The Ordinance question before the SC
The Ordinance Question Before the SC
1. At a Glance
- Core issue: President Droupadi Murmu promulgated the Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Amendment Ordinance, 2026 on May 16, 2026, increasing the sanctioned strength of SC judges from 34 to 38 — the first time judge-strength has been altered via Ordinance rather than Act of Parliament. [S1][S2]
- Constitutional tension: Article 124(1) explicitly vests in Parliament the power to prescribe the number of judges; using an Article 123 Ordinance — a temporary executive instrument — to do the same raises questions about judicial independence, security of tenure, and the basic structure doctrine. [S3][S4]
- Why UPSC cares: Intersects GS-II syllabus on judiciary, executive–legislative relations, and the basic structure doctrine; likely a Mains question for 2026–27 cycle given live SC implications.
- Parallel drawn: Mirrors the 1937 US "court-packing" episode (Roosevelt's failed attempt to add judges past age 70) — both cases question whether expanded benches retain institutional independence from the appointing authority. [S4]
2. Why in the News
- May 16, 2026: President Droupadi Murmu promulgated the Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Amendment Ordinance, 2026, amending Section 2 of the Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Act, 1956 — replacing sanctioned strength of 33 (excluding CJI) with 37, taking total strength to 38. [S1][S2]
- Late May–June 2026: Collegium recommended, and five new judges took oath — 4 former Chief Justices of High Courts and 1 from the Bar. Two filled pre-existing vacancies (the Court was at 32 against 34 sanctioned); three posts exist solely by virtue of the Ordinance with no parliamentary backing yet. [S4]
- The Ordinance's constitutional validity — its life, lapse conditions, and implications for the appointed judges' tenure — became the subject of legal commentary and public debate in the first week of June 2026. [S4]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1950 | Supreme Court established; original strength: CJI + 7 judges under Article 124(1). |
| 1956 | Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Act, 1956 enacted; subsequent amendments raised strength periodically through Parliament. |
| 1986 | Strength increased to 26 (including CJI) by legislative amendment. |
| 2008 | Strength raised to 31 by Parliament. |
| 2019 | Parliament passed the Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Amendment Act, 2019, increasing strength from 31 to 34 (including CJI). [S1] |
| 2026 | First-ever Ordinance route used to raise strength to 38; Parliament not in session. [S2] |
- Each prior increase was effected by Act of Parliament, consistent with Article 124(1)'s delegation to the legislature.
- The 99th Constitutional Amendment, 2014 introduced Article 124A (NJAC), but was struck down in 2015 (Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record Association v. Union of India) as violating the basic structure, restoring the Collegium system. [S3]
4. Core Static Facts
Constitutional provisions - Article 124(1): There shall be a Supreme Court of India consisting of a Chief Justice and such number of other judges as Parliament may by law prescribe. [S3] - Article 123: President may promulgate Ordinances when Parliament is not in session and immediate action is necessary; an Ordinance has the same force as an Act of Parliament but ceases to operate 6 weeks after Parliament reassembles, or if disapproved earlier. [S3] - Article 124(2): Appointment of SC judges — by President in consultation with such judges as he deems fit (in practice, Collegium's recommendation). [S3]
Enabling legislation - Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Act, 1956 — parent statute; Section 2 specifies the number of judges. - Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Amendment Ordinance, 2026 — amends Section 2 of the 1956 Act; promulgated May 16, 2026. [S2]
Key numbers | Parameter | Detail | |-----------|--------| | Strength before Ordinance | 34 (CJI + 33) | | Strength after Ordinance | 38 (CJI + 37) | | Additional posts created | 4 | | Actual strength at time of Ordinance | 32 | | Vacancies before Ordinance | 2 | | Judges whose posts depend solely on Ordinance | 3 | | Current SC case pendency | >93,000 cases |
Implementing ministry: Ministry of Law & Justice (Department of Justice). [S1]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 124(1) delegates number-fixing to Parliament by law; an Ordinance under Article 123 carries legislative force only for its temporary life — 6 weeks after Parliament reassembles, or until Parliament approves/rejects it. [S3]
- If Parliament lapses the Ordinance or the session ends without re-enactment, three sitting judges would occupy posts with no statutory basis — unprecedented in Indian judicial history. [S4]
- Basic structure implication: Kesavananda Bharati (1973) established judicial independence as a basic feature; NJAC case (2015) reiterated it. An Ordinance that creates dependency of judges' posts on executive/parliamentary goodwill is arguably in tension with that feature. [S3][S4]
