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Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 30 October 2025

  1. A Smarter Happiness Agenda
  2. The Constitution (One Hundred and Thirtieth Amendment) Bill, 2025


Why in News ?

  • India ranked 118th in the 2025 World Happiness Report, prompting debate on why economic progress hasn’t translated into higher well-being.
  • The article explores how India can build a smarter happiness agenda by focusing on social, psychological, and moral dimensions of well-being rather than GDP alone.

Relevance

  • GS-1 (Society): Changing social values, cultural concept of happiness, individualism vs. community life.
  • GS-2 (Governance): Role of the state in promoting mental health, social well-being, and inclusive policies.
  • GS-4 (Ethics): Aristotles eudaimonia, Stoicism, and Indian ethical traditions (Sukha, mindfulness) in pursuit of moral happiness.

Practice Questions:

  • Economic growth alone cannot guarantee happiness.” Discuss in the context of Indias low ranking in the World Happiness Report.(250 Words)

Context and Core Argument

  • GDP ≠ Happiness: Economic growth lifts people out of poverty but doesn’t ensure lasting happiness.
  • Paradox of Progress: Despite higher incomes and living standards, people feel more anxious, lonely, and disconnected.
  • The author calls for investing in the architecture of a good life” — social, moral, and psychological systems that sustain happiness.

Philosophical & Psychological Roots

  • Ancient Wisdom:
    • Aristotles eudaimonia – flourishing through virtue and purpose, not constant pleasure.
    • Stoicsataraxia – tranquility and equanimity amidst fortune’s ups and downs.
  • Indian Traditions:
    • Sukha in Hindu thought = enduring joy through self-restraint and virtue.
    • Buddhist mindfulness = happiness from detachment, not indulgence.
  • Modern Neuroscience: Confirms the hedonic treadmill — pleasure spikes fade, relationships and meaning provide durable well-being.

The Problem Today

  • Hedonic treadmill: Rising income only briefly improves happiness.
  • Digital addiction: Constant online stimulation drains focus and joy.
  • Social isolation: Urban life reduces human connection and empathy.
  • Work stress: Long hours and productivity obsession harm emotional health.

The Four-Part Framework for a Smarter Happiness Agenda

  1. Measure What Matters:
    1. Go beyond GDP — track loneliness, social trust, mental health, and community participation.
    1. Make these part of official data and policy budgets.
  2. Build Social Infrastructure:
    1. Develop bonding capital”: libraries, parks, youth programs, cultural centers, intergenerational clubs.
    1. Encourage inclusive spaces that foster belonging.
  3. Reframe Education:
    1. Teach life skills — empathy, resilience, teamwork.
    1. Integrate mental health learning and social-emotional training in schools.
  4. Humanize Workplaces:
    1. Promote right-to-disconnect, flexible hours, and digital detox policies.
    1. Reward collaboration, purpose, and rest, not just productivity metrics.

Cultural & Ethical Dimensions

  • India’s heritage valued moderation, gratitude, and community over materialism.
  • Happiness in Indian philosophy = self-mastery, not self-indulgence.
  • Utilitarian pursuit of constant pleasure betrays this civilizational memory.
  • The goal is not escapism, but mindful re-engagement with life and society.

Policy Implications

  • Develop National Well-being Indicators parallel to economic indicators.
  • Integrate happiness goals into urban planning, education, and labour policy.
  • Encourage cities that nurture families and civic engagement.
  • Support mental health and social connection programs as core governance priorities.

Global Linkages

  • Similar models exist:
    • Bhutan’s Gross National Happiness Index.
    • OECD’s Better Life Index.
    • UAE’s Ministry of Happiness.
  • India can pioneer a model rooted in civilizational ethics and scientific psychology.

Key Takeaway

  • True happiness requires relationships, purpose, and self-awareness, not mere consumption.
  • India’s “Smarter Happiness Agenda” should blend ancient wisdom with modern policy, fostering a society that values love, gratitude, and human connection as much as GDP growth.


Why in News ?

  • The Constitution (130th Amendment) Bill, 2025 was introduced in Parliament to amend Articles 75, 164, and 239AA.
  • Objective: To provide for automatic removal of Union, State, and Delhi Ministers detained in custody for 30 consecutive days for an offence punishable with imprisonment of five years or more.
  • The Bill was referred to a Joint Parliamentary Committee amid strong Opposition criticism over misuse potential.

Relevance

  • GS-2 (Polity & Governance):
    • Constitutional amendments (Articles 75, 164, 239AA); doctrine of pleasure; ministerial accountability; due process; federal implications.
  • GS-2 (Judiciary & Executive):
    • Arrest discretion, bail jurisprudence, and rule of law principles.
  • GS-4 (Ethics in Governance):
    • Constitutional morality, integrity in public office, ethical leadership vs. political vendetta.

