The 1975 Emergency, declared under Article 352 of the Indian Constitution, continues to stand as one of the most debated and instructive episodes in India’s democratic journey. While the immediate reasons cited for the Emergency were threats to national security and internal disturbance, its real significance lies in how it tested the resilience of India’s constitutional democracy—particularly in regard to fundamental rights, judicial independence, and the principle of separation of powers. A critical examination of this period reveals not only the vulnerabilities inherent in India’s legal framework at the time but also the institutional failures and lessons that followed.
One of the most troubling consequences of the Emergency was the suspension of fundamental rights, including the rights to equality (Article 14), freedom of speech and expression (Article 19), protection in respect of conviction for offences (Article 20), protection of life and personal liberty (Article 21), and safeguards against arbitrary arrest and detention (Article 22). These rights were effectively made unenforceable through the use of Article 359, which allowed the President to suspend the right of individuals to approach courts for the enforcement of fundamental rights during an Emergency. In practical terms, this meant that citizens could be detained without trial, the press could be censored, and any form of dissent could be legally suppressed. Critically, while the legal mechanism for such suspension was available in the Constitution, its broad and unchecked application highlighted serious structural weaknesses in the document’s original design. The phrase “internal disturbance” under Article 352, for example, was vague and undefined, enabling its use in a context that many scholars and observers believe was more political than constitutional. This opened the door to misuse, with no effective institutional check or public consultation.
Perhaps the most damning institutional failure during this time came from the judiciary itself. In the landmark case ADM Jabalpur v. Shivkant Shukla (1976), the Supreme Court ruled that during an Emergency, even the right to life under Article 21 could be suspended and that the courts had no jurisdiction to question detentions or executive actions. This ruling is widely regarded as a low point in Indian judicial history, where the judiciary abdicated its role as the guardian of the Constitution. The majority opinion in ADM Jabalpur gave sweeping power to the executive at the cost of individual liberty. Only Justice H.R. Khanna dissented, famously stating that “the Constitution is not a plaything of the rulers.” His judgment, though outvoted, has since been upheld as a beacon of constitutional morality and courage.
The judiciary’s failure during the Emergency must be understood in light of the broader constitutional design, but also in terms of institutional psychology—a tendency toward deference to executive authority during times of national stress. Rather than acting as a bulwark against arbitrary power, the courts became complicit, raising enduring questions about the independence of the judiciary and its ability to resist political pressure.
Yet the Emergency did not go unchallenged in the long term. It led to widespread public awareness of civil liberties and energiSed calls for constitutional reform. The 44th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1978, was a direct response to the Emergency and addressed many of the structural issues that had enabled its misuse. Most importantly, the amendment made it impossible to suspend Articles 20 and 21 even during an Emergency. It also replaced the term “internal disturbance” with “armed rebellion” as a permissible ground for national Emergency, thereby significantly narrowing the scope for executive overreach.
This amendment was a crucial corrective. It restored some balance to the constitutional framework by limiting the possibility of arbitrary governance and reinforcing the sanctity of certain inalienable rights. It also highlighted the adaptive strength of the Indian Constitution, which, though tested under strain, responded to public and institutional learning.
Despite these reforms, critics argue that legislative and administrative tendencies towards excessive executive power remain, often under the guise of national security, public order, or administrative convenience. Preventive detention laws, expansive surveillance capabilities, and frequent internet shutdowns have raised concerns about the steady erosion of personal freedoms. While these modern challenges do not amount to a formal Emergency, they do suggest that the shadow of 1975 still lingers—not in its form, but in its mindset.
Another dimension of critical analysis lies in how the Emergency period has been remembered and instrumentalized in public discourse. While it serves as a historical warning against concentrated power, it is also occasionally politicized or simplified, reducing a complex institutional failure into partisan rhetoric. These risks undermining the genuine lessons it holds for democratic governance. A nuanced understanding requires recognising that the Emergency was not merely about a particular leader or party, but about how democratic institutions can falter when not actively defended—by the judiciary, by civil society, and by the citizenry. Karl Popper, in The Open Society and Its Enemies, argued that “The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.” The Emergency taught India this truth in the harshest possible terms.
From a constitutional law perspective, the Emergency underscores the importance of non-negotiable rights—rights that cannot be suspended under any circumstance. The Emergency of 1975 was more than a political event; it was a profound constitutional reckoning. It laid bare the vulnerabilities of a system that, despite being democratic on paper, could falter under concentrated authority and institutional silence. It also emphasized the need for judicial review, procedural safeguards, and institutional accountability as essential components of a robust constitutional order. In evaluating the Emergency today, it must be recognized that it served both as a moment of crisis and a turning point. It revealed the elasticity—and potential fragility—of democratic systems under stress, but also triggered reforms that made the Indian Constitution more resilient. It reminded citizens and institutions alike that democracy is not self-executing; it must be constantly nurtured, questioned, and protected.
In reflecting on the legacy of the 1975 Emergency, the Kesavananda Bharati judgment emerges not just as a legal milestone, but as a moral compass for Indian democracy. Though it preceded the Emergency by two years, its true significance was realized in the aftermath, when the dangers of unchecked power became painfully evident. The judgment did not merely interpret the Constitution—it safeguarded its soul. By articulating the basic structure doctrine, the Court placed firm constitutional limits on legislative and executive authority, ensuring that essential principles like the rule of law, separation of powers, and protection of fundamental rights could not be dismantled by any government, however powerful. In doing so, it provided a durable framework to protect the rights and liberties that were so easily suspended during the Emergency.
The case continues to stand as a reminder that democracy survives not only through institutions, but through the ideas and principles those institutions are bound to uphold. As Amartya Sen aptly noted, “Democracy is not a mechanical condition; it is a moral commitment.” The 1975 Emergency, and the hard-won reforms that followed, are testimony to this commitment—and a caution to never take it for granted
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