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Answer: True
Fundamental Duties during Emergency: (a) Constitutional provision: Article 51A (Fundamental Duties) inserted by 42nd Amendment (1976), not suspended during Emergency, (b) Application during Emergency: (i) Fundamental Duties continue to apply: Citizens reminded of responsibilities to uphold Constitution, promote harmony, defend country, preserve heritage, (ii) Complementary to rights: Duties remind citizens that rights entail responsibilities, especially during crisis, (iii) Democratic culture: Duties foster constitutional culture, civic responsibility, even during Emergency, (c) Rationale: (i) Constitutional morality: Duties reinforce constitutional values, democratic culture, even during crisis, (ii) Civic responsibility: Citizens reminded of role in preserving democracy, constitutional order, (iii) Balanced governance: Rights protected, duties reminded; balance between individual liberty, collective responsibility, (d) Applications: (i) Post-1976: Fundamental Duties invoked in cases involving national integrity, communal harmony, even during crisis situations, (ii) Civic education: Duties used to promote constitutional values, democratic participation, (e) Illustrates constitutional culture: Fundamental Duties reinforce constitutional values, civic responsibility, even during Emergency; balance between rights protection, duty reminder fosters democratic culture.
Answer: True
Objective material requirement under SR Bommai: (a) Context: Challenge to President's Rule imposition based on political considerations, not genuine constitutional breakdown, (b) Supreme Court holding: (i) Governor's report must be based on objective material of constitutional breakdown (e.g., loss of majority verified through floor test, breakdown of law and order), (ii) Cannot be based on: Political considerations, party affiliations, subjective assessments, unverified media reports, (iii) Judicial review: Courts can examine whether report based on objective material, not political considerations, (c) Applications: (i) Rameshwar Prasad (2006): Struck down Bihar Assembly dissolution based on unverified media reports, political considerations, (ii) Recent Governor cases (2022-2024): Reiterated objective standards, struck down politically motivated Article 356 invocations, (d) Rationale: (i) Democratic legitimacy: Elected State governments represent people's will; Article 356 exceptional measure, not routine political tool, (ii) Constitutional morality: Governor as constitutional functionary, not political agent, (iii) Federal balance: Protects State autonomy against arbitrary Centre overreach via gubernatorial discretion, (e) Illustrates constitutional federalism: Objective material requirement protects State autonomy; judicial review ensures Article 356 used for genuine constitutional breakdown, not political convenience.
Answer: True
Judicial review of rights suspension during Emergency: (a) Pre-44th Amendment: Limited judicial review of Presidential orders suspending rights under Article 359, (b) Post-44th Amendment safeguards (1978): (i) Articles 20-21 cannot be suspended even during Emergency, (ii) Courts can examine whether Presidential orders comply with constitutional limits, including non-suspension of Articles 20-21, (iii) Judicial review scope: Procedural compliance, relevance to Emergency purposes, constitutional principles compliance, (c) Applications: (i) Post-1978: Courts more willing to strike down Presidential orders suspending non-suspendable rights, (ii) Rights protection: Ensures core rights (Articles 20-21) protected even during Emergency, (d) Rationale: (i) Constitutional supremacy: Presidential orders subject to constitutional limits, judicial oversight, (ii) Rights protection: Core rights essential for human dignity, rule of law, even during crisis, (iii) Democratic accountability: Courts ensure Emergency powers used for genuine crisis response, not rights suppression, (e) Illustrates calibrated rights protection: Enabling crisis response while preserving core rights; judicial review ensures Emergency powers comply with constitutional limits, not arbitrary rights suppression.
Answer: True
Article 356 political misuse and SR Bommai impact: (a) Pre-SR Bommai era: Article 356 used over 100 times, often for political purposes (dismissing opposition State governments), (b) SR Bommai safeguards (1994): (i) Objective material requirement: Governor's report must be based on verified facts, not subjective opinion, (ii) Floor test principle: Majority tested on Assembly floor, not Governor's assessment, (iii) Judicial review: Courts can examine whether proclamation based on objective material, not political considerations, (iv) Assembly revival: If proclamation struck down, Assembly can be revived with Ministry restored, (c) Post-SR Bommai impact: (i) Reduced political misuse: Governments more cautious in recommending President's Rule; courts more willing to strike down politically motivated proclamations, (ii) Federal balance: Strengthened State autonomy against arbitrary Centre overreach, (iii) Democratic legitimacy: Enhanced public trust in federal governance, (d) Applications: (i) Recent Governor cases (2022-2024): Courts reiterate SR Bommai principles, strike down politically motivated Article 356 invocations, (ii) Political accountability: Governments must justify Article 356 with objective material, not political convenience, (e) Illustrates constitutional learning: SR Bommai represents institutional learning from political misuse of Article 356; safeguards balance Union's duty to preserve constitutional order with State autonomy, democratic mandate.
