Simultaneous polls panel mulling curbs on no-trust motion
UPSC Study Note: Simultaneous Polls Panel Mulling Curbs on No-Confidence Motion
1. At a Glance
- The Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 proposes One Nation One Election (ONOE) — simultaneous elections for Lok Sabha and all State/UT Assemblies. [S1]
- A Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) is examining the Bill; its chairperson has revealed deliberations on restricting no-confidence motions when an incumbent government has only one year left in its term. [S3]
- This topic cuts across GS-II (Parliament, constitutional amendments, federalism) and tests knowledge of Article 75, Article 164, Article 85, and the no-confidence motion procedure. [S1]
- UPSC relevance: tests both static constitutional law and live legislative developments simultaneously. [S1]
2. Why in the News
- February 19, 2026: JPC chairperson and BJP MP P. P. Chaudhary, speaking at The Hindu Mind series, disclosed the panel is actively considering a provision barring the moving of a no-confidence motion against a government with only one year left in its term. [S3]
- The Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 was introduced in Lok Sabha on December 17, 2024 and referred to the JPC on December 20, 2024. [S1][S2]
- The JPC had completed 16 meetings in Delhi and undertaken country-wide consultations by February 2026. [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
- August 2023: A High-Level Committee (HLC) was constituted under former President Ram Nath Kovind to examine One Nation One Election. [S4]
- March 2024: HLC submitted its report recommending synchronised elections, citing reduced expenditure on elections, policy continuity, and administrative efficiency. [S4]
- December 17, 2024: Government introduced two companion Bills — (i) Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 (for Lok Sabha + State Assemblies) and (ii) Union Territories Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2024 (for UT Assemblies with Legislatures). [S1][S2]
- Both Bills referred to a Joint Parliamentary Committee under P. P. Chaudhary. [S2]
- Precedent for restricting no-confidence motions exists at sub-national level: several states impose time-bars for Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) — e.g., Tamil Nadu Panchayats Act, 1994 bars a no-confidence motion in the last year of a panchayat's term. [S3]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Bill name | Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 |
| Companion Bill | Union Territories Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2024 |
| Introduced in | Lok Sabha, December 17, 2024 |
| Referred to JPC | December 20, 2024 |
| JPC Chairperson | P. P. Chaudhary, BJP MP |
| Concept | One Nation One Election (ONOE) / Simultaneous Elections |
| Trigger mechanism | President issues notification on date of first sitting of new Lok Sabha after general election ("appointed date") |
| Effect on State Assemblies | Terms of Assemblies constituted after appointed date expire with Lok Sabha's 5-year term |
| Mid-term vacancy | Fresh elections held only for remainder of 5-year term (not full term) |
| First sync target | If enacted before 2029 elections → first sitting of new Lok Sabha = appointed date; full sync by 2034 |
| No-confidence motion bar (proposed) | Cannot be introduced if govt has ≤ 1 year remaining in term |
| Constitutional articles involved | Articles 75(3), 164(2) (collective responsibility); Article 85 (dissolution of Lok Sabha); Article 83 (duration of Houses) |
| Enabling Amendment | Inserts new Article 82A and amends Articles 83, 85, 172, 174, 356 |
| Nodal Ministry | Ministry of Law and Justice |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- The no-confidence motion is a constitutional mechanism of collective responsibility under Article 75(3) (LoS) and Article 164(2) (State cabinets); any statutory restriction must not effectively override these provisions. [S1]
- A time-bar on no-confidence motions has no constitutional precedent at the national level in India; it would require either a constitutional amendment or a Rules of Procedure change — both raising questions of Basic Structure doctrine (democratic accountability). [S1]
- The Bill's truncation of State Assembly terms to sync with Lok Sabha raises a federalism concern: State Assemblies derive their term from their own constitutional mandate (Article 172); truncation touches the federal character (identified as Basic Structure in S.R. Bommai v. Union of India, 1994). [S1]
- PRS India analysis flags that if an Assembly is dissolved early, the Bill does not specify the governing authority during the gap — potentially requiring President's Rule (Article 356) or a caretaker government by convention. [S1]
