Pradhan attends Samvidhan Hatya Diwas event in Chandigarh
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan participated in a programme marking 'Samvidhan Hatya Diwas' (Constitution Murder Day) in Chandigarh on Thursday, 25 June 2026, the 51st anniversary of the declaration of the 1975 Emergency. The event, organised under the hashtag #SamvidhanHatyaDiwas, was part of a series of commemorations held across the country by BJP-affiliated organisations and central government bodies on this date.
Context
On 25 June 1975, then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi advised the President of India to proclaim a state of Emergency under Article 352 of the Constitution. The proclamation led to the suspension of fundamental rights, the arrest of opposition leaders, and a near-total curb on press freedom. The Emergency lasted until March 1977 and remains one of the most contested episodes in post-Independence Indian political history.
The term 'Samvidhan Hatya Diwas' — literally 'the day the Constitution was murdered' — reflects the framing adopted by the BJP and its ideological ecosystem to characterise the Emergency as an act of constitutional subversion. Chandigarh, the Union Territory that serves as joint capital of Punjab and Haryana, hosted the programme attended by the Union Minister.
Policy Backdrop
Since 2014, the BJP-led central government has systematically institutionalised public remembrance of the Emergency period. Central ministries, state units, and affiliated student and youth bodies regularly organise events on 25 June to mark the date, positioning the ruling dispensation as a defender of constitutional values.
The commemoration fits within a broader political narrative that draws a contrast between the Emergency era and the present government's stated commitment to democratic norms. For Dharmendra Pradhan, a senior party leader who also holds the Education portfolio, participation in such events carries both political and institutional weight — signalling that the Ministry of Education aligns itself with the constitutional memory exercise.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary audience for Samvidhan Hatya Diwas events is students, citizens, and political workers who are being encouraged to engage with the Emergency as a historical warning. Educational institutions have, in recent years, been urged to include the Emergency period in civic awareness programmes, making the Education Minister's presence at such a commemoration particularly symbolic.
Opposition parties, particularly the Indian National Congress, have consistently pushed back against the framing of 25 June as 'Constitution Murder Day', arguing that it is a selective and politically motivated reading of history. The annual commemoration thus continues to be a site of active political contestation between the ruling party and the opposition.
What's Next
With the Monsoon Session of Parliament approaching, references to the Emergency and constitutional values are expected to feature prominently in legislative debates. State-level commemorations for June 2027 — marking the 52nd anniversary — are likely to be planned with greater institutional scale, especially if the BJP retains power in key state assemblies. The Education Ministry's continued engagement with this commemoration suggests it may increasingly find its way into formal curriculum discussions and student outreach programmes.