Introduction
The Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013 is the central anti-corruption law that provides for the establishment of a Lokpal for the Union and Lokayuktas for the States to inquire into allegations of corruption against certain public functionaries. It was enacted as Act 1 of 2014, received assent on 1 January 2014, and came into force on 16 January 2014.
The Act emerged from long-standing demands for an independent anti-corruption ombudsman in India. Its statement of objects also links it to India’s commitment under the United Nations Convention Against Corruption and the need for an effective mechanism against corruption in public life
Structure of the Act
The Act provides for:
• Establishment of Lokpal for the Union
• Provision for Lokayuktas in States
• Inquiry Wing
• Prosecution Wing
• Jurisdiction over specified public servants
• Procedure for preliminary inquiry and investigation
• Special Courts
• Amendments to certain related enactments
Lokpal
Composition
The Lokpal consists of:
• A Chairperson
• Up to 8 Members
Out of the Members, 50 percent must be judicial members. Also, not less than 50 percent of the Members must be from among Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, Other Backward Classes, minorities, and women.
Appointment
The Chairperson and Members of Lokpal are appointed by the President on the recommendation of a Selection Committee. The Selection Committee consists of:
• Prime Minister – Chairperson
• Speaker of Lok Sabha
• Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha
• Chief Justice of India or a Judge of the Supreme Court nominated by him
• One eminent jurist nominated by the President on the recommendation of the first four members
Search Committee
The Selection Committee is assisted by a Search Committee, which prepares a panel of names for consideration. However, the Selection Committee is not bound to choose only from the names suggested by the Search Committee.
Jurisdiction of Lokpal
The Lokpal has jurisdiction over:
• Prime Minister, subject to specified safeguards and exceptions
• Ministers
• Members of Parliament
• Group A, B, C, and D officials of the Central Government
• Officials of bodies, boards, corporations, societies, trusts, or associations receiving government funds above the prescribed limits
• Certain office-bearers of entities receiving foreign contributions above the prescribed threshold
Jurisdiction over the Prime Minister
The Act includes the Prime Minister within the jurisdiction of Lokpal, but with safeguards. Inquiry is excluded in matters relating to:
• International relations
• External and internal security
• Public order
• Atomic energy
• Space
Also, additional procedural safeguards apply before any inquiry can proceed.
Powers and functions
Lokpal can:
• Receive complaints of corruption
• Order preliminary inquiry
• Direct investigation by agencies such as the CBI
• Exercise superintendence over the CBI in matters referred by it
• Initiate prosecution through its Prosecution Wing
• Recommend disciplinary action against public servants
Inquiry Wing and Prosecution Wing
The Act provides for an Inquiry Wing for conducting preliminary inquiry and a Prosecution Wing for prosecution of public servants in corruption cases. These institutional wings are meant to make Lokpal functionally effective rather than merely advisory.
Relationship with CBI
A significant feature of the Act is that where the Lokpal refers a case to the CBI, the Lokpal exercises superintendence over the investigation. This was intended to strengthen independence and reduce external interference in corruption investigations.
Special Courts
The Act provides for designation of Special Courts for trial of offences arising from Lokpal-referred cases. This is important for speedy trial and effective prosecution.
Asset disclosure
The Act led to a statutory framework requiring public servants to furnish information regarding assets and liabilities, though the detailed rules and later relaxations came through subordinate legislation and amendments. This feature connects the Act to transparency and prevention of illicit enrichment.
Lokayuktas in States
Part III of the Act requires every State to establish a Lokayukta. However, the Act does not impose one rigid uniform model for all States. It leaves room for States to design the institution through their own laws, while making establishment mandatory in principle.
Significance of state provision
This is important because India had varied Lokayukta systems in different States even before 2013. The Act attempted to provide a national anti-corruption framework while respecting federal flexibility.
Important features of the Act
• Creates statutory anti-corruption ombudsman at Union level
• Brings high public functionaries within a formal inquiry framework
• Includes Prime Minister with safeguards
• Provides for inquiry and prosecution machinery
• Strengthens supervision over CBI in referred matters
• Requires States to establish Lokayuktas
• Provides for Special Courts
Limitations and criticism
• Recommendations and proceedings still depend on broader institutional cooperation
• State Lokayukta framework is not fully uniform across India
• Delays in appointments have affected effectiveness in practice
• Anti-corruption success depends not only on law but also on enforcement capacity and political will
These are analytical points based on the structure and implementation pattern of the Act.
Constitutional and governance significance
The Act is important because it strengthens accountability in public administration and reflects the idea of clean and responsive governance. It is part of India’s broader framework against corruption, alongside the Prevention of Corruption Act, CBI investigations, vigilance institutions, and parliamentary accountability.