- The Article 217 tenure-security principle for High Court judges (and by analogy SC judges) could be engaged if Ordinance-created posts are not legislatively confirmed. [S3]
Constitutional / Governance (Separation of Powers)
- Executive leverage: Since Ordinances lapse without parliamentary ratification, the three judges on Ordinance-created benches sit under an implicit condition — their posts depend on the government steering a confirmatory Bill through Parliament. [S4]
- Historically, India's SC has been vigilant against executive encroachment (NJAC, Second Judges Case 1993, Third Judges Case 1998) — but by accepting the Ordinance-expansion without challenge, the Collegium itself becomes party to an arrangement that could compromise its declared independence. [S4]
- Contrast with the US 1937 "court-packing" plan — the US Senate rejected it 70-20 on the ground that a court shaped by "sense of obligation to the appointing power" cannot be fearless; India's 2026 episode raises identical structural fears. [S4]
Administrative
- Pendency rationale: SC pendency crossed 93,000 cases; additional judges address genuine institutional capacity deficit. [S2]
- Collegium's calculus: By recommending names for Ordinance-seats, the Collegium accepted executive framing — trading institutional purity for functional necessity.
- Conversion risk: No automatic mechanism converts an Ordinance into an Act; the government must introduce and pass a Bill within 6 weeks of Parliament reconvening — a political variable outside judicial control. [S3]
Historical
- Every prior increase in SC bench strength since 1950 was done by Parliament, not executive fiat — the 2026 route is a constitutional first. [S4]
- FDR's court-packing plan (1937) is the canonical international precedent: rejected precisely because it would make judicial expansion a bargaining chip between the bench and the legislature. [S4]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- May 16, 2026: Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Amendment Ordinance, 2026 promulgated by President Droupadi Murmu; sanctioned strength raised from 34 to 38. [S1][S2]
- Late May 2026: Collegium recommends five judges; all five sworn in — 2 fill pre-existing vacancies, 3 fill Ordinance-created posts. Of the five, 4 were former High Court Chief Justices; 1 was an advocate. [S4]
- June 8, 2026: V. Venkatesan's analysis in The Hindu (page 10, International Print Edition) raises alarm about judicial independence, security of tenure, and the "appearance of detachment from the executive." [S4]
- The article frames the Collegium as having "staked its independence on the goodwill of the government and Parliament." [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Article 124(1) of the Constitution vests in Parliament (not the President) the power to prescribe the number of Supreme Court judges by law. [S3]
- The Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Act was originally enacted in 1956. [S2]
- Parliament last amended judge-strength by the Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Amendment Act, 2019, raising it to 34 (CJI + 33). [S1]
- The Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Amendment Ordinance, 2026 was promulgated on May 16, 2026, raising strength to 38. [S1][S2]
- An Ordinance under Article 123 ceases to operate 6 weeks after Parliament reassembles, unless approved earlier. [S3]
- Under Article 123, an Ordinance can be promulgated only when both Houses of Parliament are not in session. [S3]
- At the time the 2026 Ordinance was promulgated, the Supreme Court had only 32 sitting judges against a sanctioned 34 — meaning 2 vacancies already existed. [S4]
- Of the 5 judges sworn in after the Ordinance, 3 occupy posts created solely by the Ordinance (no parent statute). [S4]
- SC case pendency had crossed 93,000 cases at the time of the Ordinance. [S2]
- The 99th Constitutional Amendment, 2014 introduced Article 124A (NJAC); struck down in 2015 by the SC as violating the basic structure. [S3]
- Judicial independence is a basic feature of the Constitution per the Kesavananda Bharati judgment (1973). [S3]
- Implementing ministry for matters relating to Supreme Court judge-strength legislation: Ministry of Law & Justice. [S1]
- The 1937 FDR court-packing plan (USA) was rejected by the US Senate by 70 votes to 20 — cited as a cautionary precedent in 2026 Indian debates. [S4]
- An Ordinance is promulgated under Article 123 (President) for the Union; the analogous state-level power rests under Article 213 (Governor). [S3]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II (Indian Polity and Governance — Judiciary, Separation of Powers, Constitutional Provisions)
Syllabus headings: - "Structure, organization and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary." - "Separation of powers between various organs, dispute redressal mechanisms and institutions." - "Judicial independence and accountability."
Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "The use of the Ordinance-making power to increase the sanctioned strength of the Supreme Court raises fundamental questions about judicial independence. Critically examine." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "Article 123 of the Constitution was designed for emergency legislative gaps — not for structural changes to a co-equal branch of government. Comment in the context of the 2026 Supreme Court strength Ordinance." (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. "How does the security of tenure of judges relate to the independence of the judiciary? What risks does an Ordinance-created judicial post pose to this principle?" (GS-II, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Ordinance-making power (Articles 123 & 213) | Core constitutional provision at the centre of this controversy — scope, limitations, judicial review of Ordinances. |
| Collegium system (Second & Third Judges Cases) | The Collegium's acceptance of Ordinance-seats directly implicates its institutional authority and independence. |
| Basic Structure Doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati, 1973) | Judicial independence is a basic feature — whether an Ordinance route violates it is the live legal question. |
| NJAC and 99th Constitutional Amendment | Earlier instance of executive attempt to alter judicial appointment mechanics, struck down on identical independence grounds. |
| Judicial Pendency and Infrastructure | The stated rationale for the Ordinance; NJAC-DILRMP data, Supreme Court Annual Report statistics. |
| Separation of Powers in India | Structural constitutional question underlying the entire controversy. |
| US Court-Packing Plan (1937) | Comparative constitutional law — identical structural dynamic; useful for Essay paper and Mains answers requiring global analogies. |
| Security of Tenure of Judges (Articles 124, 217, 218) | Directly at stake for the three judges on Ordinance-created posts. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing Article 123 with Article 213: Article 123 is the President's Ordinance power (Union); Article 213 is the Governor's (State). The Supreme Court strength Ordinance was under Article 123, not 213.
- Assuming 5 new judges = 5 Ordinance posts: Only 3 of 5 new judges occupy Ordinance-created posts; 2 filled pre-existing vacancies that existed before the Ordinance. [S4]
- Mixing up the 2019 Act with the 2026 Ordinance: The last statutory increase was via Parliament in 2019 (to 34); the 2026 change is via Ordinance (to 38) — a category-level distinction, not merely a year difference. [S1][S2]
- Treating Ordinances as permanent: An Ordinance ceases at session-end plus 6 weeks unless re-enacted — the judge-strength Ordinance has an inherent sunset risk that a parliamentary Act does not. [S3]
- Conflating judicial independence with judicial accountability: The 2026 controversy is about independence (freedom from executive dependency), not accountability (transparency, conduct). UPSC questions on each demand different frameworks.
11. Sources
- [S1] Cabinet approves increase in the Judge strength of the Supreme Court of India by Four to 37 from 33 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2258131 — (Tier 1: PIB/pib.gov.in)
- [S2] Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Amendment Ordinance 2026 — Explained — https://www.scconline.com/blog/post/2026/05/18/supreme-court-judges-increase-ordinance-2026-explained/ — (Tier 4: legal journalism)
- [S3] Article 124: Establishment and Constitution of Supreme Court — Constitution of India — https://www.constitutionofindia.net/articles/article-124-establishment-and-constitution-of-supreme-court/ — (Tier 3/reference)
- [S4] The Ordinance question before the SC — V. Venkatesan, The Hindu, June 8, 2026 (Article content supplied as primary source) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-08/th_international/articleGVCG37HTG-14871221.ece — (Tier 4: The Hindu)