31% of Rajya Sabha MPs have declared criminal cases: report

I have sufficient grounded facts from the article (Tier 4) and PRS India (Tier 1) to write a rigorous note. Proceeding now.


Criminalization of Politics: 31% of Rajya Sabha MPs Declare Criminal Cases


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Reporting body Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) + National Election Watch (NEW)
MPs analysed 226 of 233 Rajya Sabha members
Vacancies 4 seats (West Bengal); 3 MPs excluded (affidavits unavailable)
Criminal cases declared ~31% of analysed MPs
Serious criminal cases ~16% of analysed MPs
Murder cases 1 sitting MP
Attempt to murder 4 MPs
Crimes against women 4 MPs
Billionaires (₹100 cr+) 31 MPs (14% of analysed)
Primary disclosure mechanism Affidavit filed under Section 33A, Representation of the People Act, 1951
Enabling legal basis RPA 1951 + SC orders in ADR (2002) & Public Interest Foundation (2018)
Implementing body Election Commission of India (ECI)

Party-wise breakdown of MPs declaring criminal cases: [S1]

Party MPs analysed With criminal cases %
BJP 107 28 26%
Congress 29 12 41%
Trinamool Congress 9 2 22%
DMK 8 2 25%
Samajwadi Party 4 2 50%
TDP 4 3 75%
BRS 3 3 100%
CPI(M) 3 3 100%
RJD 3 2 67%
AIADMK 4 1 25%
NCP 4 1 25%
AAP 3 1 33%

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Political / Administrative

Social


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks


8. Mains Relevance

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "Criminalisation of politics poses a structural threat to Indian democracy. Critically examine the legal and institutional mechanisms to address this menace, and evaluate why they have remained inadequate." (GS-II, 250 words)
  2. "The mandatory disclosure of criminal antecedents through affidavits has increased transparency but failed to curb criminalisation of politics. Do you agree? Suggest reforms." (GS-II, 150 words)
  3. "Discuss the ethical dimensions of electing legislators with declared criminal cases. What responsibilities do political parties bear in this context?" (GS-IV, 150 words)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Representation of the People Act, 1951 Primary statute governing disqualification, affidavit disclosure, and electoral offences
Election Commission of India — Powers & Functions ECI is the implementing body for affidavit-based disclosure and model code enforcement
Law Commission Reports on Electoral Reforms Source of key recommendations (charge-stage disqualification, state funding of elections)
Supreme Court judgments on electoral reforms ADR (2002), PUCL (2003), Public Interest Foundation (2018), Rambabu Singh (2020) — landmark cases directly on point
Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) Another dimension of legislator accountability within Parliament
Money power in elections / Electoral bonds Complements the money-muscle nexus underlying criminalisation
Rajya Sabha: Composition, functions, and indirect election Context for understanding why RS criminal profiles matter differently from LS

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong trigger for disqualification: Aspirants often state that an FIR or chargesheet disqualifies an MP. Correct: only conviction + ≥2 years sentence under Section 8, RPA 1951 leads to disqualification.
  2. Confusing ADR with a government body: ADR (Association for Democratic Reforms) is an NGO/civil society body, not a statutory or government agency. National Election Watch (NEW) is its campaign partner.
  3. Wrong constitutional article: Disqualification of Rajya Sabha members is under Article 102, not Article 191 (which applies to State Legislature members).
  4. Assuming 100% coverage: The ADR analysis covered 226, not all 233 RS MPs; 4 West Bengal seats were vacant and 3 affidavits were unavailable — omitting this nuance in answers loses marks.
  5. Conflating "serious criminal cases" with IPC-defined categories: ADR defines serious cases as those attracting 5+ years imprisonment or cases related to murder, kidnapping, rape, dacoity, etc. — this is ADR's own classification, not a statutory category under RPA.

11. Sources