The Constitutional Limitations
The 2019 bifurcation of Jammu and Kashmir, enacted through the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act, saw the region’s autonomy violently curtailed. Under the Act, the former state's division into two Union Territories—Jammu and Kashmir with a legislative assembly, and Ladakh without one—set the stage for a seismic shift in governance. By placing the newly formed UT under the aegis of Article 239A of the Indian Constitution, Jammu and Kashmir was stripped of the robust powers once afforded to its legislature under Article 370 and its own constitution. The legislative powers of this new assembly are, in essence, illusory. Article 239A, borrowed from the administration framework of the Union Territories of Delhi and Puducherry, establishes the legislative assembly's limited authority. Section 13 of the 2019 Act states that Article 239A of the Constitution (“Creation of local Legislatures or Council of Ministers or both for certain Union territories”), which provides for the administration of the UT of Puducherry, shall also apply to the UT of Jammu and Kashmir.