One Hundred and Thirtieth Amendment of the Constitution of India
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| Constitution (One Hundred and Thirtieth Amendment) Bill, 2025 | |
|---|---|
| Parliament of India | |
| |
| Territorial extent | India |
| Introduced by | Amit Shah |
| Introduced | 20 August 2025 |
| Status: Pending | |
The One Hundred and Thirtieth Amendment of the Constitution of India (or 130th Constitutional Amendment) to the Constitution of India- officially known as Constitution (One Hundred and Thirtieth Amendment) Bill, 2025, is a proposed amendment introduced in the Lok Sabha on 20 August 2025.
The Bill seeks to provide for the removal of the Prime Minister, Chief Ministers, and other Ministers if they are arrested and detained for thirty consecutive days on charges punishable by imprisonment of five years or more.[1]
- 20 August 2025: The Bill was introduced by Amit Shah, Minister of Home Affairs in the Monsoon Session of Parliament. The bill was referred to a Joint Committee of both Houses for detailed scrutiny.[2]
Key provisions
The proposed amendment aims to insert new clauses into the Constitution:
- Article 75 – Requires the President to remove a Union Minister (including the Prime Minister) who has been arrested and detained for 30 consecutive days for offences punishable with at least five years' imprisonment. If the Prime Minister does not resign by the 31st day, they cease to hold office. Reappointment is possible post-release.[3]
- Article 164 – Extends similar provisions to State Chief Ministers and Ministers. Detention for 30 days triggers removal by the Governor at the Chief Minister’s advice; failure to advise results in automatic cessation.
- Article 239AA – Applies the same rules to the National Capital Territory of Delhi’s ministers, with removal, resignation, or automatic cessation if detained for 30 consecutive days.