The Constituent Assembly, the Cabinet Mission Plan, the committees and their chairmen, the Objectives Resolution, borrowed features, and the enactment and commencement of the Constitution of India
The making of the Constitution is the single most predictable source of static one-liners in CAPF polity. Every cycle throws up a question on a date (first sitting, adoption, commencement), a chairman (Drafting Committee, the various sub-committees), a personality (who moved the Objectives Resolution, who was the Constitutional Adviser), or a borrowed feature matched to a country. These are pure recall items with no reasoning required, so a candidate who has the table cold simply collects the mark. This note gives the full evolution from the demand for a Constituent Assembly to the commencement on 1950-01-26, calibrated to the clean-fact, objective-test bar that CAPF sets. The standard textbook treatment is NCERT Class XI "Indian Constitution at Work" (Chapter 1, "Constitution: Why and How") and Laxmikanth's chapters on the historical background and the making of the Constitution.
The Constitution of India was framed by the Constituent Assembly. The Assembly first met on 1946-12-09 and adopted the Constitution on 1949-11-26, and the document came into force on 1950-01-26. The Assembly took 2 years, 11 months and 18 days to complete its work. Dr B R Ambedkar chaired the Drafting Committee and is called the Father of the Indian Constitution. The Assembly was constituted under the Cabinet Mission Plan of 1946, through indirect election by the provincial legislative assemblies, not by universal adult franchise. After Partition the Assembly was reconstituted, and its effective strength fell to 299. The Assembly also doubled as the provisional Parliament of India from 1950 until the first general elections of 1951 to 1952.
| Year | Development |
|---|---|
| 1922 | Mahatma Gandhi articulated that the Constitution of India should be framed by Indians, foreshadowing self-determination |
| 1934 | M N Roy, a pioneer of the communist movement in India, first put forward the concrete idea of a Constituent Assembly |
| 1935 | The Indian National Congress officially demanded a Constituent Assembly to frame the Constitution |
| 1938 | Jawaharlal Nehru declared that the Constitution of free India must be framed by a Constituent Assembly elected on adult franchise |
| 1940 | The August Offer accepted the principle that Indians should frame their own constitution |
| 1942 | The Cripps Mission proposal for a constitution-making body after the war (rejected) |
| 1946 | The Cabinet Mission Plan, which finally gave practical shape to the Constituent Assembly |
The Constituent Assembly was thus the product of the Cabinet Mission Plan, 1946, and not of any single earlier demand. CAPF likes the contrast: M N Roy gave the idea (1934), the Congress adopted the demand (1935), and the Cabinet Mission Plan operationalised it (1946).
Under the Cabinet Mission Plan the total strength was fixed at 389: 296 seats for British India and 93 for the princely States. The 296 British-India seats were allotted to the provinces and to the chief commissioners' provinces in proportion to population, broadly one seat per million people. Members were chosen by indirect election by the members of the provincial legislative assemblies, who themselves had been elected on a limited franchise. The provincial seats were divided among the three communities, General, Muslim and Sikh, in proportion to their populations.
After Partition the seats of the areas that became Pakistan fell away, and the strength of the Assembly for the Dominion of India was reduced. The effective strength came down to 299. Of these, 229 were from the provinces and 70 from the princely States. The Assembly was therefore a partly nominated body for the princely-States seats and an indirectly elected body for the provincial seats, never a directly elected one. This indirect-election point is a recurring CAPF trap.
| Committee | Chairman |
|---|---|
| Drafting Committee | Dr B R Ambedkar |
| Union Powers Committee | Jawaharlal Nehru |
| Union Constitution Committee | Jawaharlal Nehru |
| Provincial Constitution Committee | Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel |
| Advisory Committee on Fundamental Rights, Minorities and Tribal and Excluded Areas | Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel |
| Rules of Procedure Committee | Dr Rajendra Prasad |
| Steering Committee | Dr Rajendra Prasad |
| States Committee (Committee for Negotiating with States) | Jawaharlal Nehru |
| Sub-Committee on Fundamental Rights | J B Kripalani |
| Sub-Committee on Minorities | H C Mookherjee |
| Flag Committee | Dr Rajendra Prasad |
Pattern to lock in: Nehru chaired the three Union-side committees (Union Powers, Union Constitution, States), Patel chaired the two province and rights committees (Provincial Constitution, Advisory Committee on Fundamental Rights), and Rajendra Prasad chaired the procedural committees (Rules, Steering, Flag). Ambedkar chaired only the Drafting Committee.
