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The Making of The Constitution of India - A Detailed Analysis - Ipleaders

The document provides details about the making of the Indian Constitution by the Constituent Assembly from 1946 to 1950. It discusses that the Assembly was composed of elected representatives and nominated members. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar chaired the Drafting Committee that was responsible for drafting the final document. Over the three years it was in session, the Assembly considered thousands of amendments to draft the constitution, which was finally adopted on November 26, 1949 and came into effect on January 26, 1950.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
455 views10 pages

The Making of The Constitution of India - A Detailed Analysis - Ipleaders

The document provides details about the making of the Indian Constitution by the Constituent Assembly from 1946 to 1950. It discusses that the Assembly was composed of elected representatives and nominated members. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar chaired the Drafting Committee that was responsible for drafting the final document. Over the three years it was in session, the Assembly considered thousands of amendments to draft the constitution, which was finally adopted on November 26, 1949 and came into effect on January 26, 1950.

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Ashim Biswas
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3/29/23, 2:03 PM The making of the Constitution of India : a detailed analysis - iPleaders

The making of the Constitution of India : a


detailed analysis
By Sneha Mahawar - October 6, 2021

This article is written by Oishika Banerji of Amity Law School, Kolkata. This article provides
a detailed analysis of the making of the Indian Constitution, and the work involved in its
formulation. 

Table of Contents 
1. Introduction 
2. Who drafted the Indian Constitution
3. Composition of the Constituent Assembly
3.1. Structure
4. Working of the Constituent Assembly
5. Committees of the Constituent Assembly
5.1. The Drafting Committee of the Constituent Assembly 
6. Enactment and enforcement of the Constitution
7. Women and the Constituent Assembly
8.  Criticism surrounding the Constituent Assembly
9. Conclusion 
10. References 

Introduction 
India being the largest democracy, living and breathing in the air of sovereignty has been
gifted with the lengthiest Constitution in this world comprising 448 Articles in 25 Parts and
12 Schedules. The story that exists behind the formation of the Constitution of India
receives a remarkable position in Indian history. In 1934 the seed of forming a Constituent
Assembly was first sown by an Indian pioneer of the Communist movement, Mr. M.N. Roy.
Followed by this, it was the Indian National Congress whose demand for forming a

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Constituent Assembly to give shape to the Constitution of India took the center stage in
1935. Though this demand was accepted by the British Government in 1940, the draft
proposal that was sent over by the Government to India with Sir Stafford Cripps did not
receive a warm welcome from the Muslim League. It was finally the Cabinet Mission that put
forth the idea of the Constituent Assembly which marked the beginning of formulating the
Indian Constitution thereby creating history. The supreme law of democratic India was
drafted by the Assembly from 1946 to 1950 and was finally adopted on 26th November
1949 with effect from 26th January 1950 which has been celebrated as the Republic Day of
India. The Constituent Assembly had precisely taken two years, eleven months, and
seventeen days to complete the historic duty of drafting the Indian Constitution. During this
period, the Assembly held eleven sessions spread over 165 days, among which 114 days
were spent solely on consideration of the Draft Constitution. This article aims to throw light
on all the significant events that led up to the framing of the Indian Constitution, considered
as the mother of all laws in India.

Who drafted the Indian Constitution


The Constituent Assembly, which was established in December 1946, drafted the Indian
Constitution. In 1946, the Constituent Assembly had 300 members. Dr. Rajendra Prasad
was in charge of heading the same. The Constituent Assembly established a Drafting
Committee on August 29, 1947, under the chairmanship of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, to come up
with a draft Constitution for India. Out of a total of 7,635 amendments presented, the
Assembly moved, considered, and voted on 2,473 of them throughout its deliberations on
the draft Constitution.

