The Ninth Schedule to the Indian Constitution was added by
2022
The Ninth Schedule to the Indian Constitution was added by
- A.
First amendment
- B.
Eighth amendment
- C.
Ninth amendment
- D.
Forty Second amendment
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Correct answer: A
Schedules to the Constitution are lists appended to organise specific categories of laws or provisions. The Ninth Schedule, introduced together with Article 31-B, is the schedule that places the Acts listed in it beyond judicial review, protecting them even if they are inconsistent with Fundamental Rights such as the right to equality or (then) the right to property.
The Ninth Schedule was inserted into the Constitution by the Constitution (First Amendment) Act, 1951 -- India's very first constitutional amendment -- to protect State land-reform and zamindari-abolition laws from being struck down by courts for violating the Fundamental Right to property. It originally listed 13 Acts.
Eighth Amendment (1960): extended reserved-seat representation for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Anglo-Indians in legislatures by a further ten years -- it made no change to the Ninth Schedule.
Ninth Amendment (1960): gave effect to the transfer of certain Berubari Union territory to Pakistan under the 1958 India-Pakistan agreement -- despite the matching number, it is unrelated to the Ninth Schedule of the Constitution.
Forty-Second Amendment (1976): added a large number of further Acts to the Ninth Schedule's list and made several other sweeping constitutional changes (Preamble words, Fundamental Duties), but the Schedule itself had already existed for twenty-five years by then -- this amendment enlarged it, it did not create it.
The amendment that added the Ninth Schedule to the Constitution is the Constitution (First Amendment) Act, 1951.