Dr. Ram Prasath Manohar IAS

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Dr. Ram

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Dr. Ram

Study Materials

General Studies - Polity

Basic Structure Doctrine

Basic-Structure-Doctrine

1. What is the Basic Structure Doctrine?

  • The Basic Structure Doctrine says that Parliament can amend the Constitution, but cannot change its essential framework.
  • This principle was established in Kesavananda Bharati vs State of Kerala (1973).
  • It acts as a safety shield to protect the Constitution’s soul from political misuse.

2. Why did the Doctrine emerge?

  • Between 1950 and 1971, Parliament passed many amendments affecting Fundamental Rights.
  • Tensions grew between the government’s reform agenda and the Supreme Court’s protection of rights, leading to major cases:
Timeline:
  1. Shankari Prasad (1951) – Parliament can amend FRs.
  2. Sajjan Singh (1965) – Same view repeated.
  3. Golaknath (1967) – Parliament cannot amend FRs.
  4. 24th Amendment (1971) – Govt restores amendment power.
  5. Kesavananda Bharati (1973) – Middle path:
  • Amendments allowed
  • But cannot damage the Constitution’s core → Basic Structure born.

3. Landmark Cases that Shaped the Doctrine

Case Key Takeaway 
Shankari Prasad (1951) Parliament can amend all parts, including. FRs.
Sajjan Singh (1965) Supported Parliament’s power again.
Golaknath (1967) Parliament cannot amend FRs (reversed later).
Kesavananda Bharati (1973) Created Basic Structure Doctrine.
Indira Gandhi vs Raj Narain (1975) Free & fair elections = Basic Structure.
Minerva Mills (1980) Judicial review & balance between FRs and DPSPs = Basic Structure.
Waman Rao (1981) Post-1973 laws in the 9th Schedule are open to judicial review.
S.R. Bommai (1994) Federalism & secularism protected.
Indra Sawhney (1992) Equality and 50% ceiling upheld.
I.R. Coelho (2007) 9th Schedule laws are invalid if they harm the Basic Structure.
Kihoto Hollohan (1993) Democracy & free elections upheld.

4. What forms the Basic Structure?

(There is no fixed list, but courts have identified core elements.) Widely accepted components:
  • Supremacy of the Constitution
  • Republican & democratic forms of government
  • Secularism
  • Federalism
  • Rule of law
  • Separation of powers
  • Judicial review
  • Harmony between Fundamental Rights & DPSPs
  • Independence of the judiciary
  • Free & fair elections
  • Unity & integrity of India
  • Parliamentary system
  • Welfare state
  • Dignity of the individual
  • Limited amending power of Parliament

5. Significance of the Doctrine

Why it matters:
  1. Protects Fundamental Rights Prevents Parliament from diluting freedoms like equality, liberty, and free speech.
  2. Maintains Constitutional Supremacy No temporary government can distort the permanent document.
  3. Ensures separation of powers Judiciary remains a check on legislative overreach.
  4. Keeps democracy functioning Free elections, judicial review, and federalism stay safe.
  5. Makes the Constitution a “living document” It allows changes, but with responsibility.
  6. Encourages judicial activism when needed Especially against arbitrary amendments.

6. Criticism of the Doctrine

Even though widely praised, it faces strong criticism:
  1. Not written anywhere Critics say the doctrine is judge-made, not Constitution-made.
  2. Vague and open-ended No fixed definition → courts can keep expanding it.
  3. Judicial overreach Courts are accused of acting like a “third chamber of Parliament.”
  4. Weakens Parliamentary sovereignty Parliament’s amending power is restricted.
  5. Ambiguity in what is ‘basic’ Every judge interprets differently, creating inconsistency.

7. Why the Doctrine Still Survives

Despite criticism, it endures because:
  • It prevented abusive amendments during the Emergency.
  • It ensures checks and balances.
  • It protects the idea of India envisioned in 1950.
  • It gives the Constitution stability and soul.
 
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