CM Mohan Yadav announces UCC implementation in Madhya Pradesh
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Dr. Mohan Yadav announced on Wednesday, 1 July 2026 that the Uniform Civil Code (UCC) is set to be implemented in Madhya Pradesh, marking a significant policy move by the BJP-governed state.
In a post on X, the Chief Minister wrote: 'मध्यप्रदेश में समान नागरिक संहिता (UCC) लागू होने जा रही है' — 'The Uniform Civil Code is going to be implemented in Madhya Pradesh.' The announcement, brief but consequential, signals that the state intends to join Uttarakhand as only the second Indian state to enact such a code.
Context
The Uniform Civil Code refers to a single set of civil laws governing marriage, divorce, inheritance, and adoption uniformly across all religious communities, replacing religion-specific personal laws. Article 44 of the Indian Constitution lists it as a Directive Principle of State Policy, directing the State to work toward its realisation. The BJP has carried the UCC as a formal manifesto commitment since 1996.
Uttarakhand became the first Indian state to pass a UCC law when its Legislative Assembly approved the bill in February 2024 under Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami. Goa is separately cited as a working precedent, having retained a common civil code inherited from the Portuguese Civil Code of 1867. Dr. Yadav's announcement positions Madhya Pradesh as the next state to move on this agenda.
Policy Backdrop
Dr. Mohan Yadav took charge as Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh in December 2023. Since then, the state government has aligned closely with central BJP policy priorities. A UCC in Madhya Pradesh would cover the state's population of roughly 8.5 crore people and apply uniformly across Hindu, Muslim, Christian, and other communities on matters of personal law.
The central government has so far not introduced a nationwide UCC bill, making state-level enactments the primary legislative pathway for the policy. Legal experts note that personal law reform at the state level can still be challenged on constitutional grounds, and any Madhya Pradesh bill is likely to face scrutiny before the Madhya Pradesh High Court and potentially the Supreme Court of India.
Stakeholders and Impact
Women's organisations supporting the UCC argue it would standardise protections around marriage age, divorce rights, and inheritance regardless of religion. Religious minority groups and opposition parties have consistently raised concerns that such legislation disproportionately targets Muslim personal law and risks communal tension. Legal practitioners point to the complexity of drafting a code that is constitutionally watertight and practically enforceable across a diverse population.
The announcement is expected to energise both supporters and critics of the policy, drawing responses from civil society, bar associations, and political parties across the state ahead of any formal legislative process.
What's Next
The immediate steps to watch include the introduction of a draft UCC bill in the Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly, any public consultation or law commission process the state government may initiate, and the timeline for gubernatorial assent and actual enforcement. Legal challenges at the High Court level are widely anticipated once a bill is tabled.
If enacted, Madhya Pradesh's UCC would represent a significant acceleration of the BJP's state-by-state strategy on personal law reform, and could increase pressure on other BJP-ruled states to follow suit before the next general election cycle.