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Home » Freedom of Speech and its Resonable Restriction with special reference to Press and Media

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Freedom of Speech and its Resonable Restriction with special reference to Press and Media

7 min read

Freedom of Speech & Expression (Art. 19(1)(a)) and Reasonable Restrictions (Art. 19(2)) — with special reference to Press & Media #

1) Constitutional position: press freedom is part of Art. 19(1)(a) #

The Constitution does not separately mention “freedom of press”, but the Supreme Court has consistently held that freedom of the press is an essential facet of the citizen’s freedom of speech and expression under Article 19(1)(a). This includes the right to publish, circulate, and disseminate information and ideas through newspapers, magazines, broadcasting, and modern digital platforms.

2) What counts as “reasonable restriction” under Art. 19(2)? #

A restriction on speech/press must:

  1. be imposed by “law” (not mere executive dislike), and
  2. be reasonable (non-arbitrary, proportionate), and
  3. fall strictly within one of the Art. 19(2) grounds:
  • Sovereignty and integrity of India
  • Security of the State
  • Friendly relations with foreign States
  • Public order
  • Decency or morality
  • Contempt of court
  • Defamation
  • Incitement to an offence

Key press/media idea: the State cannot do indirect censorship (e.g., strangling circulation through controls/taxes) if the real effect is to curb expression—courts look at the effect and burden on circulation/communication, not just the form.

3) Landmark case laws (book-standard) with Facts – Issue – Held #

Romesh Thappar v. State of Madras (1950) #

Facts: The Madras Government banned the entry and circulation of a political journal (Cross Roads) in the State under the Madras Maintenance of Public Order Act, claiming public safety/public order.
Issue: Whether such a ban violates Art. 19(1)(a), and whether it is protected as a restriction under Art. 19(2) (as it then stood).
Held: The Court struck it down: freedom of speech includes freedom of press/circulation, and (at that time) “public order” was not a ground in Art. 19(2); only restrictions linked to security of the State / overthrow of the State could be saved.
Significance: This decision is a major reason why the First Constitutional Amendment (1951) expanded Art. 19(2) to include (among others) public order.

Brij Bhushan v. State of Delhi (1950) #

Facts: The Chief Commissioner, Delhi, imposed pre-censorship/prior restraint on a newspaper (Organizer), requiring scrutiny of material before publication.
Issue: Whether pre-censorship is compatible with Art. 19(1)(a), and whether it can be justified under Art. 19(2).
Held: The Court held prior restraint is a direct restriction on press freedom and struck down the order as unconstitutional (not saved by Art. 19(2) as then framed).

Express Newspapers (P) Ltd. v. Union of India (1958) #

Facts: Constitutional challenge involved laws regulating conditions of service of working journalists; the press argued this burdened press freedom.
Issue: Can the press claim immunity from general regulatory laws, and when does regulation become an unconstitutional burden on press freedom?
Held: The Court accepted that press is not immune from general laws, but emphasized: if a law singles out the press by imposing prohibitive burdens that restrict circulation, penalise choice of personnel, prevent starting newspapers, or force dependence on Government aid, it would violate Art. 19(1)(a) and may fall outside Art. 19(2).

Sakal Papers (P) Ltd. v. Union of India (1962) #

Facts: The Newspaper (Price and Page) Act/Order regulated price-page ratios and effectively limited how much content could be published at a given price.
Issue: Is regulating page limits/price a permissible economic regulation, or an unconstitutional restriction on press freedom?
Held: Struck down: these controls directly/inevitably restrict circulation and content, amounting to an infringement of Art. 19(1)(a); it cannot be justified by presenting it as mere “business regulation”.

Bennett Coleman & Co. v. Union of India (1973) #

Facts: Challenge to the Newsprint Policy (1972–73) which imposed quantitative limits affecting number of pages, growth, and new editions, justified by the Government on scarcity/regulation.
Issue: Whether newsprint controls that limit pages/editions are an indirect but unconstitutional restriction on freedom of press.
Held: The Court held key parts unconstitutional: freedom of the press has both qualitative and quantitative dimensions, and limits that stifle circulation/pages are restrictions on expression; such indirect controls cannot be saved unless they satisfy Art. 19(2) reasonableness in substance.

Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Pvt. Ltd. v. Union of India (1985) #

Facts: Newspapers challenged fiscal measures (including customs duty on newsprint) alleging that the burden would raise costs and reduce circulation, chilling press freedom.
Issue: Can taxation/fiscal measures violate Art. 19(1)(a) by burdening the press?
Held: The Court reaffirmed that press freedom is part of Art. 19(1)(a) and that while the press is not wholly immune from taxation, the State cannot use fiscal burdens in a way that effectively stifles circulation or impairs dissemination (courts will examine impact on freedom).

