HomeNewsOpinionA Constitutional amendment aiming to uphold probity in public life, or to serve as a tool of distraction?

A Constitutional amendment aiming to uphold probity in public life, or to serve as a tool of distraction?

Government’s effort to amend the Constitution to mandate resignation of ministers, CMs or even the PM if they are arrested for 30 straight days, has evoked fierce opposition from its political rivals. While the BJP claims the legislation’s goal is to clean up public life, the opposition sees it as a mortal threat, given their distrust of enforcement agencies. The Bills have a long way to go but the moot point is will it change the political narrative in the forthcoming election season

August 22, 2025 / 15:05 IST
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Amit Shah
Declaring the intention behind the move was to check the decline in morality in public life and inject integrity in the body politic, Home Minister Amit Shah said.

At a time when the combined might of opposition stalled Parliament and raised the heat over the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls in Bihar, the Narendra Modi government sought to turn the tables by introducing a Constitutional amendment.

Three Bills, to amend the Constitution, seek to mandate that a Chief Minister, Ministers, and even the Prime Minister, must be removed from office if they are detained for 30 straight days for an offence punishable by at least five years in prison. The proposed Bills would make this removal automatic once the threshold is reached, regardless of the legal status of their case. However, the person so removed can be reinstated.

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The move occurred on the penultimate day of the five-week monsoon session, which ended on August 21. The sittings of the July 21-August 21 session were severely affected, with the opposition stalling proceedings over the electoral rolls revision, which it charged had deleted many eligible voters ahead of the state assembly polls due this autumn.

BJP’s stated rationale