Political / Governance
- The proposed no-confidence motion restriction could insulate a weak government from parliamentary accountability in its final year — the very period when alternates may command a majority. [S3]
- Supporters argue it prevents political instability and election fatigue, citing multiple state elections that disrupt policy implementation and the model code of conduct cycle. [S4]
- Several PRIs already operate under such restrictions (Tamil Nadu, and other states with varying provisions), cited by Chaudhary as precedent — but PRI governance ≠ parliamentary democracy at the national or state level. [S3]
Economic
- Simultaneous elections are projected to significantly reduce election expenditure — both public (ECI logistics) and private (political party spending). [S4]
- Repeated enforcement of the Model Code of Conduct (MCC) at different times across states stalls central and state policy announcements; ONOE would limit MCC disruptions to a single cycle. [S4]
- However, mid-term dissolution followed by elections only for the residual term introduces a cost-benefit asymmetry for shorter residual elections. [S1]
Administrative / Federal
- One-time synchronisation requires truncation of ongoing State Assembly terms — a coercive federal step that states with non-BJP governments have resisted. [S3]
- The JPC has conducted country-wide consultations, but opposition parties and several state governments have raised objections about the democratic mandate of elected assemblies being curtailed. [S3]
- Implementation requires the Election Commission of India (ECI) to simultaneously manage elections for 543 LS seats + ~4,000+ state assembly seats — massive logistical and EVMs/VVPAT scaling requirement. [S4]
Ethical / Democratic
- Restricting a no-confidence motion in the last year of a term arguably immunises the executive from parliamentary oversight precisely when accountability matters most — before elections. [S3]
- The doctrine of responsible government (a Basic Structure element per Kesavananda Bharati) requires the executive to retain the confidence of the legislature at all times; a time-bar weakens this. [S1]
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- December 17, 2024: Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 and UT Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2024 introduced in Lok Sabha. [S1][S2]
- December 20, 2024: Both Bills referred to Joint Parliamentary Committee. [S2]
- 2025 (ongoing): JPC held 16+ meetings in Delhi and conducted nationwide consultations with constitutional experts, state governments, political parties, and civil society. [S3]
- February 19, 2026: JPC chairperson P. P. Chaudhary publicly disclosed deliberation on no-confidence motion time-bar provision and confirmed the "appointed date" mechanism for 2029 implementation. [S3]
- Mechanism confirmed: If enacted, State Assembly terms starting after the appointed date will be truncated to sync with 2034 Lok Sabha polls. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 is the legislative instrument for One Nation One Election. [S1]
- It was introduced in Lok Sabha on December 17, 2024. [S1]
- The companion Bill is the Union Territories Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2024 (covers UT Legislatures). [S2]
- JPC Chairperson is P. P. Chaudhary, a BJP Lok Sabha MP. [S3]
- The "appointed date" under the Bill is the date of first sitting of the new Lok Sabha after a general election. [S1]
- Under the Bill, mid-term dissolution triggers elections only for the remainder of the 5-year term, NOT a fresh full term. [S1]
- The proposed no-confidence motion bar applies when the incumbent government has ≤ 1 year remaining in term. [S3]
- Tamil Nadu Panchayats Act, 1994 is an existing law that bars no-confidence motions in the last year of a panchayat's term — cited as precedent for the proposed national provision. [S3]
- The High-Level Committee on ONOE was chaired by former President Ram Nath Kovind. [S4]
- Collective responsibility of the Council of Ministers to the Lok Sabha is enshrined in Article 75(3) of the Constitution. [S1]
- The Bill proposes to insert a new Article 82A to enable synchronisation of election cycles. [S1]
- If the Bill is enacted before 2029 elections, the first full synchronised election cycle would be 2034. [S3]
- The JPC had held 16 meetings in Delhi as of February 2026. [S3]
- Article 172 governs the duration of State Legislative Assemblies (5-year term). [S1]
- The nodal ministry for the Bill is the Ministry of Law and Justice. [S4]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II primarily (Parliament and State Legislatures, Constitutional Amendments, Federalism, Electoral reforms).
