Last Updated: May 2026
CLAT 2027 aspirants need to track CLAT current affairs May 2026 week 3 with a legal lens — not a generic news lens. This compilation curates the third-week constitutional, statutory, regulatory and Supreme Court developments that historically convert into CLAT Legal Reasoning passages and GK questions. Every entry below is written in fact-first format with the section/article number and likely question angle.
Why Week 3 of May 2026 Matters for CLAT 2027
Mid-May to early June is the highest-density window for Supreme Court constitutional bench judgments before the summer vacation. CLAT 2027 will draw heavily from these rulings. Aspirants must read the operative paragraphs, not just the headlines.
Legal & Constitutional Developments — Week 3 (May 12–18, 2026)
| Date | Event | CLAT Angle | Likely Section/Article |
|---|---|---|---|
| May 12 | Supreme Court verdict on sub-classification within SC/ST quota implementation | Article 14, Article 16(4), reservation jurisprudence | Davinder Singh test |
| May 13 | Election Commission of India notifies new code for AI-generated political content | Article 324 powers, Model Code of Conduct evolution | RP Act 1951 §123 |
| May 14 | Bombay HC strikes down portions of state DPDP Rules as ultra vires central law | Doctrine of repugnancy, Article 254 | DPDP Act 2023 §40 |
| May 15 | SC issues directions on undertrial release under BNSS Section 479 | Bail jurisprudence, Article 21 | BNSS §479 |
| May 16 | Cabinet approves Bharat Forecast System (BFS-V2) for monsoon prediction | Disaster Management Act 2005, federalism | DM Act §6 |
| May 17 | RBI Monetary Policy Committee minutes released — repo at 5.25% | Article 246, RBI Act 1934 | RBI Act §45ZB |
| May 18 | Supreme Court collegium recommends three High Court CJ elevations | Article 124, Article 217, Memorandum of Procedure | SC Advocates-on-Record case |
Deep Dive 1: Sub-Classification within SC/ST Quota (Davinder Singh Implementation)
The Supreme Court’s seven-judge bench in State of Punjab v. Davinder Singh (2024) had permitted states to sub-classify Scheduled Castes for more equitable distribution of reservation benefits. Week 3 of May 2026 saw the Court address an implementation challenge — whether the “creamy layer” doctrine (developed in Indra Sawhney) extends to SC/ST sub-classification.
Key holding: States may identify creamy layer within SC/ST sub-groups using objective criteria, but must lay down the criteria via legislation, not executive order. This reaffirms the Article 14 reasonable-classification test.
Deep Dive 2: BNSS Section 479 and Undertrial Release
Section 479 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita 2023 (which replaced CrPC Section 436A) requires the release of undertrials who have served one-third of the maximum sentence (for first-time offenders) or one-half (for repeat offenders). The May 18 directions clarified that District Legal Services Authorities must conduct mandatory monthly audits and that prison superintendents have a statutory duty to apply for release suo motu.
Static GK to Pair with This Week’s News
- Article 21 — Right to Life and Personal Liberty (Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India, 1978 — golden triangle of Articles 14, 19, 21)
- Article 124 — Establishment and constitution of Supreme Court (collegium drawn from this read with Articles 217, 222)
- Article 254 — Repugnancy between central and state laws (Concurrent List)
- RBI Act 1934 — Section 45ZB establishes the MPC; six members; repo rate decisions by majority vote
Practice MCQs (CLAT-Pattern, Passage-Based)
Quiz data missing.
How to Use This Week’s CA in Your Mock Strategy
- Add each entry to your CA notebook with the article/section number — CLAT testers love numbering specificity
- Pair every event with at least one landmark case (Davinder Singh → Indra Sawhney; Article 21 → Maneka Gandhi; collegium → SC AoR Association)
- Practice 4–6 RC-style passages per week using Free CLAT Mock Test
- Cross-link with the previous compilation: CLAT Current Affairs May 2026 Week 2
FAQ
Q1. Are Supreme Court judgments from May 2026 examinable in CLAT 2027?
Yes. CLAT’s static cut-off for legal current affairs is approximately 12 months before the exam. May 2026 judgments fall squarely in scope for CLAT 2027 (Dec 2026 attempt).
Q2. Do I need to memorise BNSS section numbers?
For 2024-25 transition years CLAT testers have asked direct section numbers. For 2027, expect questions to test the concept with the section number embedded in the passage. Memorise the high-frequency 50 sections (BNS 100–146, BNSS 35–88 + 173–186 + 479, BSA 1–24).
Q3. What’s the best source for CLAT current affairs beyond this compilation?
Primary: PIB India, SC Observer, LiveLaw. Secondary: a single newspaper editorial daily. Tertiary: our weekly compilations. Avoid 5+ sources — leads to overlap, not depth.
Q4. How is Article 254 likely to be tested?
Through a fact pattern: a state passes a law, central law conflicts. Question tests doctrine of repugnancy + state list/concurrent list distinction + Article 254(2) presidential assent exception.
Related CLAT 2027 Resources
- CLAT Current Affairs May 2026 — Monthly Compilation
- CLAT Current Affairs April 2026
- Important Constitutional Amendments for CLAT 2027
- CLAT Logical Reasoning 2027 — Strategy Guide
- CLAT 2027 FAQ — 50+ Questions
This compilation is updated every Sunday. Bookmark for weekly CLAT 2027 prep.