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Minerva Mills (1980) limited amending power: (a) Context: Challenge to 42nd Amendment provisions giving Parliament unlimited amending power, DPSP primacy over FRs, (b) Supreme Court holding: (i) Parliament's amending power under Article 368 is limited; cannot destroy basic structure of Constitution, (ii) Balance between Fundamental Rights (Part III) and Directive Principles (Part IV) is part of basic structure; Parliament cannot give absolute primacy to one over other, (iii) Constitutional supremacy prevails over parliamentary sovereignty; Constitution, not Parliament, is supreme, (c) Applications: (i) Subsequent amendments: Must preserve basic structure; courts can strike down amendments violating core features, (ii) Judicial review: Courts retain power to examine constitutional amendments for basic structure compliance, (iii) Rights protection: Fundamental Rights forming part of basic structure remain protected against legislative excess, (d) Rationale: (i) Constitutional identity: Basic structure preserves core values defining Indian constitutionalism, (ii) Democratic safeguards: Prevents transient parliamentary majorities from destroying foundational democratic features, (iii) Rights protection: Ensures Fundamental Rights forming part of basic structure remain protected, (e) Illustrates constitutional supremacy: Basic structure doctrine ensures Constitution, not transient majorities, supreme; amendment power enables adaptation but cannot destroy core identity essential to constitutional democracy.