Constituent Assembly and Making of the Constitution
Constituent Assembly and Making of the Constitution
Constituent Assembly and Making of the Constitution
⇒ The Cabinet Mission envisaged the establishment of a Constituent Assembly to frame a Constitution for the country. Members of the Constituent Assembly were elected by the Provincial Legislative Assemblies.
⇒ Each Province and each Indian State were allotted seats in proportion of its population, roughly in the ratio of one to a million. The seats so ascertained were distributed among the main communities in each Province. The main communities recognised were Sikh, Muslim and General.
Important Committees of the Constituent Assembly and their Chairman
⇒ The total number of members of the Constituent Assembly were to be 389, of whom 93 were representatives from the Indian States (Princely States) and 296 from the British India (of which 292 from the governors, provinces and 1 each from 4 Chief Commissioners, provinces).
⇒ A After the partition of India number of members of the Constituent Assembly came to 299, of whom 284 were actually present on the 26th November, 1949 and signed on the finally approved Constitution of India. The Constituent Assembly, which had been elected for undivided India, held its first meeting on December 9, 1946 and reassembled on August 14, 1947, as the sovereign Constituent Assembly for the dominion of India.
⇒ Elephant was adopted as the symbol (seal) of the Constituent Assembly.
⇒ It took two years, eleven months and eighteen days for the Constituent Assembly to finalise the Constitution.
⇒ Objective Resolution was moved in the first session er of the Constituent Assembly (on December 13, 1946)
by Pt. Jawahar Lal Nehru which was adopted after considerable deliberation and debate in the Assembly on 22 January, 1947. The following objectives were embodied in the resolution:
* To foster unity of the Nation and to ensure its economic and political security to have a written Constitution and Dato proclaim India as a Sovereign Democratic Republic.
* To have a federal form of Government with the distribution of powers between the centre and states.
* To guarantee and secure justice, equality, freedom of thought, expression, belief, faith, worship, vocation, association and action to all the people of India.
* To provide adequate safeguards for minorities, backward and tribal areas and depressed and other backward classes.
* To maintain the integrity of the territory of the republic and its sovereign rights on land, sea and air according to justice and the law of civilised nations.
* To attain rightful and honoured place in the world and make its full and willing contribution to the promotion de of the world peace and the welfare of mankind.
⇒ The principles of the Constitution were outlined by various committees of the Assembly, and there was a general discussion on the reports of these Committees. The Constituent assembly appointed the Drafting Committee with Dr. B.R. Ambedkar as the Chairman on August 29, 1947 to scrutinise the draft of the text of the constitution of India prepared by the constitutional Adviser B.N.Rao (Benegal Narsing Rao).
⇒ The Drafting Committee, headed by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, submitted a Draft constitution of India to the President of the assembly on February 21, 1948.
⇒ The members of Drafting Committee were N. Gopalaswamy Ayyangar, Alladi Krishnaswamy Ayyar, Dr. K.M. Munshi, Syed Mohammad Saadullah, B.L. Mitter (later replaced by N. Madhava Rao), Dr. D.P. Khaitan (replaced on death in 1948 by T.T. Krishnamachari).
⇒ The third and final reading of the draft was completed on November 26, 1949. On this date, the signature of the President of the Assembly was appended to it and the Constitution was declared as passed.
⇒ The provisions relating to citizenship, elections and provisional Parliament etc were implemented with immediate effect, that is from the 26th November, 1949. The rest of the provisions of the constitution came into force on January 26, 1950 and this date is referred to in the Constitution as the date of its commencement.
* 26th November is observed as ‘Constitution Day’ To celebrate the 125th birth anniversary of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, the Government of India (Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment) decided to observe ‘Constitution Day’ on 26th November w.e.f 2015.
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