Whether Amendment of the Constitution is a Political Question and not Justifiable?

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Whether Amendment of the Constitution is a Political Question and not Justifiable?

Article 107 is a provision for introduction of a Bill and the passing thereof by the House of the People and the Council of States. Article 111 relates to the presentation of such a Bill to the President for his assent. The Rules of Business of either House provide for authentication as to the passing of the Bill and the assent thereto by the President. Article 122 of the Constitution says:

"The validity of any proceedings in Parliament shall not be called in question on the ground of any alleged irregularity of procedure."

Indeed the fact that the Bill appertaining to Constitution (Twenty-Fourth Amendment) Act, 1971 was duly introduced and passed and the amendment obtained the ratification by the legislatures of not less than one-half of the States by resolutions to that effect passed by those legislatures before the Bill was presented to the President for his assent, and such assent was given thereto by the President, is clear. All the above functions are Federal functions. They are necessarily political questions. In a case appertaining to the Amendment of the Constitution of United States of America, Hughes, Chief Justice, speaking for the Supreme Court remarked:

"We think that in accordance with the historic precedent, the question of the efficacy or ratification by State legislatures in the light of previous rejection or attempted withdrawal should be regarded as a political question pertaining to the political departments, with the ultimate authority in the Congress in the exercise of its control over the promulgation of the adoption of the Amendment."

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Now what happens when a Bill for the Amendment of the Constitution is initiated by the introduction thereof in either House of Parliament and it is passed in each House by a majority of the total membership of that House and by a majority of not less than two-thirds of the members of that House present and voting and is ratified by the legislatures of not less than one-half of the States by resolutions to that effect passed by those legislatures and is then presented to the President for his assent, who gives his assent thereto?

As already observed ...

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