When B.R. Ambedkar, chairman of the drafting committee, gave his final speech in the Constituent Assembly on November 25, 1949, he countered criticism that by giving the Centre powers to override the states, the Constitution makes India an over-centralised nation-state. Stating that the 바카라use and operation바카라 of such powers 바카라are confined to emergencies only바카라, Ambedkar asked: 바카라Could we avoid giving overriding powers to the Centre when an emergency has arisen?바카라 Now that the country is grappling with a health emergency of unfathomable proportions and many state governments are left to fend themselves, the question Ambedkar posed in the Constitution바카라s defence assumes salience yet again. It brings forth the vexed issue of federalism and Centre-state relations at a time when the Centre바카라s disappointing response to the pandemic is forcing chief ministers of non-BJP-ruled states to speak out.