Fifth Amendment of the Constitution of India

The Fifth Amendment of the Constitution of India, officially known as The Constitution (Fifth Amendment) Act, 1955, empowered the President to prescribe a time limit for a State Legislature to convey its views on proposed Central laws relating to the formation of new States and alteration of areas, boundaries or names of existing States. The amendment also permitted the President to extend the prescribed limit, and prohibited any such bill from being introduced in Parliament until after the expiry of the prescribed or extended period. The 5th Amendment re-enacted the provision to Article 3 of the Constitution.

The Constitution (Fifth Amendment) Act, 1955
Parliament of India
Long title
  • An Act further to amend the Constitution of India.
Citation5th Amendment
Territorial extentIndia
Passed byLok Sabha
Passed13 December 1955
Passed byRajya Sabha
Passed15 December 1955
Assented to24 December 1955
Signed byRajendra Prasad
Commenced12 December 1956
Legislative history
First chamber: Lok Sabha
Bill titleThe Constitution (Eighth Amendment) Bill, 1955
Introduced byH.V. Pataskar
Introduced9 December 1955
Status: In force
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