Answer: True
Emergency and basic structure doctrine: (a) Constitutional principle: Basic structure doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati, 1973) holds that Parliament cannot amend Constitution to destroy core features (democracy, secularism, federalism, judicial review, rule of law, dignity), (b) Application to Emergency: (i) Even during Emergency, basic structure cannot be destroyed; Emergency powers subject to basic structure limits, (ii) Actions during Emergency (legislation, executive orders) cannot alter core constitutional features, (iii) Judicial review: Courts can examine whether Emergency actions comply with basic structure, not just procedural compliance, (c) Applications: (i) Post-1978: Emergency actions subject to basic structure review; courts strike down actions violating core features, (ii) Federal balance: Ensures Emergency powers used for genuine crisis response, not destruction of constitutional identity, (d) Rationale: (i) Constitutional supremacy: Basic structure preserves constitutional identity against transient majorities, even during crisis, (ii) Rights protection: Core features essential for rights protection, democratic governance, even during Emergency, (iii) Democratic legitimacy: Emergency powers enable crisis response but cannot alter foundational constitutional values, (e) Illustrates constitutional resilience: Basic structure doctrine ensures Constitution's core identity preserved even during crisis; balance between crisis response capacity and preservation of constitutional democracy.
Answer: True
Judicial review of Governor's report: (a) Context: Challenge to President's Rule imposition based on Governor's reports in multiple States, (b) Supreme Court holding: (i) Governor's report not final; subject to judicial review, (ii) Courts can examine: (a) Whether report based on objective material, not subjective opinion, (b) Procedural compliance (e.g., floor test conducted), (c) Constitutional principles compliance (e.g., secularism, democracy), (iii) Courts cannot re-appreciate material, substitute judicial wisdom for Presidential satisfaction, (c) Applications: (i) Rameshwar Prasad (2006): Struck down Bihar Assembly dissolution based on unverified media reports, political considerations, (ii) Recent Governor cases (2022-2024): Reiterated objective standards, judicial review scope, (d) Rationale: (i) Constitutional supremacy: Governor's report subject to constitutional limits, judicial oversight, (ii) Federal balance: Protects State autonomy against arbitrary Centre overreach via gubernatorial discretion, (iii) Democratic legitimacy: Ensures Article 356 used for genuine constitutional breakdown, not political ends, (e) Illustrates constitutional federalism: Judicial review of Governor's report protects State autonomy; courts ensure constitutional compliance without usurping executive discretion.
Answer: True
Cabinet advice requirement for Emergency: (a) Pre-44th Amendment: President could proclaim Emergency on advice of Prime Minister alone, (b) 44th Amendment safeguard (1978): President can proclaim Emergency only on written advice of Cabinet (Council of Ministers), not PM alone, (c) Rationale: (i) Collective responsibility: Ensures Emergency decision reflects collective Cabinet wisdom, not individual Prime Minister's discretion, (ii) Democratic accountability: Cabinet collectively accountable to Parliament for Emergency decision, (iii) Prevent misuse: Prevents Prime Minister from imposing Emergency for political ends without Cabinet consensus, (d) Applications: (i) Post-1978: No National Emergency proclaimed, reflecting effectiveness of safeguards, (ii) Political accountability: Cabinet must justify Emergency to Parliament, people, enhancing democratic legitimacy, (e) Illustrates calibrated emergency powers: Cabinet advice requirement ensures Emergency reflects collective executive wisdom; balance between crisis response capacity and prevention of political misuse.
Answer: True
Judicial review scope under SR Bommai: (a) Context: Challenge to President's Rule imposition in multiple States, (b) Supreme Court holding: (i) Judicial review permitted: Courts can examine whether Presidential satisfaction based on objective material, not mala fide or political considerations, (ii) Limited scope: Courts cannot re-appreciate material, substitute judicial wisdom for Presidential satisfaction; review limited to procedural compliance, relevance of material, constitutional principles compliance, (iii) Floor test principle: Courts can examine whether floor test conducted, results respected, as objective verification of majority, (c) Applications: (i) Rameshwar Prasad (2006): Struck down Bihar Assembly dissolution based on unverified media reports, political considerations, (ii) Recent Governor cases (2022-2024): Reiterated objective standards, limited judicial review scope, (d) Rationale: (i) Separation of powers: Courts respect executive/legislative domain while ensuring constitutional compliance, (ii) Federal balance: Judicial review protects State autonomy without usurping Presidential discretion, (iii) Democratic legitimacy: Courts ensure Article 356 used for genuine constitutional breakdown, not political ends, (e) Illustrates calibrated judicial review: Courts guard constitutional boundaries without substituting policy judgment; balance between judicial oversight and executive discretion in federal crises.
