CM Dhami marks 1975 Emergency as 'Samvidhan Hatya Diwas'
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami on Thursday, 25 June 2026, marked the 51st anniversary of the 1975 Emergency with a sharp post on X, calling it a 'dark chapter' in Indian democratic history and paying tribute to those who resisted the crackdown on civil liberties. He invoked the BJP-designated observance Samvidhan Hatya Diwas — literally 'Constitution Murder Day' — to frame the anniversary as an attack on constitutional values rather than a mere political decision.
Context
In his post, Dhami wrote that on this day in 1975, the then Congress government, 'drowned in the arrogance of power,' imposed the Emergency on the country, writing 'a dark chapter in the history of Indian democracy.' He noted that freedom of expression was suppressed, the press was silenced, lakhs of citizens and political workers were jailed without trial, and fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution were severely curtailed. He offered salutations to all 'guardians of democracy' who resisted the tyranny, crediting their 'indomitable courage' for keeping India a living democracy.
The national Emergency was proclaimed on 25 June 1975 by President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed under Article 352 of the Constitution, on the advice of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. It remained in force for 21 months, ending in March 1977, and is widely regarded as the most severe suspension of democratic norms in independent India's history.
Policy Backdrop
The designation Samvidhan Hatya Diwas reflects the BJP's institutionalised effort to mark 25 June as a day of democratic reckoning. The party has used the anniversary to draw a contrast between what it describes as Congress-era authoritarian governance and its own emphasis on constitutional propriety. Similar messaging has emerged from BJP leaders at both state and national levels each year around this date.
During the Emergency period, the government invoked special powers to suspend fundamental rights, impose press censorship, and detain political opponents — including leaders from across the opposition — under the Maintenance of Internal Security Act (MISA) and other preventive detention laws. The period remains a reference point in Indian political discourse on civil liberties and institutional independence.
Stakeholders and Impact
Journalists and political workers are specifically named by Dhami as among those whose voices were suppressed during the Emergency. His tribute implicitly honours those who faced detention or censorship during 1975–77, a constituency that cuts across party lines in historical memory, even if the annual observance is driven by BJP political framing.
The hashtag #SamvidhanHatyaDiwas signals coordinated messaging across BJP leaders on the platform, amplifying the party's counter-narrative to Congress's historical legacy. For the Congress party, the Emergency remains a contested episode — one that its leadership has at times acknowledged as a mistake, though it disputes the BJP's framing of the anniversary as a formal day of mourning.
What's Next
Statements from other BJP chief ministers and central government ministers on the same date are expected to reinforce the party's unified messaging around Samvidhan Hatya Diwas. Whether the observance gains formal parliamentary recognition — through a resolution or structured debate — remains a question that will shape how the anniversary is institutionalised in future years. The annual recurrence of this messaging also sets up a predictable flashpoint in BJP–Congress exchanges over India's democratic record.