Practice Questions:

  • Critically examine whether the Constitution (130th Amendment) Bill, 2025 upholds or undermines the doctrine of constitutional morality.(250 Words)

Key Provisions of the Bill

  • Articles amended:
    • Article 75 (Union Ministers) – Removal by President on PM’s advice if detained for 30 days.
    • Article 164 (State Ministers) – Removal by Governor on CM’s advice.
    • Article 239AA (Delhi) – Applies to Ministers of Delhi government.
  • Prime Minister/Chief Minister Clause: Must resign by the 31st day of detention, or automatically cease to hold office.
  • Purpose: To uphold constitutional morality and ministerial integrity by preventing prolonged detention of Ministers accused of serious crimes.

Constitutional Rationale

  • Aims to strengthen ethical governance, public trust, and accountability in executive office.
  • Reflects Article 75(1) principle — Ministers hold office “during the pleasure of the President” (or Governor).
  • Prevents governance paralysis and reputational damage from Ministers facing prolonged custody.

Opposition Concerns

(a) Discretionary Nature of Arrest

  • Arrest = discretionary, not mandatory (as per CrPC/BNSS and multiple court rulings).
  • Fear: Enforcement agencies could target political opponents using selective arrests.
  • Key judicial precedents:
    • Deenan vs Jayalalithaa (1989, Madras HC): Arrest is discretionary under Section 41 CrPC.
    • Joginder Kumar vs State of U.P. (1994, SC): Arrest must be justified; not automatic.
    • Amarawati vs State of U.P. (2004, Allahabad HC): Arrest is not mandatory in cognisable offences.
    • Arnesh Kumar vs State of Bihar (2014, SC): Police must record reasons for arrest.
    • Satender Kumar Antil vs CBI (2022, SC): Strict compliance with arrest provisions under CrPC.
  • Risk: Arrests may be used as a political weapon to disqualify Opposition Ministers.

(b) Detention for 30 Consecutive Days

  • The 30-day custody rule is seen as arbitrary and disproportionate:
    • Default bail under CrPC (Sec. 167(2)) or BNSS (Sec. 187): granted after 60–90 days if investigation not completed.
    • Thus, the 30-day cut-off is shorter than statutory detention norms, leading to premature disqualification.

(c) Application under Special Laws

  • The phrase “offence under any law for the time being in force” covers special statutes like:
    • PMLA, NDPS, UAPA — all have twin bail conditions (reverse burden of proof).
  • Under such laws, bail is extremely difficult, making automatic removal inevitable.
    • Example: Manish Sisodia’s 17-month custody under PMLA — illustrates real-world risk of political misuse.

(d) Subjectivity in Bail Decisions

  • Bail decisions often depend on judicial discretion and perceived risk of influence.
  • Ministers may face a Hobsons choice — remain in office and risk bail denial, or resign to facilitate bail.
  • Leads to constitutional instability and executive vulnerability.

Constitutional and Legal Tensions

  • Article 21 (Right to Liberty) — undermined if prolonged custody results in automatic disqualification without conviction.
  • Presumption of Innocence — removal based on mere custody (not guilt) challenges due process.
  • Separation of Powers — allows executive interference through arrest, undermining judicial independence.
  • Federalism Risk — central agencies’ power of arrest can impact state governmentspolitical autonomy.

Ethical and Governance Dimension

  • Supporters argue: Upholds probity in public life, prevents tainted Ministers from continuing.
  • Critics argue: Enables political weaponization of law enforcement and weakens democratic opposition.
  • Constitutional morality requires balancing ethical governance with rule of law and fairness.

Expert Viewpoint (Authors’ Perspective)

  • R.K. Vij (Former IPS) & Shivani Vij (Lawyer):
    • Agree on need for clean politics, but caution against misuse of discretionary arrest powers.
    • Call for stronger procedural safeguards and judicial oversight before removal.
    • Suggest redefining custody duration or linking disqualification only to judicial findings (e.g., framing of charges).

Broader Implications

  • May redefine standards of political accountability.
  • Could influence Centre-State political relations, especially in opposition-ruled states.
  • Adds urgency to police reforms and codification of arrest procedures.
  • Highlights tension between clean governance and political misuse of coercive instruments.

Way Forward

  • Ensure parliamentary scrutiny and JPC consultations for balanced reform.
  • Introduce safeguards: judicial certification of “valid custody,” or limitation to serious offences post-charge framing.
  • Harmonise with BNSS and default bail provisions to prevent arbitrary disqualification.
  • Strengthen institutional independence of investigative agencies.

October 2025
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