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Anti-Defection Law India: 10th Schedule, 52nd & 91st Amendment Explained

Learn about India's Anti-Defection Law — 10th Schedule, 52nd Amendment (1985), 91st Amendment (2003), the two-thirds merger rule, and the 2026 AAP-BJP defection case. With MCQs, flashcards & key takeaways for UPSC, SSC & State PSC exams.

⏱️ 10 min read
📊 1,848 words
📅 April 2026
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“A legislature without loyalty to voters is a legislature that governs only for itself.” — On the Purpose of Anti-Defection Law

In April 2026, seven Rajya Sabha MPs from the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) — representing more than two-thirds of the party’s strength in the Upper House — defected to the BJP. This dramatic event has brought India’s Anti-Defection Law back into sharp focus.

Defection refers to an elected legislator switching sides — either by resigning from their party or by voting against party directions. To combat the political instability caused by such “floor-crossing,” India added the 10th Schedule to the Constitution via the 52nd Amendment Act, 1985.

10th Schedule (Anti-Defection)
1985 52nd Amendment
2003 91st Amendment
2/3 Merger Threshold
📊 Quick Reference
Law Added By 52nd Amendment Act, 1985
Strengthened By 91st Amendment Act, 2003
Located In 10th Schedule of Constitution
Deciding Authority Speaker / RS Chairman
Merger Exemption At least 2/3 of party members
CoM Size Cap 15% of House strength

⚖️ What is Defection?

In a legislative context, defection is the act of an elected member of a House voluntarily giving up the membership of their political party or voting against the party’s directions (defying a whip) without prior permission.

Prior to 1985, India witnessed rampant “aaya ram gaya ram” politics — legislators switching parties for money or ministerial posts, often overnight, causing governments to collapse. This political instability was the primary reason the Anti-Defection Law was enacted.

🎯 Simple Explanation

Imagine you hire a contractor to paint your house blue, but midway through, they decide to paint it red because someone else offered more money. Anti-defection law says: you were elected on a party’s symbol — you must stay loyal to that party’s positions, or lose your seat.

📜 Constitutional Background

Before 1985, there was no constitutional mechanism to prevent legislators from switching parties. The phrase “aaya ram, gaya ram” became a popular description of this phenomenon after an MLA in Haryana changed parties three times in a single day in 1967.

To address this, Parliament introduced the 10th Schedule through the 52nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1985. The law was later strengthened by the 91st Amendment Act, 2003, which made it harder to defect by eliminating the one-third split loophole.

1967
“Aaya Ram Gaya Ram” incident in Haryana — an MLA changes parties 3 times in one day
1985
52nd Amendment Act adds the 10th Schedule (Anti-Defection Law) to the Constitution
2003
91st Amendment Act strengthens the law — eliminates 1/3 split provision; caps CoM size at 15%
2026
7 AAP Rajya Sabha MPs (2/3 of party strength) defect to BJP, invoking merger provisions

📌 Key Features of the Anti-Defection Law

The 10th Schedule lays down specific grounds for disqualification and the process to decide them:

  • Grounds for Disqualification: A member can be disqualified if they voluntarily resign from their party or defy a party whip (voting instruction) during a division in the House.
  • Presiding Officer’s Role: The Chairman of the Rajya Sabha or the Speaker of the Lok Sabha is the final authority to decide on disqualification petitions.
  • Deemed Membership: An elected member is legally deemed to belong to the political party that fielded them as a candidate during the election.
  • Ministerial Caps (91st Amendment): The size of the Council of Ministers is limited to 15% of the total strength of the House — to prevent ministerial posts from being used as bait for defection.
⚠️ Exam Trap

Don’t confuse the two amendments: The 52nd Amendment (1985) introduced the 10th Schedule. The 91st Amendment (2003) strengthened it by removing the 1/3 split exemption and adding the 15% CoM cap. Both are commonly tested.

Feature 52nd Amendment (1985) 91st Amendment (2003)
Purpose Introduced 10th Schedule Strengthened anti-defection provisions
Split Provision 1/3 of party allowed to split Split provision removed entirely
Merger Rule Not clearly defined 2/3 threshold required for merger
CoM Cap No cap 15% of House strength

✨ Exemptions from Disqualification

Not every act of crossing the floor results in disqualification. The law provides specific exemptions:

  • The Two-Thirds Merger Rule: A member is not disqualified if their original political party merges with another party, provided that at least two-thirds of the members of the legislative party agree to the merger. The AAP-to-BJP defection in 2026 falls under this provision.
  • Prior Split Provision (Repealed): Originally, a split involving one-third of the party members was recognized as valid and exempted from disqualification. The 91st Amendment (2003) deleted this loophole to make switching parties more difficult.
  • Presiding Officer’s Discretion: If the Chairman or Speaker rules that a valid merger has occurred based on the two-thirds threshold, the members are officially recognized as part of the new merged party.
✓ Quick Recall

The Golden Rule: To escape disqualification via merger, you need at least 2/3 of the legislative party to agree. Less than that = disqualification. The old 1/3 split rule no longer exists (removed in 2003).

🌍 Significance & Impact

The Anti-Defection Law serves several important purposes in Indian democracy:

  • Political Stability: Prevents frequent horse-trading and ensures that governments elected by the people remain stable for their full term.
  • Voter Mandate: Binds legislators to the party line, ensuring the political mandate given by voters to a specific party is respected.
  • Curbing Corruption: Reduces the ability of powerful actors to “buy” legislators with ministerial berths or financial incentives.
  • Weaknesses: Critics argue the law weakens inner-party democracy, since MPs cannot vote against their party even on conscience issues. The presiding officer’s neutrality has also been questioned in high-profile cases.
💭 Think About This

The Anti-Defection Law was designed to protect democracy, but does it actually undermine it? When an MP cannot vote against their party — even on matters of conscience — are they representing their constituents or just their party leadership?