Syllabus headings: - Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business - Separation of powers between various organs - Appointment to various Constitutional posts, powers, functions and responsibilities of various Constitutional Bodies - Devolution of powers and finances up to local levels and challenges therein - Issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure, devolution of powers
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The Joint Parliamentary Committee examining the Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 is considering restricting no-confidence motions in the last year of a government's tenure. Critically evaluate this proposal in the light of constitutional principles of responsible government and parliamentary sovereignty." 2. "One Nation One Election promises governance efficiency but risks undermining federal principles. Discuss, with reference to the specific mechanisms proposed in the Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024." 3. "Synchronisation of elections through the truncation of State Assembly terms raises the question of whether electoral convenience can override the democratic mandate. Analyse the constitutional and political challenges involved."
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| No-Confidence Motion (Article 75/164) | The proposed restriction directly targets this mechanism; need to know procedure, voting, examples (1999 Vajpayee govt) |
| Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) | Interacts with government stability; defections often precede no-confidence motions |
| President's Rule (Article 356) | Bill's gap-filling mechanism for dissolved assemblies; S.R. Bommai judgment crucial |
| Basic Structure Doctrine | Federalism and democratic accountability are Basic Structure elements potentially affected by the Bill |
| Model Code of Conduct | A core argument for ONOE; understand its scope, duration, and impact on policy announcements |
| Election Commission of India — Powers and Functions | ECI's role expands massively under ONOE; Article 324, logistical challenges |
| Panchayati Raj Institutions (73rd Amendment) | Cited as precedent for no-confidence motion bar; understand Part IX, Articles 243A-243O |
| Kovind Committee Report (2024) | Primary recommendation source for the Bill; key arguments and dissents |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong Bill number: The ONOE Bill is the 129th Amendment, not the 128th (which dealt with Women's Reservation) — aspirants frequently conflate these two recent landmark amendments. [S1]
- Two Bills, not one: ONOE requires two Bills — the Constitution amendment (for Lok Sabha + State Assemblies) AND the UT Laws (Amendment) Bill for UT Legislatures. Treating it as a single Bill is a common error. [S2]
- "Appointed date" confusion: The appointed date is the first sitting of the new Lok Sabha, not the date of the election itself or the date the President issues the notification. [S1]
- No-confidence motion article: Article 75(3) governs CoM's collective responsibility to Lok Sabha; Article 164(2) is the state-level equivalent. Do not cite Article 85 (dissolution) for no-confidence motions. [S1]
- Tamil Nadu PRI precedent ≠ constitutional bar: The Tamil Nadu Panchayats Act restriction is a statutory restriction on PRIs — a local body, not a constitutional government; treating it as direct constitutional precedent for Parliament is misleading. [S3]
11. Sources
- [S1] The Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 — Bill Summary — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-constitution-one-hundred-and-twenty-ninth-amendment-bill-2024 — (Tier 1 / PRS India)
- [S2] Joint Committee on the Constitution (129th Amendment) Bill, 2024 — Parliamentary Committee Page — https://prsindia.org/parliamentary-committees/joint-committee-on-the-constitution-one-hundred-and-twenty%E2%80%93ninth-amendment-bill-2024-and-the-union-territories-laws-amendment-bill-2024 — (Tier 1 / PRS India)
- [S3] Simultaneous polls panel mulling curbs on no-trust motion — The Hindu, February 19, 2026, Article excerpt supplied as primary source — (Tier 4)
- [S4] One Nation, One Election — PIB Press Release — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=2085082 — (Tier 1 / PIB)