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Supreme Court cites Preamble to reject a plea

Why in the News?

The Supreme Court rejected a plea against a religious leader inaugurating Mysuru Dasara, reminding that the Preamble upholds secularism, liberty, equality, and fraternity as core ideals of unity.

Supreme Court’s Observations:

  • Secular Character: The Court reminded that the Preamble enshrines secularism, liberty, equality, and fraternity as unifying ideals.
  • State’s Neutrality: Dasara inauguration was a State event, not a private ritual. The State “maintains no religion of its own” (echoing M. Ismail Faruqui, 1994).
  • Key Precedents Recalled:
    • Kesavananda Bharati (1973) & S.R. Bommai (1994): Secularism = basic feature of the Constitution.
    • R.C. Poudyal (1994): Even before “secular” was inserted (42nd Amendment, 1976), the Constitution upheld equal treatment of all faiths.
    • Dr. Balram Singh v. UOI (2024): State can intervene to curb religious practices impeding equality & development.

Preamble

About the Preamble:

  • Nature: Introductory statement; reflects philosophy, vision, and objectives.
  • Origin: Based on Objectives Resolution (Nehru, 1946); adopted 1947.
  • Declarations: India as Sovereign, Socialist, Secular, Democratic, Republic ensuring Justice, Liberty, Equality, Fraternity.
  • Symbolism:

    1. Source of Authority: “We, the People of India.”
    2. Nature of State: Sovereign, Socialist, Secular, Democratic, Republic.

Amendment of the Preamble:

  • Permissible: Supreme Court (Kesavananda Bharati, 1973) has held that Preamble is part of Constitution and can be amended without violating Basic Structure.
  • Only Amendment: 42nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1976 (during Emergency).
    • Added “Socialist” and “Secular” between Sovereign and Democratic.
    • Added “Integrity” to Unity of the Nation.

Key Judicial Pronouncements:

  • Berubari Union Case (1960): Preamble not a part of the Constitution; only a tool for interpretation.
  • Kesavananda Bharati Case (1973): Overruled Berubari; Preamble is part of the Constitution, embodies basic structure but cannot override provisions.
  • S.R. Bommai Case (1994): Secularism upheld as basic feature of the Constitution.
  • LIC of India Case (1995): Reaffirmed Preamble as integral, but non-justiciable (not enforceable in court).
[UPSC 2020] The Preamble to the Constitution of India is:

Options: (a) a part of the Constitution but has no legal effect

(b) not a part of the Constitution and has no legal effect either

(c) part of the Constitution and has the same legal effect as any other part

(d) a part of the Constitution but has no legal effect independently of other parts*

 

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