Your complete CLAT-focused digest for May 2026. This month saw landmark Supreme Court verdicts on federalism, a new bilateral trade agreement, RBI policy action, and several international climate developments. Read, revise, and test yourself with the quiz at the end.
Legal and constitutional developments are the highest-priority category for CLAT current affairs, typically accounting for 8-10 of the roughly 28-32 current-affairs questions in each paper. May 2026 produced several important Supreme Court judgments and legislative updates worth your attention.
In a significant judgment, the Supreme Court revisited its own jurisdiction under Article 131 of the Constitution, which grants the Court exclusive original jurisdiction in disputes between the Centre and State governments. The ruling clarified the circumstances in which a State can invoke Article 131 to challenge a central law directly before the Supreme Court, bypassing the normal route of a constitutional challenge under Article 32 or Article 226.
The ruling has immediate implications for the ongoing GST-related disputes between several States and the Union. For CLAT aspirants, the key takeaway is the connection between Article 131 and cooperative federalism — a theme that frequently appears in Legal Reasoning passages.
The Supreme Court commenced hearings on a petition challenging the 2023 amendment to the Forest Conservation Act. The amendment had redefined what qualifies as "forest land" and narrowed the scope of land that requires central permission for non-forest use. Environmental groups argue that the amendment violates the Court's earlier Godavarman judgment (1996) which had adopted a broad definition of "forest."
The hearing is expected to have wide-ranging implications for infrastructure projects, mining, and climate policy — a good example of how legal developments intersect with environment and economy categories.
The Union Cabinet approved a set of amendments to the Code on Wages, 2019 — one of the four labour codes consolidating earlier legislation. The amendments aim to harmonise minimum wage calculations across states and sectors, introduce clearer definitions for "wages" in gig and platform economies, and streamline enforcement mechanisms. Implementation rules will be notified in the coming months.
Government policy launches and scheme updates are the second-highest priority category for CLAT. May 2026 saw several notable announcements and rollouts.
The Union Government launched Phase II of the National Hydrogen Mission in May 2026. The Mission's stated objective is to scale up domestic green hydrogen production from the current base, reduce dependence on imported fossil fuels, and position India as a global supplier of clean hydrogen. Phase II introduces Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) benefits for electrolyser manufacturing, expanded funding for pilot projects in heavy industry and transport, and targeted support for State-level hydrogen hubs.
Sikkim announced an expansion of its universal basic income (UBI) pilot framework, building on a long-standing commitment first articulated in 2019. The expansion covers additional beneficiary categories and strengthens the direct benefit transfer (DBT) mechanism. Sikkim remains the only Indian state to have formally moved towards a UBI model at the sub-national level.
The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology released draft rules under the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 for public consultation. The rules operationalise several key provisions of the Act, including mechanisms for consent management, data fiduciary obligations, and the functioning of the Data Protection Board. Final notification is expected after the consultation window closes.
After multiple rounds of negotiation, India and the United Kingdom signed a comprehensive Free Trade Agreement (FTA) in May 2026. The FTA covers goods, services, investment protection, intellectual property, and provisions on mobility of professionals. It is expected to reduce tariffs on a wide range of products and unlock market access for Indian software services and UK manufactured goods. Implementation will be phased over several years.
Preparatory meetings for COP30, scheduled to take place later in 2026, concluded in May. The discussions focused on operationalising the Loss and Damage Fund agreed at COP28, finalising country-level climate commitments, and addressing disputes over climate finance obligations between developed and developing nations. India reiterated its position on differentiated responsibility and the importance of climate justice.
India and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) conducted the periodic review of their strategic partnership. Discussions centred on expanding the India-ASEAN trade framework, supply chain resilience, maritime security cooperation in the Indo-Pacific, and people-to-people exchanges through expanded scholarship programmes.
The Reserve Bank of India's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) reduced the repo rate by 25 basis points in its May 2026 meeting. This was the first rate cut in the 2026 monetary cycle and reflected the Committee's assessment that inflation was easing within the target band while economic growth needed additional support. The decision is expected to lower borrowing costs for households and businesses and could stimulate credit demand in the coming months.
The National Statistical Office (NSO) released provisional estimates for FY 2025-26 GDP growth. The estimates showed steady growth supported by strong services sector performance, moderate manufacturing recovery, and a good agricultural season. The data fed into subsequent policy discussions around fiscal deficit targets and public investment allocations.
The GST Council met in May 2026 to discuss the future of the GST Compensation Cess beyond its originally scheduled termination. The Council considered options for transitioning existing cess revenues to other frameworks and addressing outstanding compensation claims from States. No final decision was taken; deliberations are expected to continue through the next meeting.
Judicial and constitutional appointments during the month included elevations to the Supreme Court and High Courts. Key appointments in statutory regulators and autonomous bodies were also announced. Track these because CLAT occasionally includes passage-based questions on constitutional appointment processes (e.g., the collegium system, Article 124, Article 217).
Internationally, several literary and scientific awards were announced during May 2026. Cross-check these against standard year-in-review lists when preparing, but do not memorise every name — CLAT rarely tests trivia-level recall of award winners.
Test yourself on the events covered above. Aim for at least 7/10. Expand each question to see the correct answer and a brief explanation. These questions are written in a recall-first format for diagnostic purposes — actual CLAT questions would embed these facts within comprehension passages.
For CLAT-format passage-based practice, head over to the current affairs practice section.