When a Colonial Compromise Refuses to Leave the Indian Constitution
The Ghost of Montagu still walks
Indian constitutional friction rarely arrives without ancestry. Long before television cameras, press notes, and walkouts, there was dyarchy—the awkward colonial experiment introduced by the Montagu–Chelmsford reforms of 1919. It was Britain’s answer to rising Indian self-government: divide authority, split responsibility, and keep the final lever safely out of elected hands.
Subjects were carved into “reserved” and “transferred” lists. Indian ministers could govern the latter, but governors retained control over the former. Power existed in two places at once. Accountability existed in neither.
That experiment failed. Indians rejected it as duplicity disguised as reform. By the 1930s, dyarchy was widely seen as unworkable, distrustful, and inherently conflict-prone. The framers of independent India absorbed that lesson deeply.
Or so we thought.
Why Governors Were Designed to Be Silent
The Constitution of India deliberately dismantled dyarchy at the state level. Executive authority was to flow from the elected council of ministers, responsible to the legislature. The Governor was positioned as a constitutional head—an institutional hinge, not a political engine.
This design was not accidental. It was an explicit rejection of divided sovereignty. The Governor was not meant to be a parallel centre of power, nor an independent political conscience keeper. Discretion was tightly ring-fenced. Convention was the lubricant that made the machinery run.
The Governor’s authority rested less on what the Constitution allowed and more on what tradition restrained.
That balance is now under strain.
The Address That Isn’t a Speech
The Governor’s Address to the legislature occupies a peculiar constitutional space. It is mandatory. It opens the session. It outlines the government’s policies. And yet, it is not the Governor’s speech in any personal sense.
Under parliamentary logic, the address reflects the will and programme of the elected government. The Governor reads it not as an author, but as a constitutional transmitter. Acceptance, not endorsement, is the operative principle.
This distinction matters. The Address is not an invitation for personal editorial judgement. It is a ritual affirmation that executive power flows from the House.
When that ritual is disrupted, the disruption is not theatrical—it is constitutional.
Tamil Nadu’s Latest Flashpoint
Against this backdrop came the recent episode in Tamil Nadu, where Governor R. N. Ravi exited the Assembly without delivering the full government-prepared Address. Subsequently, Raj Bhavan listed multiple objections to the text. The elected government, through its law minister, issued a point-by-point rebuttal.
This was not merely a disagreement over wording. It was a collision between two understandings of the Governor’s role.
One view treats the Governor as a constitutional sentinel with latitude to publicly resist content. The other sees the office as procedurally bound, with dissent—if any—confined to private channels.
The Constitution leans decisively toward the latter.
When Convention Breaks, Conflict Begins
Defenders of assertive gubernatorial conduct often argue that the Constitution does not explicitly forbid such actions. That argument is technically clever—and institutionally dangerous.
Constitutions do not run on text alone. They run on conventions, accumulated restraint, and an understanding of where silence is more powerful than speech. Once those conventions erode, textual ambiguity becomes a weapon.
Tamil Nadu is not encountering this tension for the first time. In earlier decades, confrontations between elected chief ministers and governors—most notably during the Channa Reddy–Jayalalithaa period—produced similar questions about overreach, delay, and the thin line between discretion and interference. Elsewhere in India, governors have withheld or modified addresses, delayed assent to bills, or entered public disputes with governments, each time widening the fault line.
What is new is frequency—and visibility.
From Procedure to Precedent
Every such episode sets an informal precedent. When a Governor publicly refuses, modifies, or abandons a constitutionally expected act, the act itself changes character. What was once ceremonial becomes contested. What was once routine becomes discretionary.
This is how dyarchy returns—not by law, but by practice.
A Governor who claims space to reject a government’s legislative address today may claim space to delay bills tomorrow, stall appointments the day after, or reinterpret assent as approval rather than formality. None of this requires constitutional amendment. It only requires the slow erosion of convention.
Courts, predictably, are then forced to intervene—not because judges seek power, but because politics has abdicated restraint.
A Familiar Pattern, A Predictable End
Indian constitutional history shows a consistent pattern: when non-elected authorities press discretion too far, judicial correction follows. But courts act after damage is done—after delay, paralysis, and public acrimony.
The present moment in Tamil Nadu fits squarely within this arc. The walkout is not an isolated provocation. It is part of a longer argument about who governs, who restrains, and who decides when disagreement becomes disruption.
The Constitution resolved that question in 1950. Practice is now reopening it.
What This Moment Really Signals
This is not about one address or one governor. It is about whether India is drifting—quietly but steadily—back toward a divided executive culture that the freedom movement and the Constitution explicitly rejected.
Dyarchy was born of distrust. Parliamentary democracy depends on trust. When that trust collapses, institutions speak louder than they should—and listen less than they must.
For now, one truth stands clear: when constitutional silence is replaced by constitutional spectacle, governance does not gain strength. It loses balance.
( To be continued…)