The Drafting Committee was set up on 1947-08-29 with seven members and was chaired by Dr B R Ambedkar. It prepared the draft Constitution on the basis of the constitutional adviser's draft.
| Member | Note |
|---|---|
| Dr B R Ambedkar | Chairman, Father of the Indian Constitution |
| Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar | Eminent jurist from Madras |
| N Gopalaswami Ayyangar | Former Diwan, later a Union Minister |
| K M Munshi | Jurist and writer |
| Saiyid Mohammad Saadulla | Former Premier of Assam |
| B L Mitter (later replaced by N Madhava Rau) | Resigned, replaced |
| D P Khaitan (died, replaced by T T Krishnamachari) | Died in 1948, replaced |
Sir B N Rau was the Constitutional Adviser to the Assembly. He prepared the initial draft of the Constitution, but he was not a member of the Drafting Committee. The committee then scrutinised and refined his draft. This distinction (Rau drafted as adviser, Ambedkar chaired the Drafting Committee) is a classic CAPF discriminator.
Jawaharlal Nehru moved the Objectives Resolution on 1946-12-13. It set out the ideals and philosophy that should guide the constitution-making, including the resolve to constitute India into an independent sovereign republic, to secure justice, equality and freedom, and to safeguard minorities and depressed classes. The Assembly adopted it on 1947-01-22. The Objectives Resolution, in modified form, later became the Preamble to the Constitution. See preamble and features of the constitution.
| Item | Fact |
|---|---|
| Basis of the Assembly | Cabinet Mission Plan, 1946 |
| Total strength (initial) | 389 (296 British India, 93 princely States) |
| Effective strength after Partition | 299 (229 provinces, 70 princely States) |
| Mode of selection | Indirect election by provincial assemblies; nomination for princely States |
| First sitting | 1946-12-09 |
| Temporary President of the first sitting | Dr Sachchidananda Sinha (the eldest member) |
| Permanent President | Dr Rajendra Prasad (elected 1946-12-11) |
| Vice-President | H C Mookherjee |
| Constitutional Adviser | Sir B N Rau |
| Drafting Committee Chairman | Dr B R Ambedkar |
| Drafting Committee set up | 1947-08-29 |
| Drafting Committee members | 7 |
| Objectives Resolution moved by | Jawaharlal Nehru, 1946-12-13 (adopted 1947-01-22) |
| National Flag adopted | 1947-07-22 |
| National Anthem and National Song adopted | 1950-01-24 |
| Constitution adopted | 1949-11-26 (Constitution Day / Samvidhan Divas) |
| Constitution came into force | 1950-01-26 |
| Time taken | 2 years, 11 months, 18 days |
| Total sessions | 11 |
| Members who signed the final document | 284 |
| Total expenditure | About Rs 64 lakh |
| Original Constitution | a Preamble, 395 Articles in 22 Parts, 8 Schedules |
| Symbol | Date adopted |
|---|---|
| National Flag (the tricolour) | 1947-07-22 |
| National Anthem ("Jana Gana Mana") and National Song ("Vande Mataram") | 1950-01-24 |
| First (provisional) President of India elected | 1950-01-24 (Dr Rajendra Prasad) |
The Constituent Assembly held its last sitting on 1950-01-24, when it signed the document and elected Dr Rajendra Prasad as the first President of India; the Constitution then came into force on 1950-01-26.
| Person | Role |
|---|---|
| Dr Rajendra Prasad | Permanent President of the Constituent Assembly; later first President of India |
| Dr B R Ambedkar | Chairman of the Drafting Committee; Father of the Indian Constitution |
| Jawaharlal Nehru | Moved the Objectives Resolution; chaired the Union committees |
| Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel | Chaired the Provincial Constitution and Fundamental Rights committees |
| Sir B N Rau | Constitutional Adviser; prepared the initial draft |
| H V R Iengar | Secretary to the Constituent Assembly |
| S N Mukherjee | Chief Draftsman |
| Prem Behari Narain Raizada | Calligrapher who handwrote the original Constitution |
The Constitution was adopted on 1949-11-26 but commenced only on 1950-01-26. The gap was deliberate. The Congress had declared Purna Swaraj (complete independence) on 1930-01-26 at the Lahore session under Nehru's presidency, and 26 January had been observed as Independence Day from 1930 to 1947. To honour that anniversary, the framers timed the commencement of the Constitution to 26 January. This is the standard assertion-reason item: the Constitution commenced on 1950-01-26 (assertion) because that date was the Purna Swaraj day of 1930 (correct reason). A handful of provisions dealing with citizenship, elections and provisional Parliament came into force on 1949-11-26 itself, but the bulk commenced on 1950-01-26. The day of commencement is celebrated as Republic Day, and 26 November is observed as Constitution Day (Samvidhan Divas) since 2015.