Answer: True
Article 19 automatic suspension: (a) Article 358 text: During Emergency, Article 19 freedoms automatically suspended for duration of Emergency, (b) Key features: (i) Automatic suspension: No separate Presidential order required (unlike Article 359 for other rights), (ii) Scope: Applies only to laws/restrictions related to Emergency purposes (war, external aggression, armed rebellion), (iii) Duration: Suspension lasts for Emergency duration; Article 19 freedoms automatically restored post-Emergency, (c) 44th Amendment safeguard (1978): Suspension applies only to laws/restrictions related to Emergency; unrelated restrictions remain subject to judicial review, (d) Applications: (i) 1962, 1971 Emergencies: Restrictions on speech, assembly related to defence, security, (ii) Post-1978: Courts examine whether restrictions genuinely related to Emergency, not political suppression, (e) Illustrates calibrated rights suspension: Enabling crisis response while preventing arbitrary rights suppression; balance between national security and individual liberty through scope limitation, judicial oversight.
Answer: True
SR Bommai floor test requirement: (a) Context: Challenge to President's Rule imposition without floor test in multiple States, (b) Supreme Court holding: (i) Floor test primary method to test whether Ministry enjoys majority support in Assembly, (ii) Governor cannot dismiss Ministry based on subjective assessment, media reports, political considerations without floor test, (iii) Floor test ensures democratic verification: Elected representatives, not appointed Governor, decide government fate, (c) Applications: (i) Hung Assembly scenarios: Governor must invite leader most likely to command majority, verify through floor test, (ii) Judicial review: Courts can examine whether floor test conducted fairly, results respected, (iii) Federal balance: Protects State autonomy against arbitrary Centre overreach via gubernatorial discretion, (d) Rationale: (i) Democratic legitimacy: Elected Assembly represents people's will; floor test ensures Ministry reflects Assembly majority, (ii) Constitutional morality: Governor as constitutional functionary, not political agent, (iii) Judicial oversight: Courts ensure Article 356 used for genuine constitutional breakdown, not political ends, (e) Illustrates constitutional federalism: Floor test as democratic standard ensures State governments reflect Assembly majority; judicial review protects State autonomy against arbitrary Centre overreach.
Answer: True
Article 352 special majority requirement: (a) Constitutional text: Emergency proclamation must be approved by both Houses by special majority: (i) Majority of total membership of each House, AND (ii) 2/3 of members present and voting, (b) 44th Amendment safeguard (1978): Changed from simple majority to special majority to prevent narrow majorities from imposing Emergency, (c) Rationale: (i) Democratic consensus: Special majority ensures Emergency reflects broad political agreement, not narrow partisan interest, (ii) Crisis legitimacy: High threshold enhances legitimacy of Emergency measures, public acceptance, (iii) Prevent misuse: Prevents ruling party from imposing Emergency without broad support, (d) Applications: (i) Post-1978: No National Emergency proclaimed, reflecting effectiveness of safeguards, (ii) Political accountability: Government must build broad consensus for Emergency, enhancing democratic legitimacy, (e) Illustrates calibrated emergency powers: Special majority ensures Emergency reflects genuine national consensus; balance between crisis response capacity and prevention of political misuse.
Answer: True
Article 19 suspension during Emergency: (a) Article 358 text: During Emergency, Article 19 freedoms automatically suspended for duration of Emergency, (b) Scope of suspension: (i) Applies only to laws/restrictions related to Emergency purposes (war, external aggression, armed rebellion), (ii) Does not permit arbitrary restrictions unrelated to Emergency, (iii) Post-Emergency: Article 19 freedoms automatically restored, (c) 44th Amendment safeguard (1978): Suspension applies only to laws/restrictions related to Emergency; unrelated restrictions remain subject to judicial review, (d) Applications: (i) 1962, 1971 Emergencies: Restrictions on speech, assembly related to defence, security, (ii) Post-1978: Courts examine whether restrictions genuinely related to Emergency, not political suppression, (e) Illustrates calibrated rights suspension: Enabling crisis response while preventing arbitrary rights suppression; balance between national security and individual liberty through scope limitation, judicial oversight.
