The Ordinance question before the SC


The Ordinance Question Before the SC

1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


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]

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

Constitutional / Governance (Separation of Powers)

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. 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]
  2. The Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Act was originally enacted in 1956. [S2]
  3. Parliament last amended judge-strength by the Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Amendment Act, 2019, raising it to 34 (CJI + 33). [S1]
  4. The Supreme Court (Number of Judges) Amendment Ordinance, 2026 was promulgated on May 16, 2026, raising strength to 38. [S1][S2]
  5. An Ordinance under Article 123 ceases to operate 6 weeks after Parliament reassembles, unless approved earlier. [S3]
  6. Under Article 123, an Ordinance can be promulgated only when both Houses of Parliament are not in session. [S3]
  7. 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]
  8. Of the 5 judges sworn in after the Ordinance, 3 occupy posts created solely by the Ordinance (no parent statute). [S4]
  9. SC case pendency had crossed 93,000 cases at the time of the Ordinance. [S2]
  10. The 99th Constitutional Amendment, 2014 introduced Article 124A (NJAC); struck down in 2015 by the SC as violating the basic structure. [S3]
  11. Judicial independence is a basic feature of the Constitution per the Kesavananda Bharati judgment (1973). [S3]
  12. Implementing ministry for matters relating to Supreme Court judge-strength legislation: Ministry of Law & Justice. [S1]
  13. 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]
  14. 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

  1. 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.
  2. 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]
  3. 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]
  4. 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]
  5. 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