Preamble politics
There
are rising concerns about a possible amendment to the Preamble to the
Constitution to delete the
words
“socialism” and “secularism”. By V. VENKATESAN
RARELY do Supreme
Court judges respond to contemporary political issues while hearing matters
brought before them. The exercise of restraint helps them hear cases having a
bearing on such issues with objectivity and without a semblance of bias. But
when they make certain spontaneous observations on current issues in the course
of hearing a matter, they do so
indirectly and
sometimes in exasperation. Thus, while hearing a public interest litigation
petition seeking recognition for
Christian courts set
up under the “Canon Law” so that decrees of dissolution of marriage granted by
such courts could
become valid and
binding, Justice Vikramjit Sen observed on February 10 that “India is a secular
country, but I don’t know
how long it will
remain so”.
It would not be an exaggeration to say
that Justice Sen had in mind the immediate political context while making these
remarks, as the dust
created by the controversy over the Narendra Modi government’s move to justify
its failure to respect
the 1976 amendment to
the Preamble to the Constitution had hardly settled. The Constitution 42nd
Amendment Act
introduced the words
“socialist secular” between the words “sovereign” and “democratic republic”,
which “the people of
India solemnly
resolved to constitute India into”. The National Democratic Alliance (NDA)
government issued an
advertisement in the
newspapers on January 26 on the occasion of Republic Day using an image of the
Preamble to the
Constitution without
the words “socialist secular”.
The Press Information Bureau’s (PIB)
Director-General, Frank Noronha, described the advertisement as an artistic
depiction of the original version of the historical document. “I believe that
the new rendering of the amendment is not available. Also, it has been used as
a watermark to give an aesthetic sense to the design,” he told the media. Union
Ministers were not so circumspect. At least two of them, Minister of State for
Information and Broadcasting Rajyavardhan Rathore and Communications and
Information Technology Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad, asked whether the
governments that existed before the Preamble was amended were not secular. They
favoured a debate on the subject. Sanjay Raut, Shiv Sena Member of Parliament,
demanded the deletion of the two words from the Preamble.
When the controversy
threatened to sully the image of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led
government and give the
impression that the
advertisement amounted to a violation of the oath taken by the Ministers to
respect the Constitution,
Ministers Arun Jaitley
and M. Venkaiah Naidu and BJP president Amit Shah denied any move to amend the
Preamble a
second time to delete
the two words. Jaitley instructed the Information and Broadcasting Ministry to
issue advertisements
carrying the amended Preamble
in future. Ravi Shankar Prasad denied that he was in favour of the deletion of
the two
words. Amidst all
these, Prime Minister Narendra Modi maintained a mysterious silence on the
issue, which added to the
prevailing suspicion
of a hidden agenda to amend the Preamble.
However, the
controversy has helped revive an understanding of the 42nd Amendment’s
contribution to India’s
constitutional
history. The 42nd Amendment almost rewrote the Constitution, making Parliament
the supreme sovereign
body. In the words of
the historian Granville Austin, the amendment had four main purposes: to
further protect from legal
challenges Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi’s 1971 election to Parliament and future elections of
her followers’ and hers; to
strengthen the Central
government vis-à-vis the State governments and its capability to rule
the country as a unitary, not a
federal, system; to
give maximum protection from judicial challenge to social revolutionary
legislation, whether intended
sincerely or to cloak
authoritarian purpose; and “to trim” the judiciary, as one Congressman put it,
so as to “make it difficult
for the court to upset
her policy in regard to many matters”.
The amendment of the
Preamble hardly fulfilled any of these purposes. Yet, the debate on the 42nd
Amendment in both
Houses of Parliament
devoted considerable time to it. Looking back, it appears as though the authors
of the amendment
included the changes
in the Preamble in order to make the entire amendment appear benign. In this,
they were not
successful. The 44th
Amendment to the Constitution, enacted by the Janata Party government in 1978,
repealed most of the
changes introduced by
the 42nd Amendment, except those in the Preamble.
Rather than remove the
words added to the Preamble, the 45th Amendment Bill sought to define them.
Thus, the Bill said
“republic”, as
qualified by the expression “secular”, meant a republic in which there was
equal respect for all religions; and
the expression
“republic” as qualified by the expression “socialist”, meant a republic in
which there was freedom from all
forms of exploitation,
social, political and economic.
The definitions, which
Law Minister Shanti Bhushan had sought to provide then, failed to muster enough
support in
Parliament to ensure
their passage as part of the 44th Amendment Act. Speaking on the Bill in both
Houses, many members
felt that mere respect
alone would not give the minorities freedom and protection. The definitions, it
was felt, would lead to
conflict of
interpretation if any disputes arose. There were other objections, too. As a
result, Parliament did not find it
necessary to define
the two words alone in the Preamble. But there was no demand from the MPs to
delete these words from the Preamble because they appeared, as the
constitutional scholar D.D. Basu opined, to be vague, or “had been productive
of more mischief than benefit”. The official objective
of the government in making the amendment in 1976 was to make explicit what was
already provided in the Constitution
but which, in the absence of such emphasis, was going to be denigrated by
“vested interests to promote their selfish ends”.
Apart from the words “secular” and
“socialist”, one more word was introduced in the Preamble in 1976. The pre-1976
version resolved to
secure to all its citizens “fraternity assuring the dignity of the individual
and the unity of the nation”. The
amended version read
“unity and integrity of the nation,” with the word “integrity” included through
an amendment.
In his book Working
A Democratic Constitution: The Indian Experience (1999), Austin mentions
that A.R. Antulay (who was a member of the Rajya Sabha from 1976 to 1980) took
credit for the inclusion of the word “secular” and credited the then Congress president,
D.K. Barooah, for providing the word “socialist”. Antulay and Barooah were
members of the Swaran Singh Committee, which
initially prepared the proposals for the 42nd Amendment. Austin considers
Antulay’s claim
consistent with his
Muslim identity.
Although Indira Gandhi herself saw the
amendment of the Preamble as nothing more than providing a “frame of
reference”, Antulay might have suggested the idea as a result of his
perceptions as a member of the minority community. The recent controversy shows
that the presence of the two words in the Preamble has more than symbolic
significance. A study of the debates in Parliament on the issue in 1976 shows
that many MPs indeed assumed it was so.
(Published in Frontline.in)
No comments:
Post a Comment