Answer: True
Judicial review of Emergency proclamation: (a) Pre-44th Amendment: Limited judicial review; courts reluctant to examine Presidential satisfaction, (b) Post-44th Amendment (1978): (i) Courts can examine whether Emergency proclamation based on objective material, not mala fide or political considerations, (ii) Judicial review scope: Relevance of material to constitutional breakdown, procedural compliance, constitutional principles compliance, (c) Applications: (i) SR Bommai principles applied: Courts examine whether proclamation based on objective material, not political considerations, (ii) Recent cases: Courts more willing to scrutinize Emergency-like situations (e.g., pandemic restrictions) for constitutional compliance, (d) Rationale: (i) Constitutional supremacy: Emergency powers subject to constitutional limits, judicial oversight, (ii) Rights protection: Judicial review ensures Emergency not used to suppress rights, democracy, (iii) Democratic accountability: Courts ensure Emergency reflects genuine crisis, not political convenience, (e) Illustrates calibrated emergency powers: Judicial review balances crisis response capacity with prevention of political misuse; ensures Emergency powers used for genuine existential threats, not political ends.
Answer: True
Article 356 maximum duration: (a) Constitutional text: President's Rule continues for 6 months after Parliamentary approval; can be extended by Parliamentary resolution every 6 months, (b) 44th Amendment safeguard (1978): Extension beyond 1 year requires: (i) National Emergency in operation in India/State, OR (ii) Election Commission certification that elections cannot be held due to extraordinary circumstances, (c) Absolute maximum: President's Rule cannot exceed 3 years total, regardless of extensions, (d) Rationale: Prevent indefinite President's Rule; ensure democratic restoration through elections at earliest opportunity, (e) Applications: (i) Historical use: Some States had prolonged President's Rule (e.g., Punjab in 1980s), but post-1994 stricter scrutiny, (ii) Judicial review: Courts examine whether extensions justified by genuine circumstances, not political convenience, (f) Illustrates democratic federalism: Time limits ensure President's Rule temporary measure; extensions require exceptional justification, preserving State autonomy, democratic mandate.
Answer: True
Article 360 non-invocation: (a) Constitutional provision: President may proclaim Financial Emergency if financial stability/credit of India threatened, (b) Historical record: Never invoked since Constitution adoption (1950), (c) Reasons for non-invocation: (i) Fiscal prudence: Union/States managed fiscal challenges through cooperative mechanisms (Finance Commission, GST Council), not Emergency powers, (ii) Federal balance: Preference for negotiated solutions over unilateral Union control, (iii) Political consensus: Avoiding Emergency powers except for genuine existential threats, (d) Alternative mechanisms: (i) Finance Commission: Regular mediation of fiscal claims, (ii) FRBM Acts: Fiscal discipline frameworks for Union/States, (iii) GST Council: Cooperative fiscal federalism for indirect taxation, (e) Illustrates calibrated federalism: Preference for cooperative, negotiated solutions over emergency powers; Financial Emergency as last resort, not first response, to fiscal challenges.
Answer: True
Rameshwar Prasad (2006) judicial review of Governor's report: (a) Context: Bihar Assembly elections 2005 resulted in hung Assembly; Governor recommended President's Rule citing horse-trading based on media reports, without floor test, (b) Supreme Court holding: (i) Governor's satisfaction must be based on objective material, not unverified media reports or political considerations, (ii) Floor test is primary method to test majority; Governor cannot pre-empt Assembly's right to test majority, (iii) Dissolution of Assembly is extreme step; revival possible if proclamation invalidated, (c) SR Bommai reinforcement: (i) Presidential satisfaction subject to judicial review, (ii) Floor test as democratic standard for majority verification, (iii) Secularism part of basic structure; State action against secularism can justify Article 356, (iv) Assembly dissolution not automatic; can be revived if proclamation struck down, (d) Impact: Curbed arbitrary use of Article 356 for political ends; strengthened federal balance by protecting State autonomy against Centre overreach via gubernatorial discretion, (e) Illustrates judicial protection of federal balance: Objective standards, floor test principle ensure Governor acts as constitutional functionary, not political agent; State autonomy protected within unified framework.
