Abstract
In March 2025, comedian Kunal Kamra sparked a national free speech debate with a parody subtly mocking Maharashtra’s Deputy CM, the satire resulted in the vandalism of a Mumbai comedy club, police complaints, and breach of privilege proceedings. Kamra's refusal to apologise, exemplified how satire in India often leads to censorship, legal threats, and political consequences.
In the world's largest democracy, freedom of speech and expression is considered a fundamental right in Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution of India, an authoritative endorsement of democratic principles. However, the actual experience of these rights in India is being increasingly sullied by state censorship, growing legal restrictions, and rising social intolerance. The contradiction cannot be missed: a right guaranteed constitutionally but frequently abrogated in reality. As India further enters the digital age, and socio-political sensitivities advance, the tension between freedom of speech and a process of censorship will become more complicated, nuanced, and contested than ever before. India's approach to free speech is evolving and frequently contradictory, as it attempts to strike a balance between constitutional rights and concerns about morality, national security, and internet accountability.