By JanDrishti Bureau | March 22, 2026 | New Delhi
In what is being described as the most significant overhaul of India’s internal security forces since independence, Union Home Minister Amit Shah is set to introduce the Central Armed Police Forces (General Administration) Bill, 2026 in the Rajya Sabha tomorrow. The bill aims to create a unified "Umbrella Law" to govern the seven primary CAPFs, replacing several colonial-era and fragmented statutes.
The proposed legislation seeks to streamline recruitment, career progression, and administrative logistics across the CRPF, BSF, CISF, ITBP, SSB, NSG, and Assam Rifles. However, the most controversial aspect of the bill remains the proposed changes to the Indian Police Service (IPS) deputation quotas and the recruitment of "Cadre Officers."
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The Strategic Goal:
The government argues that a unified law will eliminate legal ambiguities in active duty deployments, standardize disciplinary codes across all forces, and modernize procurement under a single administrative system.
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The IPS vs. Cadre Conflict: A New Balance
For decades, tension has existed between directly recruited CAPF officers and IPS officers on deputation at senior levels. The 2026 Bill proposes a major shift.
The new bill introduces a Gradual Cadre Autonomy (GCA) model. Under this, IPS deputation at the IG level will be capped at 25%, increasing opportunities for cadre officers.
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Key Recruitment Reforms
- Lateral Entry for Veterans: 10% reservation for ex-Agniveers
- Unified Selection Board: CAPF Recruitment Commission (CRC)
- Specialized Technical Wing: Drone warfare, cyber defense, AI surveillance
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Administrative and Operational Changes
The bill grants more financial powers to Director Generals, reducing dependency on the Ministry of Home Affairs for procurement.
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Key Changes Comparison
Legal Basis:
Before: Separate Acts
After: Unified Umbrella Law
IPS Deputation:
Before: High/Variable
After: Limited to 25%
Procurement:
Before: Centralized
After: DG-level autonomy
Ex-Agniveer Quota:
Before: Optional
After: 10% mandatory
Disciplinary Code:
Before: Different per force
After: Standardized
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Analyst Note:
While the bill empowers cadre officers, IPS associations have raised concerns about reduced coordination between state police and central forces.
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UPSC Corner: Significance for Aspirants
This bill is important for UPSC preparation under Internal Security and Governance. It reflects a shift from police-centric leadership to a paramilitary-specialist model.
It also relates to topics like federalism, security reforms, and Non-Functional Financial Upgradation (NFFU).
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Conclusion
As Amit Shah presents the bill, the Rajya Sabha is expected to see intense debate. Opposition may question federal balance, while CAPF personnel look forward to better career opportunities.
JanDrishti will provide detailed updates and analysis.
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