Call Us Now

+91 9606900005 / 04

For Enquiry

legacyiasacademy@gmail.com

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 25 August 2025

  1. The new Constitution Bill, the need for a balancing act
  2. Nourish to Flourish: The Nutrition–Cognition Link


The Paradox of Moral Integrity in Indian Politics

  • Electorate demand: Citizens expect high moral standards and clean governance.
  • Ground reality:
    • Rising criminalisation of politics.
    • Leaders with serious criminal charges holding public office.
    • Declining trust in governance and institutions.
  • Contradiction: Integrity expected, but compromised political ethics persist.

Relevance : GS 2(Governance , Polity , Constitution)

Practice Question : Discuss the merits and challenges of the 130th Amendment Bill, 2025 in addressing the criminalisation of politics.(250 Words)

The 130th Constitutional Amendment Bill, 2025 – Key Provisions

  • Introduced: 20 August 2025, Lok Sabha.
  • Core clause: Ministers (Union & State), Chief Ministers, and the Prime Minister must resign or be automatically removed if in custody for more than 30 consecutive days in crimes punishable with ≥ 5 years imprisonment.
  • Articles amended:
    • Article 75 (Union Council of Ministers).
    • Article 164 (State Council of Ministers).
    • Article 239AA (Delhi Ministers).
  • Mechanism:
    • Removal on advice of PM/CM.
    • Automatic removal if no advice given.
  • Reappointment possible once released from custody.

Constitutional Basis

  • Doctrine of Pleasure”:
    • Articles 75(1), 164(1), 239AA(5) → ministers hold office at President’s/Governor’s pleasure.
    • Judicial limits: Shamsher Singh vs State of Punjab (1974), Nabam Rebia vs Deputy Speaker (2016).
  • Judicial morality precedents:
    • S.R. Bommai vs Union of India (1994): Constitutional morality is guiding principle.
    • Manoj Narula vs Union of India (2014): Ministers with serious criminal charges ought not to be appointed.
    • Lily Thomas vs Union of India (2013): Legislators disqualified immediately upon conviction (Section 8(3), RPA).

Merits of the Bill (Progressive Dimensions)

  • Strengthens accountability: Prevents leaders in custody from continuing in executive office.
  • Public trust: Addresses citizen frustration with corrupt leaders retaining power.
  • Normative shift: Elevates standards of political morality in line with judicial expectations.
  • Checks criminalisation: Sends strong message against governance by tainted leaders.

Concerns & Constitutional Quandaries

(a) Violation of Presumption of Innocence

  • Arrest ≠ conviction.
  • Article 21: Right to life & liberty includes presumption of innocence.
  • Detention without conviction cannot be equated to guilt.

(b) Inconsistency with Legislators

  • MPs/MLAs disqualified only on conviction (RPA, 1951).
  • Ministers face harsher treatment (removal even on arrest).
  • Creates paradox: Legislator convicted of corruption may remain until disqualified, but minister under arrest is removed.

(c) Political Misuse & Partisanship

  • Dual mechanism: Discretion of PM/CM + automatic removal.
  • Risks political vendetta (hostile governments may allow rivals to fall; allies may be shielded for 30 days).
  • May destabilize governance → frequent resignations/reappointments (“revolving door”).

(d) Governance Instability

  • Short-term detentions may cause weeks of political uncertainty.
  • Frequent leadership changes erode executive stability.

(e) Over-broad applicability

  • Covers all offences punishable with ≥ 5 years.
  • Includes minor non-serious offences → disproportionate consequences.

The Larger Context: Criminalisation of Politics

  • Data (ADR–NEW, 2024 General Elections):
    • 46% of MPs have criminal cases.
    • Up from 43% (2019), 34% (2014), 30% (2009).
    • 55% increase in 15 years.
  • Structural problem:
    • Weak law enforcement.
    • Electoral compulsions (winnability > morality).
    • Delayed judicial process → charges remain pending for years.

