http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/no-plaything/99/

No plaything

Today, there is only one Preamble, that which is enforced by the
amendment that came into force in January 1977.

Written by Upendra Baxi | Posted: February 4, 2015 12:00 am

Justice M. Hidayatullah memorably wondered whether our Constitution
was the "plaything of a special majority". That was in Sajjan Singh vs
State of Rajasthan in 1965. In 1967, in I.C. Golaknath and Others vs
State of Punjab and Another, the Supreme Court ruled that the
fundamental rights enshrined in Part III of the Constitution may not
be taken away or abrogated by Parliament through the amendment of the
Constitution under Article 368. In 1973, the judgment on Kesavananda
Bharati vs State of Kerala articulated the doctrine of basic structure
and the essential features of the Constitution, laying down that
"secularism", "socialism" as well as the Preamble to the Constitution
(which may not be amended unless it was according to prescribed
constitutional procedure) were integral to them. With effect from
January 3, 1977, the Constitution (Forty-second Amendment) Act amended
the Preamble and India was declared a sovereign, secular, socialist,
democratic republic. Although the 42nd amendment was reversed in key
aspects by the post-Emergency 44th amendment, which took effect from
June 20, 1979, the amended Preamble was not changed. It has remained
unchanged since 1977.

This snapshot of constitutional and legal positions has unfortunately
become necessary because the ministry of information and broadcasting
recently released an advertisement with Republic Day greetings and an
inset of the unamended Preamble. Instead of a public and national
apology for its obvious mistake, it reportedly defended the release by
saying that the original Preamble, as prepared by illustrious figures
such as Nehru and Ambedkar, was of historical interest.

The ministry's action has been widely deplored by the political
opposition as well as by some leading human rights activists. In the
wake of the Shiv Sena's strident insistence that the Constitution be
amended to delete the two "offensive" words, "secularism" and
"socialism", from the Preamble, Parliamentary Affairs Minister
Venkaiah Naidu said "secularism is in our blood" and that the
government had "no intention to drop the word". Prime Minister
Narendra Modi, however, has not spoken on the matter so far.

Going strictly by constitutional law, there is nothing called an
original Preamble. True, when it was adopted, the Constitution did not
include the terms "socialist" and "secular" as it now does. And it
does so because the Supreme Court of India willed it before Parliament
and the political executive did. Today, there is only one Preamble,
that which is enforced by the amendment that came into force in
January 1977. No ministry at the Central or the state level is legally
competent to say otherwise. The Constitution may not be amended by the
executive. Only Parliament has the legal power to amend and even this
would be valid if the justices of the Supreme Court were to hold that
the amendment did not offend the basic structure or the essential
features of the Constitution.

The right to freedom of speech and expression, under the 44th
amendment, may not be taken away or abrogated by an executive
proclamation of emergency, and a citizen may pursue that right,
subject to other reasonable restrictions that Parliament may impose on
the grounds stated under Article 19(a) and validated by the Supreme
Court. Parliament remains free to initiate an amendment under Article
368. Although the better view is that any amendment of the basic
structure is simply forbidden since Kesavananda, the Preamble may be
amended by a simple majority in Parliament.

In any event, the legislators and ministers have to take an oath or
affirmation as prescribed by the Third Schedule of the Constitution.
They are thus duty-bound to observe "the Constitution as by law
established". It cannot be denied by anyone that the duty extends to
the Preamble, which is now the law that binds until it is changed. The
Constitution and the court are silent about the consequences when the
oath is demonstrably violated. Whether or not the large majority of
un-oathed citizens may recall such legislators or the concerned
legislators and ministers may cease to hold office, this much is
clear: no Central ministry may issue a public advertisement that
violates the Constitution as by law established.

The 42nd amendment also introduces Part IVA (Article 51A), which
enjoins all citizens to observe their fundamental duties. These
include the duty to "cherish and follow the noble ideals which
inspired our national struggle for freedom" and to "value and preserve
the rich heritage of our composite culture". However one may interpret
these, it is clear that constitutional secularism is a direct result
of these ideals. So is the notion of a "composite culture". The
Constitution does not contemplate an unreligious society. A social
order that venerates plurality for its own sake is the constitutional
idea of India. There may be, and are, other ideas about India but an
abiding regard for fundamental duties alone will make these
constitutional, not the other way around.

Finally, it has been argued that socialism is made redundant by the
advent of hyperglobalisation and neoliberalism. But the constitutional
perspectives on Indian development forbid such a conclusion. Articles
38 and 39 still remain the guiding directive principles of state
policy. The elimination of "economic inequality" still remains our
national goal. The MGNREGA, and the Food Security Act, despite some
proposed amendments, and the Jan Dhan Yojana are the direct results of
Article 39(b), which commands "that the ownership and control of the
material resources of the community are so distributed as best to
subserve the common good". Many economic and national policies still
emanate from Article 39(d), which directs that "the operation of the
economic system does not result in the concentration of wealth and
means of production to the common detriment". The constitutional idea
of development may be defined in one sentence: development programmes
and policies that disproportionately benefit the constitutionally
worst off are just.
What is more, the Supreme Court has begun to give many directives the
status of fundamental rights under Article 21 -- the right to live with
dignity itself has now become a fundamental and basic human right. In
its social action, it has been practising demosprudence over jaded
jurisprudence. Not only has it, in Justice Goswami's immortal words,
become the "last refuge for the bewildered and the oppressed", but it
has also emerged as a national policy actor, co-governing the nation.
We do not need political "hacktivism" but social activism in
preserving what has been bequeathed to us so wisely and well by the
Constitution makers and the Supreme Court.

The writer is professor of law, University of Warwick,and former vice
chancellor of Universities of South Gujarat and Delhi

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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