Nadda demands Rahul Gandhi apologise for Emergency sins
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Health Minister and BJP national president J. P. Nadda on 25 June 2026 sharply attacked the Gandhi family on Samvidhan Hatya Diwas, demanding that Congress leader Rahul Gandhi seek a public apology for his grandmother Indira Gandhi's 'anti-constitutional acts' before invoking the Constitution.
Context
Posting under the hashtag #SamvidhanHatyaDiwas, Nadda wrote in Hindi: 'Indira Gandhi ke pote aur poti Samvidhan ki pustak lekar ghoomte phirte hain, unhe Samvidhan ka ek praavdhan bhi nahin pata hai' — 'Indira Gandhi's grandson and granddaughter walk around carrying the Constitution, yet they do not know even a single provision of it.' He added that Rahul Gandhi must apologise to the people of the country for his grandmother's anti-constitutional acts before picking up the Constitution.
The post was published on the 51st anniversary of the proclamation of Emergency, which began on 25 June 1975 when then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi advised the President to invoke Article 352, citing internal disturbance. The 21-month Emergency suspended fundamental rights, led to mass arrests and press censorship, and remains one of the most contested episodes in Indian democratic history.
Policy Backdrop
The 42nd Constitutional Amendment of 1976, passed during the Emergency, significantly expanded Parliament's powers and curtailed judicial review. After the Janata government came to power, the 44th Constitutional Amendment of 1978 restored many pre-Emergency safeguards. The BJP formally designated 25 June as Samvidhan Hatya Diwas — 'Constitution Murder Day' — to institutionalise annual commemoration of what the party characterises as Congress's assault on constitutional democracy.
Nadda's post continues a decade-long pattern of BJP messaging that contrasts the party's stated adherence to constitutional values with the Gandhi family's historical record. The rhetoric is deployed both during election campaigns and on social media, particularly around this date each year.
Stakeholders and Impact
Rahul Gandhi, who has frequently carried a copy of the Constitution at public rallies and parliamentary sessions as a symbolic gesture, is the primary target of the attack. The BJP's framing seeks to undercut the moral authority of the Indian National Congress on constitutional matters by tying its current leadership to the Emergency legacy.
Constitutional scholars and opposition parties have historically contested the BJP's framing, arguing that post-Emergency legal and democratic corrections — including the 44th Amendment — were themselves carried out within constitutional processes. Congress is expected to issue rebuttals, and the exchange is likely to spill into parliamentary proceedings during the upcoming monsoon session.
What's Next
BJP units across states are observing Samvidhan Hatya Diwas with public events and social media campaigns on 25 June 2026. Congress's response and any counter-narrative around the anniversary will shape the political discourse heading into the monsoon session of Parliament. The annual ritual of competing constitutional claims between the two parties shows no sign of abating, with each side seeking to define who is the authentic guardian of India's democratic framework.