Constitution should be amended to make it more federal in nature: Stalin


UPSC Study Note: Constitution Should Be Amended to Make It More Federal — Stalin's Demand & the Kurian Joseph Committee


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1946–49 Constituent Assembly debates; B.R. Ambedkar described India as a "Union of States" (not a federation), favouring a strong Centre.
1983 Sarkaria Commission constituted to review Union-State arrangements; submitted report in 1988.
2007 Punchhi Commission set up on 27 April 2007 under Justice M.M. Punchhi (retired Chief Justice of India) to revisit Centre-State relations. [S2]
2010 Punchhi Commission submitted 7-volume report with 273 recommendations; Standing Committee of Inter-State Council deliberated on all 273. [S2]
April 2025 Stalin constitutes 3-member Justice Kurian Joseph High-Level Committee on Union-State Relations. [S3]
February 2026 Part I of the Kurian Joseph report tabled in Tamil Nadu Assembly; Stalin calls for constitutional amendment. [S1]

4. Core Static Facts

Justice Kurian Joseph High-Level Committee (2025–26) - Constituted: April 2025, by Tamil Nadu government [S3] - Chairperson: Justice Kurian Joseph (retired Supreme Court Judge) - Members: Ashok Vardhan Shetty (former IAS officer); Prof. Naganathan (former Deputy Chairman, State Planning Commission) [S3] - Mandate: Study structural shift in Centre-State power balance; recommend institutional and constitutional reforms - Key finding: "Creeping centralisation" — Centre progressively absorbing State powers [S3] - Report: Calls for "structural reset" via constitutional amendments and institutional reforms [S3]

Sarkaria Commission (1983–88) - Total recommendations: 247 [S2] - Status: 108 implemented; 87 in process; 35 not accepted [S2] - Covered: Legislative/administrative/financial relations, Governor's role, emergency provisions, All India Services, deployment of Union Armed Forces in States [S2]

Punchhi Commission (2007–10) - Set up: 27 April 2007 [S2] | Chair: Justice M.M. Punchhi (retd CJI) - Volumes: 7 | Recommendations: 273 [S2] - Topics: Centre-State financial relations, local self-government, internal security, environment/natural resources, socio-economic development [S2]

Key Constitutional Provisions on Federalism - Article 1: India is a "Union of States" (not a federation) - Articles 245–255: Distribution of legislative powers; Parliament can legislate on State List in national interest (Art. 249) - Seventh Schedule: Union List (97 subjects), State List (66 subjects), Concurrent List (47 subjects) - Article 263: Inter-State Council (actual body: set up 1990) - Article 356: President's Rule — historically a central tool of encroachment - Article 368: Constitutional amendment procedure — requires special majority ± ratification by ≥50% State legislatures for federal provisions


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Political / Administrative

Fiscal / Economic

Social

Ethical / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Sarkaria Commission (1983) made 247 recommendations on Centre-State relations; 108 have been implemented. [S2]
  2. The Punchhi Commission was set up on 27 April 2007 under Justice M.M. Punchhi, a retired Chief Justice of India. [S2]
  3. The Punchhi Commission submitted 7 volumes containing 273 recommendations. [S2]
  4. The Justice Kurian Joseph High-Level Committee (2025) is a 3-member body constituted by the Tamil Nadu government, not the Union government. [S3]
  5. In S.R. Bommai v. Union of India (1994), the Supreme Court held federalism to be a basic feature of the Constitution.
  6. Article 263 of the Constitution provides for an Inter-State Council; it was actually set up in 1990 on the Sarkaria Commission's recommendation.
  7. India is described in Article 1 as a "Union of States" — not a "federation of states."
  8. The Seventh Schedule contains Union List (97 subjects), State List (66 subjects), and Concurrent List (47 subjects).
  9. Parliament can legislate on a State List subject if Rajya Sabha passes a resolution by 2/3 majority declaring it expedient in national interest (Article 249).
  10. Amendments to federal provisions of the Constitution require ratification by not less than one-half of State Legislatures (Article 368(2) proviso).
  11. GST was introduced via the 101st Constitutional Amendment Act, 2016, subsuming State indirect taxes into a joint framework.
  12. The 15th Finance Commission recommended 41% of the divisible pool be devolved to States (excluding J&K post-reorganisation).
  13. The Rajamannar Committee (Tamil Nadu, 1969) was the first State-level committee to formally demand greater autonomy — a precursor to the current Kurian Joseph report.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-II (Polity & Governance)

Syllabus headings: - Functions and responsibilities of the Union and the States; issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure - Devolution of powers and finances up to local levels and challenges therein

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The Indian Constitution is federal in form but unitary in spirit." In light of the Justice Kurian Joseph Committee's recommendation for a 'structural reset' of Indian federalism, critically examine whether constitutional amendments can make India more genuinely federal without undermining national unity. (GS-II, 250 words)

  2. The Sarkaria Commission (1983) and Punchhi Commission (2007) both recommended reforms in Centre-State relations, yet structural asymmetries persist. Analyse the key areas where Union-State relations need recalibration in contemporary India. (GS-II, 250 words)

  3. "Fiscal federalism in India has been eroded by the proliferation of cesses, surcharges, and Centrally Sponsored Schemes." Do you agree? Suggest reforms to restore fiscal autonomy to States. (GS-II / GS-III, 250 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Sarkaria & Punchhi Commissions Direct predecessor reports on Union-State relations; frequently tested alongside any federalism demand
Finance Commission (15th FC) Fiscal dimension of federalism; vertical/horizontal devolution, conditionalities
GST and fiscal federalism 101st Amendment; how GST restructured State revenue autonomy
Governor's role and constitutional limits Central flashpoint in Centre-State tensions; Punchhi recommendations on time limits
Delimitation and Southern States Directly linked to Stalin's concern about political marginalisation post-2026 Census
Basic Structure Doctrine Any constitutional amendment demand must pass this test; Kesavananda Bharati (1973)
Inter-State Council and Article 263 Institutional mechanism for Centre-State coordination — often tested for composition/mandate
Concurrent List subjects (NEET, education) Practical ground-level Centre-State conflicts arising from Concurrent List

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Sarkaria vs Punchhi numbers confused: Sarkaria = 247 recommendations; Punchhi = 273 recommendations. Students often swap these figures.
  2. Punchhi Commission Chair misidentified: Justice M.M. Punchhi was a retired Chief Justice of India, not a retired High Court judge — distinguish from other committees chaired by HC judges.
  3. Kurian Joseph Committee is a State government body, not a Union government or Supreme Court-appointed commission — unlike Sarkaria/Punchhi which were central commissions.
  4. "Federation" vs "Union": The Constitution uses "Union of States" (Art. 1), not "federation" — this is a deliberate drafting choice with legal significance; confusing the two in Mains answers is a trap.
  5. Basic Structure and Art. 368: Students assume Parliament can amend any constitutional provision with a special majority. Federal provisions also require ratification by ≥50% State Legislatures, and the Basic Structure doctrine (Federalism = basic feature per Bommai) limits the extent of any amendment diluting State powers.

11. Sources

Sources: - The Hindu article (provided excerpt) — 19 Feb 2026 - PIB — Punchhi Commission Standing Committee deliberations - Ajmal IAS Academy — Kurian Joseph Committee explainer - Gulf News — Stalin panel formation