SC rejects plea against caste count in census
SOCIAL – POPULATION
21 MAY 2026
- The Supreme Court said there was nothing wrong in the government of the day ascertaining caste as part of the nationwide Census exercise.
- “Any government of the day must know how many people are backward and how many need welfare. This is a matter of policy,” Chief Justice of India Surya Kant, heading a three-judge Bench, said.
- The top court was responding to a plea filed by petitioner-in-person Sudhakar Gummula that caste enumeration should not be made part of Census 2027.
- The Chief Justice said it was not within the court’s domain to decide whether a caste enumeration should necessarily be a part of Census 2027 or not.
- Until the 2011 Census, the exercise had included the systematic enumeration of only Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.
- The government had said on the floor of Parliament about the incorporation of the caste enumeration in the second phase of Census 2027.
- The first phase involved the collection of the House Listing Operation (HLO) information regarding housing conditions, assets, amenities and so on of each household.
- ‘Integration instrument’
- The second phase, Population Enumeration, would involve the collection of demographic, socio-economic, cultural and other details.
- The last comprehensive nationwide caste Census was conducted in colonial India in 1931.