Possible Alternatives / Nuanced Models

  1. Trigger based on judicial scrutiny:
    1. Link removal not to arrest, but to framing of charges by a competent court.
    1. Prevents politically motivated arrests.
  2. Independent Review Mechanism:
    1. Tribunal/judicial panel to decide on minister’s removal.
    1. Insulates process from partisan misuse.
  3. Suspension, not Removal:
    1. Interim suspension of ministerial functions pending trial.
    1. Balances governance continuity & accountability.
  4. Scope refinement:
    1. Limit to offences involving moral turpitude, corruption, serious crimes.
    1. Avoid sweeping inclusion of minor offences.

Critical Analysis

  • Strength: Responds to moral deficit in politics; institutionalises integrity.
  • Weakness: Risks undermining fair trial principles; creates inconsistency in treatment.
  • Opportunity: Chance to set global precedent in ethical governance.
  • Threat: Politicisation of law; destabilisation of governance.

Conclusion

  • The 130th Amendment Bill, 2025 reflects citizens’ yearning for clean politics and constitutional morality.
  • However, its blunt approach risks compromising due process, stability, and fairness.
  • True reform must lie in a nuanced framework: judicially backed triggers, impartial review, and focus on serious offences.
  • As the Supreme Court cautioned in Bommai and Narula, morality in politics is indispensable, but it must align with constitutional values.
  • Ultimately, integrity without fairness endangers democracy, just as power without integrity corrodes it.

Criminalization of Politics – Data & Facts

2024 Lok Sabha Elections (Latest Data):

  • 46% of MPs elected in 2024 (251 out of 543) have pending criminal cases – the highest number in history (Association for Democratic Reforms)
  • 27 MPs have been convicted of crimes (National Election Watch data)
  • 31% (170 MPs) are charged with serious criminal offences, including murder, attempt to murder, and crimes against women (ADR analysis)
  • Success rate for candidates with criminal charges was 15.3%, while candidates without criminal cases had only 4.4% success rate (Election Commission data analyzed by ADR)


Understanding the Basics

  • Critical Window (First 1,000 Days):
    • From conception → 2 years of age.
    • Equivalent to the “make-or-break” period for physical growth, brain development, and cognition.
    • Missing this window = irreversible damage.
  • Analogy: Just as missing the airport check-in “critical hour” leads to missing the flight, missing proper nutrition + stimulation in first 1,000 days leads to lifelong developmental setbacks.

Relevance : GS 2(Governance , Social Issues ,Health)

Practice Question : Examine the role of ICDS and recent initiatives like Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi in integrating nutrition with cognitive development.(250 Words)

Scientific Foundations of Nutrition–Cognition Link

  • Brain Growth:
    • By 2 years → brain = 80% of adult weight.
    • Synaptic density peaks in early years; “neuroplasticity” strongest before 5 years.
    • Frontal lobes (self-regulation, planning, language, executive function) develop in spurts in first 2 years.
  • Nutritional Deficiencies → Cognitive Impairments:
    • Iron deficiency → affects language, memory, and processing speed.
    • Protein-energy malnutrition → stunting + reduced IQ.
    • Micronutrient gaps (iodine, zinc, vitamin B12, folate) → impaired neurodevelopment.
    • Many deficiencies are irreversible beyond age 3.
  • Neuroplasticity & Learning:
    • Early years = fastest and most permanent learning phase.
    • Children retain language, rhymes, motor skills learned before 5 years.
    • Poor nutrition in this window → weaker circuits → lifelong disadvantage.

India’s Nutritional Context

  • Progress: Decline in stunting (height-for-age).
  • Challenge: At current pace → 10% stunting only by 2075.
    • To reach by 2047 (Amrit Kaal target), pace must double.
  • Data (NFHS-5, 2019–21):
    • Stunting = 35.5%.
    • Wasting = 19.3%.
    • Anaemia (children 6–59 months) = 67%.
  • Shows nutritional insecurity remains structural and intergenerational.

Nutrition + Cognition = Integrated Approach

  • Evidence: Stand-alone nutrition programmes = low-to-moderate impact.
  • Stronger results when nutrition + early stimulation/learning combined.
  • Tamil Nadu Vellore study: Early iron deficiency → poorer language skills & slower processing by age 5.