The Indian Constitution was adopted on November 26, 1949, and the members of
Parliament signed it on January 24, 1950. The Constitution was signed by 284 people in
total. It rained outside on the day the Constitution was signed, which was viewed as a

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favorable omen. The Indian Constitution went into effect on January 2, 1950. The Assembly
ceased to exist on that date, and the Provisional Parliament of India was formed until a new
Parliament was formed in 1952.

The Constituent Assembly (CA) formed a number of committees to study and report on a
variety of significant issues that needed to be addressed in the Constitution. The broad
ideas outlined in these committees’ proposals had been addressed in the CA by August
1947. Sir Benegal Narsing Rau, the Assembly’s Constitutional Advisor, prepared a draft
incorporating the Assembly’s numerous choices based on the committee reports. There
were 240 clauses and 13 schedules in it. Few people must be aware that Sir B N Rau had
drafted the initial draft of the Indian Constitution in October 1947. Almost every clause in
the first draft included a marginal note referring to similar provisions in other constitutions
or the Government of India (GOI) Act 1935.

Dr. Ambedkar was elected chairman of the Drafting Committee (DC) during its first meeting
on August 30. Following that, the DC convened for 42 days, beginning on October 27, 1947,
to discuss each article of Rau’s original draft. On February 21, 1948, the DC submitted a
Revised Draft Constitution to the President of the Constituent Assembly. It had 315 items
and eight schedules in it. Ambedkar was polite enough to express the DC’s gratitude to Sir
B N Rau and Shri S N Mukherjee, Joint Secretary and Draftsman respectively, in his
covering letter.

The period from February 1948 to November 1949, when the Constitution was finally
adopted by the Constituent Assembly, is an important stage of our Constitution’s evolution
since a number of historic events occurred during that time that influenced discussions on
the Constitution’s provisions. For example, Indian state integration, the abolition of religious
minorities’ particular advantages while keeping privileges for backward and downtrodden
sections such as Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, and Centre-State relations. The
DC-prepared Draft Constitution was extensively distributed. On April 10 and 11, 1948, a
Special Committee was constituted to analyze the text, particularly those elements that
differed from previous assembly decisions.

The DC convened again in October 1948 to assess the entire situation in light of the Special
Committee’s report. Following that, Ambedkar, as Chairman of the DC, presented a new
report to the President of the Assembly, stating the revisions that the Committee had
chosen to be introduced in the Assembly.

On November 4, 1948, the Assembly received the Draft Constitution. It was debated for
over a year before being adopted and authenticated by the President on November 26,
1949. The Constitution formed the Republic of India on January 26, 1950, and the
Constituent Assembly ceased to exist on that date. The Assembly spent over three years
crafting the constitution, from December 9, 1946, to November 26, 1949. Sir Rau, Shri S N
Mukherjee, and members of different CA and DC committees all contributed to its creation.

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Composition of the Constituent Assembly


It was the Cabinet Mission that had put forth the idea of a Constituent Assembly and,
therefore the composition of the Assembly was made in line with the Cabinet Mission
scheme. This came up with certain traits from which it could be inferred that the
Constituent Assembly was supposed to be a body partly elected, and partly nominated
members. The elections to the Assembly that took place in 1946 resulted in the Indian
National Congress winning a total of 208 seats, and the Muslim League securing 73 seats
leaving behind 15 seats that were occupied by independents. The decision of the Princely
States to not be involved in the Constituent Assembly left 93 seats vacated. It is noteworthy
that although members of the Constituent Assembly were not elected directly by the Indian
people, it comprised of representatives of all sections of the society namely the Hindus,
Muslims, Sikhs, Parsi, Anglo-Indian, Indian Christians, SCs/ STS, Backward Classes, and
women belonging to all of these sections. 

Structure
The structure of the Constituent Assembly was:

1. 292 members elected through the Provincial Legislative Assemblies;

2. The Indian Princely States was represented by 93 members; and

3. The Chief Commissioners’ Provinces were represented by 4 members.

Thus, the total membership of the Constituent Assembly was to be 389. But the
Mountbatten Plan of 3rd June 1947 led to the partition of India thereby leading to a
formation of a separate Constituent Assembly for the newly made Pakistan. This ceased
some of the representatives of certain Provinces to be members of the Assembly, resulting
in a reduction of the membership to 299 members. 

