JPC likely to retain clause on removal of Ministers
JPC Likely to Retain Clause on Removal of Ministers
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The Constitution (One Hundred and Thirtieth Amendment) Bill, 2025 proposes automatic removal of the Prime Minister, Chief Ministers, and other Ministers if arrested and detained for 30 consecutive days for serious offences (punishable with 5+ years imprisonment). [S1]
- A 31-member Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) headed by BJP MP Aparajita Sarangi has been examining the Bill since December 2025 and is expected to recommend retaining the core removal clause. [S2][S4]
- Critical for UPSC: intersects GS-II themes of Parliament, constitutional amendments, executive accountability, rule of law, and federalism.
- Opposition's INDIA bloc largely boycotted the JPC, raising constitutional objections around basic structure doctrine. [S3]
2. Why in the News
- July 2, 2026: Reports emerged that the JPC, after 10 rounds of meetings since December 2025, is likely to retain the clause mandating removal of Ministers detained for 30 consecutive days. [S4]
- The draft report is expected to be circulated by July 10, 2026, with the panel scheduled to meet July 17, 2026 to finalise it ahead of the Monsoon Session of Parliament. [S4]
- In June 2026, JPC chair Aparajita Sarangi stated that stakeholders broadly backed the Bill's intent to decriminalise politics. [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
- August 20, 2025: The Constitution (130th Amendment) Bill, 2025 introduced in Lok Sabha. [S1]
- Bill also accompanied by two allied Bills to extend identical provisions to UTs of Puducherry and Jammu & Kashmir; constitutional provisions for Delhi (Article 239AA) are covered within the main Bill. [S1]
- November 12, 2025: Lok Sabha Secretariat announced constitution of the 31-member JPC to examine the Bill. Most INDIA bloc parties boycotted, citing ruling alliance's numerical dominance. [S3]
- December 2025 onwards: JPC commenced deliberations; completed 10 rounds of meetings through mid-2026. [S4]
- Predecessor context: Earlier attempts at anti-defection law (1985), RPA disqualification provisions (Section 8, 1951), and SC judgment in Lily Thomas v. Union of India (2013) (struck down Section 8(4) of RPA protecting convicted MPs/MLAs from immediate disqualification) form the legal lineage.
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Full Bill name | The Constitution (One Hundred and Thirtieth Amendment) Bill, 2025 |
| Introduced in | Lok Sabha, August 20, 2025 |
| Articles amended | Articles 75 (Council of Ministers, Union), 164 (Council of Ministers, States), 239AA (Delhi) |
| Trigger threshold | Arrest + detention for 30 consecutive days for offence punishable with ≥5 years imprisonment |
| Removal mechanism | By President/Governor on advice of PM/CM; OR automatic on 31st day of detention; PM/CM must tender resignation by 31st day, else automatically cease to hold office |
| JPC composition | 31 members — 21 from Lok Sabha, 10 from Rajya Sabha |
| JPC chairperson | Aparajita Sarangi, BJP MP |
| JPC tenure | December 2025 – July 2026 (10 meetings) |
| Draft report deadline | Circulate by July 10, 2026; finalise July 17, 2026 |
| Target session | Monsoon Session of Parliament |
| Companion Bills | Separate Bills for Puducherry UT and J&K UT |
| Implementing authority | President of India / Governor (constitutional office); Ministry of Home Affairs (nodal) |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional - Bill amends Part V (Articles 75) and Part VI (Article 164) of the Constitution — core executive provisions; requires simple majority + ratification by half the states if it alters federal balance. [S1] - PRS India analysis flags potential conflict with four basic structure features: parliamentary democracy, separation of powers, federalism, and rule of law. [S1] - The 30-day window is framed by proponents as sufficient time to seek bail, hence not violating natural justice principles. [S4] - Parallels the Lily Thomas (2013) SC ruling: convicted legislators lose membership immediately; this Bill extends the logic to the executive (ministers), not merely the legislature.
Political / Governance - JPC is numerically dominated by NDA (15 BJP + 11 NDA allies = 26 out of 31); INDIA bloc members — TMC, SP, AAP, Shiv Sena (UBT), Congress — largely boycotted, reducing effective opposition voice. [S3] - Stated objective: decriminalisation of politics — removing criminally accused persons from executive power during prolonged detention. [S3] - JPC likely to add a caveat to prevent misuse of the law (e.g., politically motivated arrests). [S4]
Ethical / Governance - Addresses the democratic deficit where Ministers accused of serious crimes continue exercising executive power during prolonged detention. - Risk of misuse: ruling party at Centre/state could engineer arrests of opposition ministers to trigger automatic removal — the misuse caveat in the JPC report attempts to address this. [S4] - Raises questions about presumption of innocence (accused ≠ convicted) versus accountability of those holding public trust.
Federal / Administrative - Applies uniformly to Union Council of Ministers, State Councils of Ministers, and Delhi; separate Bills for Puducherry and J&K reflect constitutional need for specific territorial legislation. [S1] - Governor's role in state removals could create Centre-State friction given the politically sensitive nature of arrests and detentions.
