85th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2001 – Consequential Seniority for SC/ST Promotions
Syllabus: Constitution (UPSC GS II)
The 85th Amendment Act, 2001 strengthened reservation in promotions for Scheduled Castes (SCs) and Scheduled Tribes (STs) by introducing the concept of “consequential seniority1.” It amended Article 16(4A) and was applied retrospectively from 17 June 1995.
Earlier, the “catch-up rule” allowed general category employees promoted later (without reservation) to regain seniority over SC/ST employees who were promoted earlier through reservation. The 85th Amendment nullified this rule.
Purpose
- To ensure effective representation of SC/STs in higher posts.
- To allow reservation in promotion along with consequential seniority, removing barriers created by judicial interpretations.
Mechanism
- Article 16(4A) was amended to explicitly include the phrase “with consequential seniority.”
- This enabled SC/ST candidates promoted through reservation to retain seniority from the date of promotion.
Effect
- SC/ST employees promoted through reservation rank senior to non-reserved category employees promoted later.
- The amendment applies retrospectively from June 1995, ensuring past promotions also receive the benefit of seniority.
Legal Position
- The amendment was challenged in M. Nagaraj vs Union of India (2006).
- The Supreme Court upheld its constitutional validity, but laid down conditions for states:
- Quantifiable data on backwardness,
- Inadequacy of representation,
- Maintenance of administrative efficiency (Article 335).
- Question Reference
(HPAS PYQ 2025) ↩︎










