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India | Law | Volume 14 Issue 9, September 2025 | Pages: 144 - 147
RTI Act: A Cadaver in the Morgue of Indian Democracy
Abstract: The Right to Information Act, 2005, marked a watershed in Indian democracy by institutionalizing transparency and empowering citizens to challenge entrenched bureaucratic secrecy, yet nearly two decades later its decline illustrates a profound democratic regression. Initially celebrated as a triumph of participatory governance, the RTI regime now stands weakened by legislative, administrative, and social erosion. The RTI (Amendment) Act, 2019 weakened the autonomy of the Information Commissions by making appointment to them, along with its tenure and service conditions, subject to the executive. The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, furthered exemptions to the disclosure of personal information on a broad basis diluting the overriding public interest test, as well as limiting the scope of the available data source. Administrative Laziness compounds this crisis with positions left in commissions, backlogs way beyond 400,000 cases way beyond easy compliance with statutory time limits and non-compliance with the requirement of Public Information Officers being the rule rather than the exception. Institutional inertia has been underpinned by judicial reluctance to act decisively in openness despite earlier decisions that had favoured openness. More troubling is the coercive environment in which RTI activists and users operate, facing harassment, threats, and even fatal violence, while civil society organizations that once supported transparency face regulatory curbs that weaken citizen initiatives. These developments have turned the RTI framework into a system of democratic empowerment into an instrument of executive hegemony, inefficiency, lack of judicial spirit and in-hostility to citizen engagement. The erosion of the RTI regime is not a procedural setback but a distortion of democratic ethos, where accountability and participatory governance are increasingly subordinated to opacity. Reviving the RTI Act requires legislative reform, institutional reinvigoration, and a reaffirmation of the constitutional vision of democracy as a shared enterprise between state and citizen.
Keywords: Right to Information, transparency, accountability, governance, democracy, civil society, legislative erosion
How to Cite?: Aparajita Singh, "RTI Act: A Cadaver in the Morgue of Indian Democracy", Volume 14 Issue 9, September 2025, International Journal of Science and Research (IJSR), Pages: 144-147, https://www.ijsr.net/getabstract.php?paperid=SR25904231110, DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.21275/SR25904231110