R. Rajagopal v. State of Tamil Nadu (1994) (Auto Shankar case) #

Facts: A magazine proposed to publish a prisoner’s autobiography; State officials attempted to restrain publication, citing reputation/privacy and law-and-order concerns.
Issue: Can the State impose prior restraint on publication? How to balance press freedom and right to privacy?
Held: The Court protected press freedom against prior restraint in this context: the press can publish, particularly where material is based on public records; the State cannot generally impose pre-publication censorship outside constitutionally permitted limits, though privacy principles apply especially to purely private individuals.

Odyssey Communications (P) Ltd. v. Lokvidayan Sanghatana (1988) #

Facts: A TV serial episode’s telecast was injuncted; the producer challenged the restraint.
Issue: Does broadcasting/telecast fall within Art. 19(1)(a), and can courts restrain telecast without fitting Art. 19(2)?
Held: The Court treated telecast as a form of speech/expression; restrictions must be justified strictly within Art. 19(2) grounds and cannot be imposed casually through interim restraints.

Secretary, Ministry of I&B v. Cricket Association of Bengal (1995) #

Facts: Dispute concerning broadcasting rights/monopoly and access to telecast; raised broader questions about who can use electronic media.
Issue: Is electronic broadcasting covered by Art. 19(1)(a)? Can the State maintain monopoly over airwaves/broadcasting?
Held: The Court held broadcasting is implicated in citizens’ free speech rights, and monopoly over broadcasting media is unacceptable; airwaves are a public resource and must be regulated fairly in public interest consistent with free speech.

Sahara India Real Estate Corp. v. SEBI (2012) #

Facts: Concerns over media reporting of sub judice matters and possible prejudice to fair trial; Court considered postponement of publication in limited cases.
Issue: How to balance freedom of expression and fair trial/administration of justice?
Held: The Court recognized that in narrowly tailored situations, postponement orders may be permissible where there is a real and substantial risk to trial fairness; such orders must be exceptional and proportionate.

Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015) #

Facts: Challenge to Section 66A of the IT Act criminalising online speech using vague terms like “annoyance”, “inconvenience”, etc., leading to misuse.
Issue: Whether vague, overbroad online speech offences impose an unconstitutional chilling effect and fall outside Art. 19(2).
Held: Section 66A struck down: vagueness and overbreadth created a chilling effect on protected speech; only restrictions squarely within Art. 19(2), framed with precision, can survive.

Anuradha Bhasin v. Union of India (2020) #

Facts: Challenges to communication restraints and internet shutdowns affecting citizens and the press in J&K; also questioned non-publication/supply of orders.
Issue: Whether indefinite internet suspension is permissible, and what standards apply to restrictions impacting speech/press.
Held: The Court held indefinite suspension is impermissible; shutdown orders must satisfy necessity and proportionality, be reasoned, and be subject to review; restrictions cannot exceed what is strictly required.

4) Conclusion #

Freedom of speech under Art. 19(1)(a) forms the backbone of democratic governance, and press/media freedom is its strongest institutional expression. The State may restrict speech only through reasonable laws falling strictly under Art. 19(2). The Supreme Court’s press jurisprudence—beginning with Romesh Thappar and Brij Bhushan (anti-censorship and anti-prior restraint), strengthened through Sakal Papers and Bennett Coleman (ban on indirect control of circulation), and extended to broadcasting and digital spaces through Cricket Association of Bengal, Shreya Singhal, and Anuradha Bhasin—shows a consistent principle: regulation is permissible, but censorship (direct or indirect) is not, unless it squarely meets Art. 19(2) with strict reasonableness and proportionality.

Updated on 20 January 2026
Article 19 Constitutional Law I Freedom of Speech Press and Media Reasonable Restrictions

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Table of Contents
  • Freedom of Speech & Expression (Art. 19(1)(a)) and Reasonable Restrictions (Art. 19(2)) — with special reference to Press & Media
    • 1) Constitutional position: press freedom is part of Art. 19(1)(a)
    • 2) What counts as “reasonable restriction” under Art. 19(2)?
  • 3) Landmark case laws (book-standard) with Facts – Issue – Held
    • Romesh Thappar v. State of Madras (1950)
    • Brij Bhushan v. State of Delhi (1950)
    • Express Newspapers (P) Ltd. v. Union of India (1958)
    • Sakal Papers (P) Ltd. v. Union of India (1962)
    • Bennett Coleman & Co. v. Union of India (1973)
    • Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Pvt. Ltd. v. Union of India (1985)
    • R. Rajagopal v. State of Tamil Nadu (1994) (Auto Shankar case)
    • Odyssey Communications (P) Ltd. v. Lokvidayan Sanghatana (1988)
    • Secretary, Ministry of I&B v. Cricket Association of Bengal (1995)
    • Sahara India Real Estate Corp. v. SEBI (2012)
    • Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015)
    • Anuradha Bhasin v. Union of India (2020)
  • 4) Conclusion

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