Constitutional Accountability and Democratic Integrity

Context of the Case
  • In January 2026, prominent activists, journalists, and religious leaders urged the Supreme Court of India to recognise hate speech as a “constitutional tort”, not merely a law-and-order issue.
  • Petitioners highlighted the rise in hate speech incidents, particularly at religious congregations, and sought regulatory and accountability mechanisms.

Relevance

  • GS 1: Social harmony, communal relations, and challenges to fraternity in a diverse society.
  • GS 2: Fundamental Rights, Supreme Court jurisprudence, constitutional torts, governance and rule of law.
  • GS 3: Internal security implications of hate speech and its linkage with communal violence.
What is a Constitutional Tort?
Conceptual Meaning
  • constitutional tort is a judicially evolved remedy where the State is held vicariously liable for actions or omissions of its agents that violate fundamental rights.
  • It moves beyond criminal prosecution to public law compensation and accountability, rooted in Articles 14, 19, and 21.
Judicial Evolution in India
  • Recognised through landmark cases such as:
    • Rudul Sah v. State of Bihar (1983)
    • Nilabati Behera v. State of Odisha (1993)
    • D.K. Basu v. State of West Bengal (1997)
  • Courts held that monetary compensation can be awarded for State failure to protect constitutional rights.
Why Hate Speech is Argued as a Constitutional Tort ?
 Discriminatory Character of Hate Speech
  • Petitioners argued that hate speech is inherently discriminatory, targeting individuals or groups based on religion, caste, ethnicity, or identity.
  • Such speech violates:
    • Article 14 (Equality before law)
    • Article 15 (Non-discrimination)
    • Article 21 (Dignity and life)
Beyond Law and Order Paradigm
  • Treating hate speech as a routine policing issue reduces it to crowd control or preventive detention, ignoring its systemic and structural harm.
  • Petitioners stressed that hate speech erodes constitutional morality, not just public order.
Failure of Existing Legal and Administrative Framework
Supreme Court’s 2022 Directions
  • In October 21, 2022, the Supreme Court directed States to:
    • Register suo motu FIRs against hate speech that incites communal violence
    • Act irrespective of religion or political affiliation of offenders
Ground-Level Non-Compliance
  • Petitioners cited persistent inaction by police despite prior knowledge of habitual offenders and recurring hate-speech events.
  • Common administrative failures include:
    • Refusal to register FIRs
    • Invocation of weaker penal provisions
    • Delayed investigations
Hate Speech and Hate Crimes: Empirical Link
Causal Relationship
  • Petitioners argued a direct correlation between hate speech and hate crimes, where incendiary public speeches often precede:
    • Mob violence
    • Communal riots
    • Targeted attacks 
Constitutional Implications
  • Failure to prevent hate speech despite foreseeability constitutes State negligence, engaging vicarious liability under constitutional tort doctrine.
Governance and Federal Accountability Issues
Police as a State Subject
  • Public order and police fall under the State List, but constitutional rights impose non-negotiable obligations on States.
  • Repeated inaction suggests institutional complicity or abdication of constitutional duty.
Need for Judicial Oversight
  • Petitioners urged continued Supreme Court monitoring, arguing that mere advisory directions lack enforceability.
Ethical and Democratic Dimensions
Impact on Constitutional Morality
  • Hate speech undermines the values of fraternity, secularism, and dignity, enshrined in the Preamble.
  • Normalisation of hate corrodes democratic discourse and legitimises exclusion.
Free Speech vs Harm Principle
  • While Article 19(1)(a) protects free speech, Article 19(2) permits reasonable restrictions to prevent:
    • Public disorder
    • Incitement to violence
    • Harm to social harmony
  • Hate speech falls squarely within constitutionally permissible restrictions.
Arguments Against Overreach (Counterview)
  • Expanding constitutional tort doctrine may:
    • Increase judicial overreach into executive functions
    • Create chilling effects on legitimate speech
    • Raise concerns of subjective interpretation
  • Hence, safeguards and clear doctrinal thresholds would be necessary.
Way Forward
Legal and Institutional Measures
  • Develop clear judicial standards to identify hate speech triggering constitutional tort liability.
  • Fix personal accountability of supervisory police officers for non-compliance with court directions.
Preventive and Structural Reforms
  • Mandatory videography and prior permission for large religious congregations with history of hate speech.
  • Independent monitoring mechanisms under State Human Rights Commissions.
Strengthening Constitutional Culture
  • Training law enforcement in constitutional values and hate-crime sensitivity.
  • Reaffirmation of fraternity and dignity as enforceable constitutional norms.

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