Working of the Constituent Assembly


The date, 9 December 1946, holds immense importance as it was the day when the
Constituent Assembly met for the first time in the Constitution Hall of the Indian Parliament,
New Delhi. Though the first row of the Hall was embraced by notable personalities such as
Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, Acharya J.B.
Kripalani, Dr. Rajendra Prasad, Smt. Sarojini Naidu, Shri Hare-Krushna Mahatab, Pandit
Govind Ballabh Pant, Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, Shri Sarat Chandra Bose, Shri C. Rajagopalachari
and Shri M. Asaf Ali, the auspicious occasion significantly noticed the absence of the Muslim
League. The oldest member of the Constituent Assembly, Dr. Sachchidananda Sinha was
appointed as the temporary chairman of the Assembly meeting that was attended by 211
members. Later, it was Dr. Rajendra Prasad who was elected for the position of the
President of the Constituent Assembly followed by which both H.C. Mukherjee and V.T.
Krishnamachari were elected for the position of the Vice-President of the Assembly thus
providing the Assembly with two Vice Presidents. 

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The working of the Constituent Assembly proceeded on the basis of the Objectives
Resolution that was laid before the Assembly on 13th December 1946 by Pandit Jawaharlal
Nehru and was adopted by the Constituent Assembly on 22 January 1947. The Objectives
Resolution listed eight principles that were the guiding light for the framing of the
constitutional structure of India with fundamental elements of independence, and
sovereignty. The Resolution stated that the powers of the organs of the government will be
derived from the people of the nation thereby ensuring socio-economic and political justice,
equality before the law of the land, freedom to express, worship, belief, to the people in
return. With the aim to eliminate caste discrimination that had been long prevailing in the
Indian society, the Resolution aimed to provide adequate protection to individuals belonging
from backward classes, tribal areas, and minority groups. With a vision to maintain
worldwide peace and ensure welfare for mankind, the Objective Resolution proposed to
keep intact the integrity, and sovereignty of the nation at any cost. A few notable changes
were brought in the Constituent Assembly by the Independence Act, 1947 which needs to
be mentioned to understand the working of the Assembly, namely;

1. The Assembly became a fully functioning sovereign body, and by the means of the Act of
1947, any law made under the umbrella of the British Parliament with regards to India
could be scrapped, altered, or modified. 

2. The Assembly was majorly vested with two functions;

1. Make a Constitution for the free nation; and

2. Enacting laws for the country and its people to be governed by.

3. The total strength of the Assembly was fixed at 299 which was inclusive of the strength
of the 

Indian provinces (229), and 

Princely States (70). 

The Assembly functioned in many other ways beyond enacting laws and framing the Indian
Constitution such as; 

1. Adoption of the national flag, national song, and national anthem on 22nd July 1947, and
24th January 1950 respectively. 

2. In May 1949, the Assembly had ratified India’s membership of the Commonwealth.

3. The Assembly on 24th January 1950, elected Dr. Rajendra Prasad as its first President. 

Finally, it was on 29 August 1947, a Drafting Committee under the chairmanship of Dr. B.R.
Ambedkar was formulated by the Constituent Assembly to prepare a Draft Constitution for
India. Repeated debates, discussions, arguments, scrapping of clauses, the addition of
clauses took place whenever the Committee used to meet and all were worth it when the
Constitution of India was adopted by the country on 26 November, 1949 with 284 members
signing the same. After that, the Assembly ceased to exist from the 26th day of January,

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1950 when the Constitution began to be applicable and a new Parliament was given way in
1952. 