Policy Framework in India

  • ICDS (Integrated Child Development Services):
    • World’s largest early childhood programme.
    • Covers nutrition, health, early learning.
  • Key Initiatives:
    • Poshan Bhi Padhai Bhi (2023) → combines nutrition + early education.
    • Navchetana (National Framework for Early Childhood Stimulation):
      • Structured 36-month activity calendar.
      • 140 stimulation activities for play-based learning + nutrition reinforcement.
      • Delivered by Anganwadi/crèche workers & parents during home visits.

Gaps and Challenges

  • ICDS limitations:
    • 14 lakh Anganwadis exist, but coverage, quality & consistency are uneven.
    • Urban poor often left out.
    • Monitoring & evaluation weak.
  • Technology underutilised:
    • Digital tools can enhance monitoring, caregiver education, and early learning but remain patchy.
  • Human Resource Gaps:
    • Anganwadi workers are overburdened (nutrition, pre-school, immunisation, record-keeping).
  • Crèche provision inadequate:
    • Weak link between women’s workforce participation & reliable child-care facilities.

Broader Socio-Economic Linkages

  • Childs development → National development:
    • Malnourished child = low learning → low-skilled adult → productivity trap.
    • Nutritional lag perpetuates poverty cycle.
  • Gender empowerment:
    • Crèche services allow mothers to participate in workforce.
    • Nutrition + stimulation → reduces care burden on women → boosts equality.
  • Automation & AI economy:
    • Future jobs will demand cognitive skills > physical labour.
    • Malnutrition + poor cognitive base = India risks a demographic liability.

Way Forward

  1. Strengthen ICDS & Anganwadis:
    1. Universalise high-quality coverage.
    1. Special focus on urban poor and tribal areas.
  2. Integrate Nutrition + Stimulation:
    1. Nutrition must go hand in hand with early learning activities.
    1. Adopt home-based play-learning as in Navchetana.
  3. Technology leverage:
    1. Mobile apps for mothers/caregivers on nutrition + learning.
    1. Real-time monitoring of growth data.
  4. Workforce support:
    1. Expand crèche models (public, community, PPP).
    1. Link with women’s skilling & employment.
  5. Targeted interventions:
    1. Micronutrient supplementation (iron, folate, iodine, zinc).
    1. Fortified food distribution.
  6. Evaluation & Monitoring:
    1. Regular cognitive, health, and psychosocial assessment of children <6 years.

Conclusion

  • The first 1,000 days = Indias true Amrit Kaal for child development.
  • Nutrition and cognition are inseparable — “we are what we eat and what we think.”
  • Investments in integrated early childhood care:
    • Break intergenerational poverty cycles.
    • Empower women.
    • Build a cognitively strong workforce for a technologically advanced India.

Bottom line: What is lost in early years can never be regained — nourishing children today is the only way to ensure India flourishes tomorrow.

Child Malnutrition – Data & Facts

NFHS-5 (2019-21) Confirmed Statistics:

  • 35.5% of Indian children under five are stunted (National Family Health Survey-5)
  • 19.3% are wasted (NFHS-5 data)
  • 32.1% are underweight (Ministry of Health and Family Welfare)
  • 57% of Indian women suffer from severe anemia (NFHS-5 findings)

Trends and Patterns:

  • Stunting improved slightly from 38.4% in NFHS-4 to 35.5% in NFHS-5 (Government health ministry data)
  • Wasting prevalence increased slightly from 19.9% in NFHS-1 to 20.5% in recent surveys (UNICEF India analysis)
  • Concurrent wasting and stunting decreased from 8.7% in 2005-06 to 5.2% in 2019-2020 (Indian Journal of Pediatrics study)
  • The rate of stunting reduction slowed significantly – annual average rate of reduction was only 1.33% between NFHS-4 and NFHS-5, compared to 2.20% between NFHS-3 and NFHS-4 (Public health researchers’ analysis)

Critical Age Patterns:

  • Concurrent wasting and stunting peaks at 19 months (8%), then drops after 24 months (Pediatric nutrition studies)
  • Malnutrition rates are higher in rural areas than urban areas (NFHS-5 comparative analysis)

August 2025
MTWTFSS
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
Categories