Historical - Follows trajectory of judicial and legislative efforts since 1990s to reduce criminalisation: Vohra Committee (1993), Law Commission reports, ADR litigation, Lily Thomas (2013), and RPA Section 8 debates.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- August 20, 2025: Constitution (130th Amendment) Bill introduced in Lok Sabha. [S1]
- November 12, 2025: 31-member JPC constituted; Aparajita Sarangi appointed chairperson. [S3]
- December 2025: JPC begins deliberations; INDIA bloc boycott formalised. [S3][S4]
- June 2026: JPC chair states stakeholders broadly support the Bill's decriminalisation objective; no significant resistance reported. [S3]
- July 2, 2026: JPC confirmed to be retaining the 30-day detention removal clause; draft report to be circulated by July 10. Panel to meet July 17 to finalise before Monsoon Session. [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Constitution (130th Amendment) Bill, 2025 was introduced in Lok Sabha on August 20, 2025. [S1]
- The Bill amends Articles 75, 164, and 239AA of the Constitution of India. [S1]
- A Minister is liable for removal if arrested and detained for 30 consecutive days for an offence punishable with five or more years imprisonment. [S1]
- In the case of the Prime Minister or a Chief Minister, they must tender resignation by the 31st day of detention or automatically cease to hold office. [S1]
- The JPC examining the Bill has 31 members — 21 from Lok Sabha and 10 from Rajya Sabha. [S3]
- The JPC is chaired by Aparajita Sarangi, BJP MP. [S3][S4]
- Most INDIA bloc members boycotted the JPC, citing the ruling alliance's numerical dominance in the 31-member panel. [S4]
- JPC completed 10 rounds of meetings since December 2025 before finalising its draft report. [S4]
- The JPC draft report is to be circulated by July 10, 2026, and finalised on July 17, 2026 ahead of the Monsoon Session. [S4]
- Companion Bills were introduced separately for the UTs of Puducherry and Jammu & Kashmir. [S1]
- The JPC is likely to include a caveat to prevent misuse of the law while retaining the core clause. [S4]
- Precedent: SC's Lily Thomas v. Union of India (2013) struck down Section 8(4) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, which had shielded sitting MPs/MLAs from immediate disqualification on conviction.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II (Polity, Constitution, Governance)
Syllabus headings: - Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business - Constitutional Amendments — types, significance, basic structure doctrine - Executive — accountability, criminalisation of politics
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Constitution (130th Amendment) Bill, 2025 seeks to remove Ministers detained for 30 days from office. Critically examine its constitutional validity and its potential to decriminalise politics." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "Discuss the implications of the INDIA bloc's boycott of the JPC examining the Constitution (130th Amendment) Bill, 2025 for parliamentary democracy and the legislative process." (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. "The presumption of innocence and the accountability of public office-holders are often in tension. Examine this tension in the context of the proposed 30-day detention removal clause for Ministers." (GS-II/GS-IV, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Basic Structure Doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati, 1973) | Core test for validity of constitutional amendments; directly applicable to this Bill |
| Criminalisation of Politics (Vohra Committee, ADR cases) | Historical and policy background driving this legislation |
| Lily Thomas v. Union of India (2013) | Direct legal predecessor: disqualification of convicted legislators |
| Representation of the People Act, 1951 — Section 8 | Disqualification of MPs/MLAs on conviction; sister provision to this Bill |
| Article 75 and 164 — Council of Ministers | Articles being directly amended; essential static knowledge |
| Joint Parliamentary Committee — Composition and Powers | Procedural context for understanding JPC functioning and report process |
| Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule, 1985) | Parallel effort to discipline elected representatives; comparative study |
| Role of Governor in State Politics | Relevant because removal of state ministers involves the Governor's discretionary role |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong amendment number: Confusing the 130th Amendment Bill (2025) with earlier landmark amendments (42nd, 44th, 73rd, 74th, 86th, 101st). The number itself is examinable.
- Threshold confusion: The threshold is 30 consecutive days of detention (not mere FIR or chargesheet); and the offence must be punishable with ≥5 years (not any offence).
- Removal mechanism mix-up: PM and CM must tender resignation; other Ministers are removed on advice of PM/CM to the President/Governor. Automatic cessation on 31st day applies differently to PM/CM versus other ministers.
- JPC composition error: 31 total members (21 LS + 10 RS), not the standard committee size; do not confuse with PAC or other standing committees.
- Scope confusion: The main Bill covers Union Ministers, State Ministers, and Delhi (Article 239AA); Puducherry and J&K are covered by separate companion Bills — not by the 130th Amendment itself.
- Conflating conviction with detention: The Bill triggers on arrest + 30-day detention, NOT on conviction — a critical distinction from Lily Thomas (2013) which was about conviction.
11. Sources
- [S1] The Constitution (130th Amendment) Bill, 2025 — PRS India Legislative Research — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-constitution-one-hundred-and-thirtieth-amendment-bill-2025 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] Union Home Minister Amit Shah interview on Constitution (130th Amendment) Bill 2025 — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2160539 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] "Stakeholders back Bill to decriminalise politics, says panel chief Sarangi" — Business Standard, June 2026 — https://www.business-standard.com/india-news/stakeholders-back-bill-to-decriminalise-politics-says-panel-chief-sarangi-126061700701_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [S4] "JPC likely to retain clause on removal of Ministers" — The Hindu, July 2, 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-07-02/th_chennai/articleGQUG6N9OS-15178092.ece — (Tier 4)