Committees of the Constituent Assembly


To avoid any kind of mismanagement, and taking into account the load of work to be dusted
off, the Constituent Assembly had formulated different committees working in specific areas
of constitution-making. There were eight major committees namely;

1. The Union Powers Committee presided over Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru.

2. The Union Constitution Committee presided over Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru.

3. The Provincial Constitution Committee presided over Sardar Patel.

4. Drafting Committee presided by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar.

5. Advisory Committee on Fundamental Rights, Minorities and Tribal and Excluded


Areas presided by Sardar Patel. This committee had the following five sub-committees:

Fundamental Rights Sub-Committee with J.B. Kripalani as the Chairman.

Minorities Sub-Committee with H.C. Mukherjee as the Chairman.

North-East Frontier Tribal Areas and Assam Excluded & Partially Excluded Areas
Sub-Committee with Gopinath Bardoloi as the Chairman.

Excluded and Partially Excluded Areas (Other than those in Assam) Sub-
Committee with A.V. Thakkar as the Chairman.

North-West Frontier Tribal Areas Sub-Committee.

6. Rules of Procedure Committee presided over by Dr. Rajendra Prasad.

7. States Committee (Committee for Negotiating with States) presided over Pandit
Jawaharlal Nehru.

8. The Steering Committee was presided over by Dr. Rajendra Prasad.

The remaining 13 committees were considered minor committees. 

The Drafting Committee of the Constituent Assembly 


Among all the committees mentioned above, a special mention of the Drafting Committee
headed by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar is required. Set up on 29th August 1947, the Drafting
Committee was vested with the main task of drafting the Constitution of India after taking
into account proposals from different committees. This Committee comprised of seven
members of the Assembly namely;

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1. Dr. B. R Ambedkar as the Chairman of the Committee;

2. Dr. K M Munshi;

3. Syed Mohammad Saadullah;

4. N Madhava Rau;

5. N Gopalaswamy Ayyangar;

6. Alladi Krishnaswamy Ayyar;

7. T T Krishnamachari.

The Committee took a period of not beyond six months to prepare its first draft which was
subjected to changes by suggestions, public comments, and various criticism thereafter the
second draft was released in October 1948. 

Enactment and enforcement of the Constitution


The Constitution was adopted on November 26, 1949, containing a Preamble, 395 Articles,
and 8 Schedules after three sets of reading of the Draft that was prepared by the Drafting
Committee, and published in October 1948. The motion on Draft Constitution was declared
to be passed on November 26, 1949, thereby receiving the signatures of the members
along with the President. It is to be noted that the Preamble succeeded the Constitution in
enactment. Among the 395 Articles, some of the Articles like Articles 5 to 9, Articles 379,
380, 388, 392, 393 came into force on 26th November, 1949 itself. The rest of the Articles
were enforced on Republic Day, that is 26th January, 1950. As the Constitution of India
commenced, the Indian Independence Act, 1947, and the Government of India Act, 1935
ceased to exist. At present, our Constitution is decorated with 448 Articles, 25 Parts, and 12
Schedules. 

Women and the Constituent Assembly


A significant feature of the Constituent Assembly was that women played an important role
in framing the Indian Constitution as well. There were 15 women members of the
Constituent Assembly who contributed towards bringing in the Constitution of independent
India in their own way. The notable contributions of each of these 15 personalities have
been listed hereunder;

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1. Shrimati Ammu Swaminathan had put forth that the two stable pillars on which the
Indian Constitution rests are the Fundamental Rights, and the Directive Principles of
State Policy. With the view that the Constitution was lengthy and bulky, Ammu
Swaminathan had contended that many minute details that have been incorporated in
the Indian Constitution should have been left with the Government, and the Legislature. 

2. Shrimati Annie Mascarene’s view on the provincial election was a notable one along
with which her tribute to Sardar Patel for unifying India received applause in the
Assembly.

3. Begum Aizaz Rasul opined that the Ministry being a stable body should not be
subjected to the whims and fancies of any particular party or legislature to which the
Ministry was responsible. Further, her appreciation for the commendable job done by Dr.
B. R Ambedkar on protecting minority rights while drafting the Indian Constitution cannot
be ignored.

