Congress backs Jairam Ramesh's two-thirds majority claim, BJP invokes 1975 Emergency

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Congress backs Jairam Ramesh's two-thirds majority claim, BJP invokes 1975 Emergency

Synopsis

A sharp political clash erupted on 25 June as Congress rallied behind Jairam Ramesh's claim that the BJP wants a two-thirds majority to dismantle reservations and rewrite the Constitution — while the BJP turned the tables, invoking the 1975 Emergency and demanding an apology from the Congress on its own constitutional record.

Key Takeaways

Congress on 25 June backed Jairam Ramesh 's allegation that the BJP is seeking a two-thirds parliamentary majority to end reservations and amend the Constitution .
UP Congress President Ajay Rai called Ramesh's charge 'absolutely correct,' linking it to alleged MLA poaching by the BJP.
Congress MP Rakesh Rathore alleged BJP wants to exclude marginalised communities from the mainstream and that 'MPs are being bought in crores.' BJP leader Gourav Vallabh demanded Congress apologise for imposing the 1975 Emergency , saying the party 'abolished fundamental rights' under Indira Gandhi .
PM Narendra Modi called the Emergency a 'grave sin' and the 'darkest chapter in Indian democracy,' urging citizens to 'never forgive nor forget.'

Congress leaders on Thursday, 25 June rallied behind party general secretary Jairam Ramesh, who had alleged that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is pursuing a two-thirds parliamentary majority specifically to end reservations and amend the Constitution. The BJP swiftly counter-attacked, invoking the 1975 Emergency and asserting that the Congress has no moral standing to lecture on constitutional values.

Congress Leaders Back Ramesh's Allegation

Uttar Pradesh Congress President Ajay Rai said Ramesh's charge was 'absolutely correct,' alleging that the BJP's reported practice of poaching elected legislators demonstrated an intent to weaken the Constitution. 'The way BJP is buying MLAs, this shows that they want to change the Constitution and weaken its strength,' Rai alleged.

Congress MP Rakesh Rathore went further, claiming the BJP does not want marginalised communities to enter the mainstream. 'They don't want that the oppressed section in the country gets to be a part of the mainstream. That is why the BJP wants to amend the Constitution and also that is why MPs are being bought in crores,' Rathore said. He added that the BJP's reported push for a two-thirds majority in Parliament was aimed at drafting a Constitution 'of their own.'

BJP Fires Back, Cites Emergency as Congress's Constitutional Record

BJP leader Gourav Vallabh launched a sharp rebuttal, demanding that Ramesh and the entire Congress leadership 'collectively stand and apologise to the entire country' for the Emergency imposed in 1975 under the then Indira Gandhi-led government. 'The fundamental rights of the people were abolished by the Congress during that period,' Vallabh said.

Vallabh further alleged that the Congress government of that era had 'completely destroyed Constitutional establishments' and reduced governance to a one-person regime. 'Indira Gandhi had made herself the centre of the regime. Even today, people who lived through that period are horrified thinking about the events that took place at that time,' he said.

The BJP leader also stressed the need to remind younger generations — including millennials, Generation Z, and Generation Alpha — that the Congress had, in his words, 'hatched a conspiracy to destroy the Constitution in 1975,' adding that 'it was the people of the country who defeated that conspiracy.'

PM Modi Calls Emergency India's 'Darkest Chapter'

The exchange came on the same day that Prime Minister Narendra Modi publicly condemned the Emergency's imposition as a 'grave sin' and the 'darkest chapter in the history of Indian democracy.' Modi urged citizens to 'never forgive nor forget' those responsible — remarks widely read as a direct broadside at the Congress ahead of ongoing political competition.

Context and What This Signals

The row centres on a recurring fault line in Indian politics: who controls the constitutional narrative. Ramesh's original remark tapped into long-standing anxieties among Scheduled Caste, Scheduled Tribe, and Other Backward Class communities about the safety of reservation provisions. The BJP's counter — centred on the Emergency anniversary — reflects its established strategy of anchoring the Congress's credibility to 26 June 1975, the date Emergency was declared. This is not the first time both charges have been traded; the pattern intensifies predictably around the Emergency anniversary each year. How the two parties frame constitutional intent will likely shape messaging through the next electoral cycle.

Point of View

And neither is engaging the other's actual argument. Congress's reservation-threat framing is politically potent but rests on an allegation — Ramesh has not produced evidence that BJP's majority-building is explicitly aimed at scrapping reservations. The BJP's Emergency counter is historically grounded but functionally a deflection: invoking 1975 does not address what the party intends to do with a two-thirds majority today. What is missing from both sides is specificity. The Constitution requires a two-thirds majority for any amendment — that is a procedural fact, not proof of intent. The real accountability question — which constitutional provisions, if any, does the BJP plan to amend — goes unanswered, and neither the Congress nor the media has pressed for it with precision.
NationPress
25 Jun 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What did Jairam Ramesh allege about the BJP's two-thirds majority push?
Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh alleged that the BJP is seeking a two-thirds majority in Parliament specifically to end reservations for marginalised communities and amend the Constitution. Congress leaders including UP Congress President Ajay Rai and MP Rakesh Rathore backed the claim on 25 June.
How did the BJP respond to Jairam Ramesh's remark?
BJP leader Gourav Vallabh rejected the allegation and demanded that Jairam Ramesh and the entire Congress leadership apologise for imposing the Emergency in 1975, saying the party 'abolished fundamental rights' during that period. He argued Congress has no credibility to speak on constitutional protection.
What did PM Modi say about the 1975 Emergency?
Prime Minister Narendra Modi called the imposition of the Emergency a 'grave sin' and the 'darkest chapter in the history of Indian democracy' on 25 June. He urged citizens to 'never forgive nor forget' those who imposed it.
Why does a two-thirds majority matter for constitutional amendments in India?
Under the Indian Constitution, amending most core provisions requires a two-thirds majority of members present and voting in each House of Parliament, along with an absolute majority of the total membership. This threshold is why both the BJP's alleged pursuit of such a majority and the Congress's concerns about constitutional changes are politically significant.
Who is affected by this political dispute over reservations and constitutional amendments?
The dispute directly concerns Scheduled Caste, Scheduled Tribe, and Other Backward Class communities, whose reservation rights under the Constitution are at the centre of Ramesh's allegation. More broadly, the row shapes how all voters assess each party's constitutional commitments ahead of future elections.
Nation Press
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