Answer: True
Fundamental Rights during Emergency: (a) Article 358: During Emergency, Article 19 (freedoms) automatically suspended for duration of Emergency, (b) Article 359: President may suspend enforcement of other Fundamental Rights via Presidential order, (c) 44th Amendment safeguard (1978): Articles 20-21 cannot be suspended even during Emergency: (i) Article 20: Protection in respect of conviction for offences (no ex-post facto law, no double jeopardy, no self-incrimination), (ii) Article 21: Protection of life and personal liberty, (d) Rationale: Prevent recurrence of 1975-77 Emergency excesses where habeas corpus petitions were suspended (ADM Jabalpur case), (e) Applications: (i) Post-1978: Even during Emergency, citizens can challenge detention, conviction violations under Articles 20-21, (ii) Judicial review: Courts retain power to examine whether Emergency proclamation, Presidential orders comply with constitutional limits, (f) Illustrates calibrated rights protection: Enabling crisis response while preserving core rights essential to human dignity, rule of law; balance between national security and individual liberty.
Answer: True
SR Bommai safeguards on Article 356: (a) Objective material requirement: Presidential satisfaction must be based on objective material (e.g., Governor's report, Assembly proceedings, independent verification), not subjective opinion or political consideration, (b) Judicial review scope: Courts can examine: (i) Relevance of material to constitutional breakdown, (ii) Mala fides or political motivation, (iii) Compliance with constitutional principles (secularism, democracy, federalism), (iv) Procedural compliance (floor test before dismissal), (c) Floor test principle: Primary method to test majority; Governor cannot dismiss Ministry without testing majority on Assembly floor, (d) Assembly dissolution safeguard: Not automatic; can be revived if proclamation struck down by court, (e) Applications: (i) Rameshwar Prasad (2006): Struck down Bihar Assembly dissolution based on unverified media reports, (ii) Recent Governor cases (2022-2024): Reiterated objective standards for Article 356 invocation, (f) Impact: Curbed arbitrary use of Article 356 for political ends; strengthened federal balance by protecting State autonomy against Centre overreach via gubernatorial discretion, (g) Illustrates constitutional federalism: Judicial review as guardian of federal balance; objective standards protect State autonomy within unified framework.
Answer: True
Article 257 Union directions for infrastructure: (a) Constitutional provision: Union can give directions to States for: (i) Construction, maintenance of railways, national highways, (ii) Measures for protection of railways, (iii) Ensuring State executive power exercised to comply with Union laws, (b) Rationale: (i) National infrastructure: Railways, highways are national assets requiring uniform standards, coordination, (ii) Federal cooperation: Enables Union-State collaboration on infrastructure without abolishing State executive power, (iii) Efficiency: Avoids duplication, ensures seamless national infrastructure network, (c) Applications: (i) Railways: Union directions for land acquisition, security, maintenance of railway infrastructure in States, (ii) National highways: Coordination for construction, maintenance, safety standards across State boundaries, (iii) Protection measures: Security, emergency response coordination for railways, highways, (d) Limits: (i) Directions must relate to specified subjects (railways, highways), not general policy, (ii) State executive power not abolished; only guided for national infrastructure, (iii) Financial responsibility: Union typically bears costs for national infrastructure projects, (e) Illustrates cooperative federalism: Article 257 enables Union-State coordination on national infrastructure while respecting State executive domain; balance between national integration and State autonomy.
Answer: True
Inter-State Council constitutional basis: (a) Article 263: President may by order establish Inter-State Council if it appears expedient in public interest, (b) Functions: (i) Inquire into and advise on disputes between States, (ii) Investigate and discuss subjects of common interest to Union/States, (iii) Make recommendations for better policy coordination, (c) Establishment: ISC established by Presidential order in 1990 based on Sarkaria Commission recommendation, (d) Composition: PM (Chairperson), all CMs, UT Lt. Governors, Union Ministers as needed — ensures high-level political engagement, (e) Functioning challenges: (i) Infrequent meetings (last meeting 2022), limiting continuous dialogue, (ii) Limited implementation of recommendations, reducing impact, (iii) Political dynamics affecting cooperation, (f) Potential: If activated regularly, ISC could: (i) Resolve inter-State disputes through dialogue, not litigation, (ii) Coordinate policy on common challenges (climate, migration, infrastructure), (iii) Strengthen cooperative federalism through institutionalized Centre-State consultation, (g) Illustrates constitutional mechanism for cooperative federalism: Potential for structured dialogue underutilized due to political will gaps; reform needed to activate ISC as effective federal coordination platform.