4. Shrimati Dakshayani Velayudan who belonged to the Madras Constituency showed


her concern towards the Harijan community standing against the formation of a separate
electorate for them, forced labor, the practice of untouchability in the Assembly in a
majority of her speeches.

5. Shrimati G. Durgabai had put forth her views on the appointment of Judges of the
Provincial High Courts, pointing that the same should be the duty of the Governor and
his set of Ministers solely. Her views on the prohibition of the Devadasi system,
protection of children from exploitation, and limitations on the freedoms provided to
individuals had been remarkable also.

6. Shrimati Hansa Mehta majorly highlighted the need for social, economic, and political
justice for women of India taking into account the prolonged suppression they have been
subjected to in India. 

7. Shrimati Purnima Banerji put forth her views on the State’s Control over Religious
Instruction in Schools. She also pointed out that secularism in a true sense could only be
achieved if citizens of the nation are united among themselves.

8. Shrimati Renuka Ray belonging to the West Bengal Constituency focused majorly on
equality of Status and justice for women.

9. Shrimati Sarojini Naidu had sought an inclusive Constituent Assembly of India.

10. Shrimati Sucheta Kripalani had uplifted the environment of the Constituent Assembly
by singing the verses of the national song, and the national anthem of India.

11. Shrimati Vijayalakshmi Pandit aimed for the centrality of new Asia in the Post-Raj
World Order.

12. Rajkumari Amrit Kaur was the first woman of independent India to join the Cabinet in
the position of Health Minister. She founded the Indian Council for Child Welfare followed
by the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) and Lady Irwin College in Delhi.

13. Shrimati Malati Chowdhury laid emphasis on the role of education in the development
of a nation. 

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14. Shrimati Leela Ray had played a significant role in both pre and post-independent
India. Founded the Jatiya Mahila Sanghati, Dacca Mahila Satyagraha Sangha that worked
towards women empowerment, and anti-salt tax movement respectively.

15. Shrimati Kamla Chaudhri significantly worked towards women’s education and
empowerment. 

 Criticism surrounding the Constituent Assembly


There were several criticisms that the Constituent Assembly had to face during its existence
which have been listed hereunder;

1. The Constituent Assembly was a time-consuming effort: While drawing a


comparison with the framers of the American Constitution, the critics stated that the
makers of the Indian Constitution had taken a longer time period than what should have
been taken by them. 

2. The Constituent Assembly was neither a representative body nor a sovereign


one: The critics pointed out that the Assembly was not a representative body as the
members were not elected by means of universal adult franchise and as the roots of the
formation of the Assembly lies with the British Government, the body was not a
sovereign one. 

3. The Constituent Assembly was dominated by members of the Congress Party: A


British-Constitutional expert recognized by the name of Granville Austin had pointed out
that the Constituent Assembly of India was a one-party body thereby charging the
Assembly to be governed only by the members of the Congress.

4. The Constituent Assembly was a Hindu-dominated body: Critics had majorly


pointed out that the Constituent Assembly represented only the Hindus of the nation,
leaving behind the rest of the religions. 

Conclusion 
As we come to the end of this article, it is worth mentioning that in spite of the pile of
criticisms put forth on the functioning of the Constituent Assembly, one cannot ignore that
today if India is living and breathing in the air of sovereignty, democracy, and freedom
along with the rights and duties vested on both the citizens and the states of the nation, it
is because of the relentless efforts by notable personalities who had come together to gift
India its biggest asset, or as we call it the Constitution of India. 

References 
https://rajyasabha.nic.in/rsnew/constituent_assembly/constituent_assembly_mem.asp

https://constitutionnet.org/sites/default/files/the_role_of_constituent_assemblies_-
_final_yg_-_200606.pdf

https://rajyasabha.nic.in/rsnew/publication_electronic/Selected%20Women%20Speech_Fina

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