Kerala to be renamed ‘Keralam’? India’s union cabinet approves name change proposal

In a significant administrative development, India’s Union Cabinet has granted approval for the proposed renaming of the southern state of Kerala to ‘Keralam,’ aligning the official nomenclature with its authentic Malayalam pronunciation. This decision marks a crucial milestone in a longstanding cultural-linguistic movement that has gained substantial political traction.

The constitutional process, announced by Information and Broadcasting Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw on Tuesday, will now advance to the Kerala State Legislative Assembly for formal consideration. The timing of this development is particularly noteworthy as it precedes the state’s assembly elections scheduled for the first half of 2026.

According to the established procedural framework, the President of India will formally refer the Kerala (Alteration of Name) Bill, 2026, to the state legislature for consultation as mandated under Article 3 of the Indian Constitution. This legislative mechanism requires the central government to seek state assembly perspectives before proceeding with parliamentary consideration.

The initiative follows the Kerala Legislative Assembly’s unanimous resolution passed in June 2024, which formally endorsed the name change to better reflect the state’s linguistic heritage. The proposed alteration represents more than mere semantic adjustment—it embodies the preservation of regional cultural identity within India’s federal structure.

Final implementation will require subsequent presidential recommendation and parliamentary approval through the designated constitutional amendment process. This development underscores the dynamic interplay between linguistic preservation, regional identity, and administrative processes in contemporary Indian governance.