| Source | Borrowed feature |
|---|---|
| Government of India Act, 1935 | Federal scheme, office of Governor, emergency provisions, public service commissions, much administrative detail; the single largest source (close to half the text) |
| United Kingdom | Parliamentary government, rule of law, single citizenship, the cabinet system, the writs, bicameralism, the Speaker and her role, the legislative procedure |
| United States | Fundamental Rights, judicial review, independence of the judiciary, impeachment of the President, removal of Supreme Court and High Court judges, the office of Vice-President, the preamble idea |
| Ireland | Directive Principles of State Policy, nomination of members to the Rajya Sabha, the method of election of the President |
| Canada | Federation with a strong Centre, vesting of residuary powers in the Centre, appointment of State Governors by the Centre, advisory jurisdiction of the Supreme Court |
| Australia | The Concurrent List, freedom of trade, commerce and intercourse, the joint sitting of the two Houses of Parliament |
| Weimar Constitution of Germany | Suspension of Fundamental Rights during an emergency |
| Soviet Union (erstwhile USSR) | Fundamental Duties, the ideal of justice (social, economic and political) in the Preamble |
| France | The Republic, and the ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity in the Preamble |
| South Africa | The procedure for amendment of the Constitution (Art 368), the election of Rajya Sabha members |
| Japan | The phrase "procedure established by law" in Art 21 |
A few discriminators worth holding: residuary powers with the Centre and a strong-Centre federation come from Canada (not the United States, whose residuary powers lie with the states); the Concurrent List and joint sitting come from Australia; and the suspension of Fundamental Rights in an emergency comes from the Weimar Constitution of Germany.
Two of the borrowed features sit exactly where CAPF probes internal-security knowledge. The emergency provisions came from the Government of India Act, 1935, and the power to suspend Fundamental Rights during an emergency was drawn from the Weimar Constitution of Germany. The Assembly debated whether to provide for preventive detention in peacetime and consciously retained it in Art 22, an unusual choice tied to the security concerns of a newly partitioned State. The decision to vest residuary powers and a strong centralising tilt in the Union (from the Canadian model) is the structural reason the Centre can deploy its forces and direct the States in a security crisis. See citizenship and emergency provisions, fundamental rights and human rights and internal security.
The making of the Constitution is tested almost entirely as static recall. Expect these formats.
The Constituent Assembly of India was constituted under which plan or scheme. (a) Cripps Mission (b) Cabinet Mission Plan (c) Mountbatten Plan (d) Wavell Plan. Answer (b). The Cabinet Mission Plan of 1946 gave the Assembly its practical shape; the idea was first given by M N Roy in 1934.
Consider the following statements about the Constituent Assembly. (1) It was directly elected on universal adult franchise. (2) Dr Sachchidananda Sinha was its first permanent President. (3) Sir B N Rau was the Constitutional Adviser. How many are correct. (a) one (b) two (c) three (d) none. Answer (a). Only statement 3 is correct; the Assembly was indirectly elected, and Sinha was the temporary President of the first sitting, with Rajendra Prasad as permanent President.
Match the feature with its source. (1) Directive Principles (2) Concurrent List (3) Residuary powers with the Centre (4) Suspension of rights in emergency, with sources Ireland, Australia, Canada and Germany. Answer 1-Ireland, 2-Australia, 3-Canada, 4-Germany. The Concurrent List and joint sitting are Australian, residuary powers with the Centre are Canadian.
The Constitution was adopted on 1949-11-26 but came into force on 1950-01-26. The reason for choosing 26 January was: (a) it was the date of Gandhi's birth (b) it marked the Purna Swaraj declaration of 1930 (c) it was the date of Independence (d) it was Ambedkar's birthday. Answer (b). The Lahore session of 1930 declared Purna Swaraj on 26 January, observed as Independence Day until 1947.
Who among the following chaired the Union Powers Committee of the Constituent Assembly. (a) B R Ambedkar (b) Sardar Patel (c) Jawaharlal Nehru (d) Rajendra Prasad. Answer (c). Nehru chaired the Union-side committees; Patel chaired the provincial and fundamental-rights committees; Ambedkar chaired only the Drafting Committee.
| Often mixed up | The correct position |
|---|---|
| Temporary vs permanent President | Sachchidananda Sinha presided over the first sitting; Rajendra Prasad was the permanent President |
| Constitutional Adviser vs Drafting Committee Chairman | B N Rau was the adviser who drafted the text; Ambedkar chaired the Drafting Committee |
| Direct vs indirect election | The Assembly was indirectly elected by provincial assemblies, never on universal adult franchise |
| Adoption vs commencement date | Adopted 1949-11-26, commenced 1950-01-26 |
| Who gave the idea vs who created it | M N Roy gave the idea (1934); the Cabinet Mission Plan (1946) created the Assembly |
| 389 vs 299 | 389 was the initial total strength; 299 was the effective strength after Partition |