🧠 Memory Tricks
The “5-2-1” Pattern:
10th Schedule → 52nd Amendment (1985) → 91st Amendment (2003). Read as: Schedule added in ’85, strengthened in ’03. The gap is 18 years.
Two-Thirds vs. One-Third:
“Merger = 2/3, Split = GONE” — The 1/3 split rule was removed in 2003. Now only a 2/3 merger saves you from disqualification.
15% CoM Cap:
“15 is the limit on ministers” — Added by the 91st Amendment to stop parties from using ministry posts as bait. Easy to confuse with other percentage rules — nail this one.
📚 Quick Revision Flashcards

Click to flip • Master key facts

Question
Which Constitutional Amendment introduced the Anti-Defection Law?
Click to flip
Answer
The 52nd Amendment Act, 1985, which added the 10th Schedule to the Constitution.
Card 1 of 5
🧠 Think Deeper

For GDPI, Essay Writing & Critical Analysis

⚖️
Does the Anti-Defection Law strengthen or weaken Indian democracy? Can it curb corruption while simultaneously suppressing legitimate dissent within parties?
Consider: political stability vs. conscience voting; party dictatorship vs. voter mandate; the role of independent judgment in a representative democracy.
🌍
Should the power to decide disqualification petitions be vested in an independent tribunal rather than the Speaker/Chairman? What are the implications of the current system?
Think about: conflict of interest when the Speaker belongs to the ruling party; delays in decisions; the Supreme Court’s interventions; comparison with other democracies.
🎯 Test Your Knowledge

5 questions • Instant feedback

Question 1 of 5
The Anti-Defection Law in India is contained in which Schedule of the Constitution?
A) 8th Schedule
B) 10th Schedule
C) 9th Schedule
D) 12th Schedule
Explanation

The 10th Schedule was added by the 52nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1985 to curb defection.

Question 2 of 5
The 91st Constitutional Amendment Act (2003) made which key change to the Anti-Defection Law?
A) Added the 10th Schedule
B) Gave the Supreme Court power to decide defection cases
C) Removed the one-third split provision
D) Introduced the two-thirds merger rule for the first time
Explanation

The 91st Amendment Act, 2003 removed the one-third split provision, making it harder to defect without facing disqualification.

Question 3 of 5
Under the Anti-Defection Law, a merger is considered valid if at least __ of the legislative party agrees to it.
A) One-half
B) One-third
C) Three-fourths
D) Two-thirds
Explanation

Under the Anti-Defection Law, the two-thirds rule requires at least two-thirds of a legislative party to agree to a merger for it to be valid and exempt from disqualification.

Question 4 of 5
The 91st Amendment capped the size of the Council of Ministers at what percentage of House strength?
A) 15%
B) 10%
C) 20%
D) 25%
Explanation

The 91st Amendment Act, 2003 capped the Council of Ministers at 15% of the total strength of the House to reduce the use of ministerial berths as incentives for defection.

Question 5 of 5
Who is the final authority to decide disqualification petitions under the 10th Schedule in the Lok Sabha?
A) President of India
B) Speaker of the Lok Sabha
C) Supreme Court of India
D) Election Commission of India
Explanation

Disqualification petitions under the 10th Schedule are decided by the Speaker of the Lok Sabha or the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha.

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📌 Key Takeaways for Exams
1
10th Schedule: The Anti-Defection Law is contained in the 10th Schedule, added by the 52nd Amendment Act, 1985.
2
Disqualification Grounds: A member is disqualified if they voluntarily resign from their party OR defy a party whip during a division in the House.
3
Merger Exemption: Disqualification can be avoided if at least two-thirds of the legislative party agrees to merge with another party.
4
91st Amendment (2003): Removed the old one-third split provision and capped the Council of Ministers at 15% of House strength.
5
Deciding Authority: The Speaker (Lok Sabha) or Chairman (Rajya Sabha) decides disqualification petitions — not courts, not the Election Commission.
6
2026 Context: 7 AAP Rajya Sabha MPs (over two-thirds of AAP’s RS strength) defected to BJP — invoking the valid merger exemption under the 10th Schedule.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Anti-Defection Law in India?
It is the law contained in the 10th Schedule of the Indian Constitution, added by the 52nd Amendment Act (1985), which provides for disqualification of elected members who voluntarily resign from their party or vote against party directions without permission.
Can a defecting MP avoid disqualification?
Yes, under one specific condition — if at least two-thirds of the legislative party agrees to merge with another party, no member is disqualified. The old one-third split rule has been removed by the 91st Amendment (2003).
Why was the 91st Amendment needed after the 52nd Amendment?
The 52nd Amendment had a loophole — a one-third split of a party was considered valid and exempt from disqualification. This was misused frequently. The 91st Amendment (2003) closed this loophole, raised the bar to two-thirds for mergers, and added a cap on ministerial berths (15%) to reduce defection incentives.
What happens in the 2026 AAP defection case?
Seven AAP MPs defected to BJP, representing more than two-thirds of AAP’s Rajya Sabha strength. If accepted as a valid merger by the Rajya Sabha Chairman under the 2/3 rule, these MPs would not face disqualification under the 10th Schedule.
What is the significance of the “deemed membership” clause?
Under the 10th Schedule, an elected member is legally deemed to belong to the party that fielded them as a candidate. This means even if a member informally distances from a party, they are still bound by that party’s whip unless they formally address the defection process.
🏷️ Exam Relevance
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Prashant Chadha

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