Wednesday, October 1, 2025

RSS calls for review of 'Socialist' & 'Secular' in constitution preamble

 RSS calls for review of 'Socialist' & 'Secular' in constitution preamble, citing emergency-era insertion. The RSS has called for reviewing the words 'socialist' and 'secular' in the preamble of the Constitution, saying these were included during the Emergency and were never part of the Constitution drafted by B.R. Ambedkar 


RSS Leader Hosabale’s Call to Omit ‘Socialist’, ‘Secular’ from Preamble is an Attack on Constitution Itself

S.N. Sahu


Hosabale argued that the two words were added to the original preamble during the emergency period of 1975-1977 and that the Constitution drafted by Ambedkar on November 26, 1949, never contained those words.


RSS Leader Hosabale’s Call to Omit ‘Socialist’, ‘Secular’ from Preamble is an Attack on Constitution Itself

RSS Sarkaryavah Dattatreya Hosabale with Union minister Nitin Gadkari (R) and President of the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts (IGNCA) Trust Ram Bahadur Rai (L) during a book launch. Photo: PTI


The statement by Dattatreya Hosabale, the general secretary of  Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), that a decision must be made to remove the words “socialist” and “secular” from the preamble of the constitution after a debate constitutes an attack on the Indian constitution – something which RSS and BJP find difficult to accept. 


They have expressed their intent, from time to time, to review it or change in toto. However, Hosabale advanced an absurd argument that it was during the Emergency period of 1975-1977, that the two words were added to the original preamble and that the Constitution drafted by Ambedkar on November 26, 1949, never contained those words.



Vice president Jagdeep Dhankar and Union ministers Shivraj Singh Chouhan and Jitender Singh have also joined the call for removal of the two words from the preamble. 


Clearly, such a concerted move expresses their intent to assail the constitution which BJP and RSS has recurrently done. 


What BJP’s constitution says

Article II of the BJP’s 2012 Constitution, dealing with its objective, states: “The Party shall bear true faith and allegiance to the Constitution of India as by law established and to the principles of socialism, secularism and democracy and would uphold the sovereignty, unity and integrity of India.” 


So, it is rather strange that the RSS and BJP leaders, who accept the  above provision, are demanding the removal of the words “secular” and “socialist” from the constitution.


Supreme Court’s validation of the words “secular” and “socialist”

On the eve of the 75th anniversary of the constitution on November 25, 2024, the Supreme Court bench comprising Chief Justice of India Sanjiv Khanna and justice P.V. Sanjay Kumar dismissed a batch of petitions challenging the inclusion of the words “socialist” and “secular” in the preamble and held that the addition of these terms could not be invalidated merely on the ground that the preamble in the original form did not contain them at the time of the adoption of the constitution.


The apex court upheld the constitutional validity of the insertions of those words after a prolonged and detailed hearing based on arguments of the petitioners who challenged such insertions and the written and oral counters filed against them. 


Therefore, Hosabale’s call for debate to decide the fate of the two words in the preamble is a call to reject the Supreme Court’s judgement.  


‘Secular’ mentioned in fundamental rights

Notably, part of Hosabale’s argument that the word “secular” was not there in Ambedkar’s constitution is also false. 


His argument collapses when seen in the context of one of the fundamental rights enshrined in Article 25, dealing with the freedom of conscience and free profession, practice and propagation of religion. In this very article, the word “secular” is mentioned under clause (2)(a). 


If he has no trouble with the word “secular” in the chapter on fundamental rights and he only wants a debate on the word “secular” enshrined in the preamble, he should also turn to Union home minister Amit Shah who displayed his intense love for the word “secularism” in the preamble during the Lok Sabha election campaign in 2024. 


Shah had faced country-wide concerns arising out of strident claims of some BJP MP candidates contesting the elections that the constitution would be changed if the party won 400-plus seats. 


The concerns around this gained huge traction and Shah could sense that BJP would confront massive electoral loss for such a boastful claim.  


Amit Shah’s new found love for the word ‘secular’

The entire BJP leadership and cadre was banking on the firm articulations of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, during the consecration of Ram Temple in Ayodhya, that “Ram is Rashtra” (Lord Ram is the State) and “Dev is Desh” (A Hindu deity is the country) for winning 400 plus  Lok Sabha seats. 


Those articulations were certainly contrary to the constitutional vision of India and Indian State, which is deeply rooted in secularism, held by the Supreme Court as the basic structure of the constitution. 


Amit Shah was shaken by the mood of the electorate shaped by the opposition parties that by securing a huge majority in the parliament, the BJP would alter the entire constitution. So, he denied the removal of the word on more than one occasion in his election campaign speeches.


He desperately tried to negate the campaign that BJP would change the constitution and categorically said that the word “secular” in the preamble would not even be touched.


So, what prompted Dattatreya Hosabale to generate a debate on the words “secular” and “socialist” in the preamble to create a public opinion for their eventual deletion? 


The only possible answer can be found in RSS and BJP’s visceral hatred for the Constitution itself. 


Indira Gandhi’s farsighted vision

Insertions of the two words in the preamble of the constitution during the Emergency of 1975 testified to the vision of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to protect the constitution itself from those forces who were mobilised by RSS against her under the leadership of Jayaprakash Narayan. 


