B.R. Gavai: bill brings only a "change in the manner of elections once"; structure and voter rights unchanged; no-confidence motion intact; within parliamentary competence. [S4]
- Anti-ONOE (2 former CJIs) — Justice U.U. Lalit: bill in present form will not survive a legal challenge in the Supreme Court. Justice Sanjiv Khanna: "open to question as violating and offending the basic structure." [S4]
- Truncating a sitting state assembly's term without fresh mandate raises Article 21 (right to representation) and federal principle concerns.
Political / Governance
- India currently holds elections in some part of the country almost every year, triggering the Model Code of Conduct (MCC) frequently, which stalls policy announcements.
- ONOE proponents argue it will reduce governance paralysis and allow governments uninterrupted policy focus.
- Critics argue it privileges national narratives over local issues, disadvantaging regional parties.
Economic / Fiscal
- Estimated savings: Multiple bodies (ECI, Law Commission) project significant reduction in election expenditure — exact figure not authoritatively finalised.
- Reduced frequency of MCC activation frees the calendar for economic policy implementation.
- Logistical cost of deploying EVM/VVPAT machines, security forces simultaneously is also a one-time capital cost increase.
Administrative / Federal
- Centre–State asymmetry: Truncated state assembly terms require state concurrence or risk federal overreach.
- Kovind Committee recommended a two-phase approach: Phase 1 — Lok Sabha + State elections simultaneously; Phase 2 — Local body elections within 100 days. [S3]
- Election Commission would need vastly enlarged EVM stockpiles and security deployment capacity.
Historical
- India successfully conducted four rounds of simultaneous elections (1952, 1957, 1962, 1967) before the cycle broke. [S2]
- The break was caused by political instability (President's Rule, floor crossings) — same structural vulnerabilities remain today.
Ethical / Governance
- Accountability gap: If a state government loses majority mid-term, ONOE may keep a caretaker government in office until the next synchronised election — weakening democratic accountability.
- Justice Gavai's counter: no-confidence motion remains operational; accountability mechanisms intact. [S4]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- December 2024: Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 and UT Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2024 introduced in Lok Sabha; referred to 39-member JPC. [S1]
- July 11, 2025: JPC held meeting at Parliament House; deliberations ongoing. [S3]
- 2025 (multiple sessions): JPC recorded testimony of former CJIs — Gogoi, Chandrachud, Khehar, Lalit, Khanna deposed before Gavai's deposition. [S4]
- 12–13 February 2026: Former CJI B.R. Gavai deposes; sixth former CJI to testify; endorses constitutional validity. [S4]
- As of February 2026: 4 former CJIs support, 2 oppose the bill on Basic Structure grounds. [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 aims to synchronise Lok Sabha and State Assembly elections. [S1]
- The companion bill is the Union Territories Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2024. [S1]
- The JPC examining these bills has 39 members — 27 Lok Sabha + 12 Rajya Sabha. [S1]
- JPC is chaired by P.P. Chaudhary (BJP). [S2]
- Simultaneous elections were last held in 1967 before the cycle broke. [S2]
- India had four successful rounds of simultaneous elections: 1952, 1957, 1962, 1967. [S2]
- 80% of 21,500+ public responses received by JPC were in favour of ONOE. [S1]
- 47 political parties submitted views; 32 supported ONOE. [S1]
- Former CJIs U.U. Lalit and Sanjiv Khanna raised Basic Structure objections; Gogoi, Chandrachud, Khehar, Gavai said no violation. [S4]
- Justice Gavai: ONOE brings "only a change in the manner of elections once" — not a breach of Basic Structure. [S4]
- The no-confidence motion mechanism remains intact under ONOE, per Justice Gavai — so governmental accountability is unaffected. [S4]
- The Kovind High-Level Committee submitted its report recommending ONOE in March 2024. [S3]
- Under the Bill, the President issues a notification on the date of first sitting of Lok Sabha after a general election to trigger synchronisation. [S1]
- ONOE does not mandate voting on a single day — elections held in phases per ECI's convenience. [S1]
- The Basic Structure doctrine was established in Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala (1973). [S4]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II - Syllabus heading: Indian Constitution — features, amendments, significant provisions; Functioning of legislature; Representation of People Act; Issues relating to elections.
Plausible Mains Questions
-
"Simultaneous elections are a governance necessity but a constitutional hazard." Critically examine the arguments for and against the One Nation One Election proposal with reference to India's federal structure and the Basic Structure doctrine. (GS-II, 15 marks)
-
The Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 has evoked sharply divided opinions among former Chief Justices of India. Analyse the constitutional basis of these divergent views and their implications for parliamentary sovereignty. (GS-II, 10 marks)
-
How does the Model Code of Conduct affect governance in India? Would simultaneous elections mitigate or aggravate these effects? (GS-II, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Basic Structure Doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati & successors) | The core constitutional test applied to ONOE; must know recognised Basic Structure elements. |
| Election Commission of India — Powers & Functions | ECI's logistical role in implementing ONOE; EVM/VVPAT procurement. |
| Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) | Floor-crossing triggered the 1967–68 synchronisation break; still a structural vulnerability for ONOE. |
| Federalism in India | ONOE critics argue it undermines cooperative federalism; essential conceptual grounding. |
| Model Code of Conduct | Primary governance argument for ONOE — frequent MCC activation stalls policy. |
| Representation of the People Act, 1951 | Governs conduct of elections; ONOE will require RPA amendments. |
| President's Rule (Article 356) | Mechanism that can disrupt synchronised election cycles mid-term; key vulnerability. |
| Kovind Committee Report, 2024 | Direct precursor to the Bill; its recommendations are directly examinable. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong year for synchronisation breakdown: The cycle broke in 1967–68, not 1971. 1971 was when Indira Gandhi held early Lok Sabha elections — a different event.
- Confusing the two bills: There are two bills — the Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill (for states) AND the UT Laws (Amendment) Bill (for UTs). UPSC may test which covers which.
- "Single day" misconception: ONOE does not mean all voting happens on one day — it means elections are synchronised, held in phases. A common misstatement.
- Wrong JPC count: JPC has 39 members (27 LS + 12 RS), not a different number. Chair is P.P. Chaudhary, not Arjun Ram Meghwal (Law Minister).
- Overstating judicial consensus: 4 former CJIs support, 2 oppose — it is not unanimous. Confusing Lalit/Khanna's positions with the majority view is a common error.
11. Sources
- [S1] The Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 — PRS Legislative Research — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-constitution-one-hundred-and-twenty-ninth-amendment-bill-2024 — (Tier 1 / PRS)
- [S2] One Nation, One Election — PIB Press Release — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=2085082 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] JPC Meeting, July 2025 — News on AIR — https://www.newsonair.gov.in/joint-parliamentary-committee-on-one-nation-one-election-held-meeting-at-parliament-house/ — (Tier 1 / govt broadcaster)
- [S4] Article: "Simultaneous polls do not violate Constitution's Basic Structure: Justice Gavai" — The Hindu, 13 February 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-13/th_international/articleGBGFJ3B2J-13529919.ece — (Tier 4)