The Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) held meeting on Wednesday reviewing three significant bills including 'The Constitution (One Hundred and Thirtieth Amendment) Bill', 2025, which proposes that the Prime Minister or Chief Minister must resign if detained for 30 consecutive days. This aims to ensure accountability in governance.
According to sources, all four experts supported the Bills in principle, describing them as broadly aligned with constitutional values and democratic governance. However, they also raised queries and sought clarifications on specific provisions across the three Bills, flagging potential legal and constitutional nuances that may require careful drafting or safeguards.
Two other Bills under review are the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation (Amendment) Bill, 2025, and the Government of Union Territories (Amendment) Bill, 2025. The JPC is seeking broader consultation, following detailed presentations by senior legal experts and a call from an opposition member of parliament on this committee for wider consultations with mainstream opposition parties.
Sources said the panel discussed a key provision in The Constitution (One Hundred and Thirtieth Amendment) Bill, 2025, which mandates that the Prime Minister or a Chief Minister must resign if he or she remains under detention for 30 consecutive days, failing which, he shall cease to hold office from the day thereafter. The provision is intended to ensure continuity and accountability in executive governance, particularly in extraordinary situations.
In today's meeting, four eminent legal experts presented to the committee. These included Justice (Retd.) Dinesh Maheshwari, Chairperson of the Law Commission of India, Dr Anju Rathi Rana, Member-Secretary of the Law Commission, Prof (Dr) GS Bajpai, Vice Chancellor of National Law University, Delhi and Prof Sri Krishna Deva Rao, Vice Chancellor of NALSAR University of Law, Hyderabad.
The JPC has now asked the experts to submit their detailed views in writing. They have also been asked to formally respond to the questions raised by Members of Parliament during the deliberations, sources added.JPC will meet again on January 22 to discuss further.Giving some details of the meeting, the Chairperson of the Committee and BJP MP Aparajita Sarangi said that the Joint Parliamentary Committee began its consultations today. The Chairperson of the Law Commission of India was present today.
"I would like to mention that there are 31 members in this committee. 21 are from the Lok Sabha, and 10 are from the Rajya Sabha. Some political parties refused to participate in this committee.The government under PM Modi wants to operate within the law, but some political parties want to operate outside the law and run the government from jail.