Harish Khare in his article, ‘The Emergency’s True Legacy: How JP’s Naivety Empowered the RSS’, writes, “Thanks to JP, the RSS, the very organisation that created the eco-system for Nathuram Godse to fire those fatal shots at the Mahatma, has worked its way to a “respectable” place in our national imagination. Not just respect, it now has clout, patronage and veto power in our national affairs.”


Intent of Constituent Assembly on secularism

All members in the Constituent Assembly worked for establishing the Indian State anchored in secularism. Two exemplary statements to that effect are quoted here to flag the legislative intent of the assembly.  


RSS and BJP, while vainly appropriating Sardar Patel as their icon, should be mindful of his sensible words uttered in the Constituent Assembly on October 14, 1949:  


“I made it clear that this Constitution of India, of free India, of a secular State will not hereafter be disfigured by any provision on a communal basis.”


Another eminent member of the Assembly, T.J.M. Wilson outlined the importance of the secular state  on November 23, 1949, and flagged the  escalating dangers to it.


“The greatest achievement, however, of our Constitution,” he said, “is its secular character, and the secular State that emerges therefrom”. He added, “We have achieved this secular character of the State and we have provided for it in the Constitution.” 


He cautioned, “But the clouds are gathering and are threatening to darken the secular character of the State and obliterate it”. 


“I only pray and trust,” he affirmed, “that the progressive forces of this country, under the guidance and leadership of our great and beloved Prime Minister(Jawaharlal Nehru) will clear away those clouds and shall not allow our country to pass once again through that destruction and misery which most of the nations of Europe and Asia had to pass before they could accomplish this great achievement of a secular State.”


That legacy of the Constituent Assembly and Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi constitute a categorical imperative to save the constitution and secularism.


S.N. Sahu served as Officer on Special Duty to President of India K.R. Narayanan.


Congress slams RSS after it calls for reviewing words 'socialist', 'secular' in Constitution's Preamble

Jairam Ramesh said the RSS has "never accepted" the Constitution of India

Published - June 27, 2025 12:18 pm IST - New Delhi


PTI

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Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh. 

Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh. | Photo Credit: Shiv Kumar Pushpakar


Slamming the RSS for calling for reviewing the words 'socialist' and 'secular' in the Preamble of the Constitution, the Congress on Friday (June 27, 2025) alleged that the RSS has "never accepted" Babasaheb Ambedkar's Constitution and that their demand was part of the conspiracy to destroy it.



The RSS on Thursday (June 26, 2025) called for reviewing the words 'socialist' and 'secular' in the Preamble of the Constitution, saying they were included during the Emergency and were never part of the Constitution drafted by B.R. Ambedkar.


Congress general secretary in-charge communications Jairam Ramesh said the RSS has "never accepted" the Constitution of India.


"It attacked Dr. Ambedkar, Nehru, and others involved in its framing from November 30, 1949 onwards. In RSS' own words, the Constitution was not inspired by Manusmriti," he said in a post on X.


"The RSS and the BJP have repeatedly given the call for a new Constitution.


"This was Mr. (Narendra) Modi's campaign cry during the 2024 Lok Sabha elections. The people of India decisively rejected this cry. Yet the demands for changing the basic structure of the Constitution continues to be made by the RSS ecosystem," Mr. Ramesh said.


The Chief Justice of India himself delivered a judgment on November 25, 2024 on the issue now being raised by a leading RSS functionary, he said.


"Would it be asking too much to request him to take the trouble to read it?" Mr. Ramesh said.


In a post on X from its official handle, the Congress alleged that the thinking of RSS-BJP is "anti-constitutional".


"Now RSS general secretary Dattatreya Hosabale has demanded a change in the Preamble of the Constitution. Hosabale says- the words 'socialist' and 'secular' should be removed from the Preamble of the Constitution. This is the conspiracy to destroy Baba Saheb's Constitution, which RSS-BJP has always been hatching," the party said.


When the Constitution was implemented, RSS opposed it, the Congress said.

"In the Lok Sabha elections, BJP leaders were openly saying that we need more than 400 seats in Parliament to change the Constitution. Finally, the public taught them a lesson. Now once again they are engaged in their conspiracies, but the Congress will not let their intentions succeed at any cost. Jai Samvidhan," the party said in the post in Hindi.


Addressing an event organised here on the Emergency, RSS general secretary Hosabale said, "The Preamble of the Constitution Baba Saheb Ambedkar made never had these words. During the Emergency, when fundamental rights were suspended, Parliament did not work, judiciary became lame, then these words were added." He said discussions were held on this issue later but no effort was made to remove them from the Preamble. So whether they should remain in the Preamble should be considered, he added.


"The Preamble is eternal. Are the thoughts of socialism as an ideology eternal for India?" Hosabale said.


The suggestion from the RSS' second senior-most functionary to consider removing the two terms came as he hit out at the Congress for its Emergency-era excesses and demanded an apology from the party.


Speaking at an event marking 50 years of the Emergency, Hosabale, who holds the position of Sah-Baudhik Pramukh (second in command of the RSS' intellectual wing), said that the Preamble is meant to be eternal. "So, from the perspective of ideology, should socialism be considered eternal for India?" he asked.


He argued that socialist and secular, inserted during the 42nd Constitutional Amendment in 1976 during the Emergency, were not part of the original Preamble drafted by Jawaharlal Nehru.

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