Chapter 54: Political Parties
Summary:
Political parties are essential for the functioning of a representative democracy.
Important Points:
- Types of Parties:
- National Parties (e.g., BJP, Congress, AAP).
- State Parties (e.g., DMK, TMC, SP).
- Recognition by Election Commission:
- Based on performance in elections (votes and seats).
- Benefits include common symbol, free broadcast time.
- Functions of Parties:
- Contest elections.
- Form governments.
- Frame policies and programs.
- Shape public opinion.
Key Highlight:
Political parties are called “vehicles of democracy” but also need internal reforms.
Chapter 55: Elections
Summary:
Elections are the backbone of Indian democracy, ensuring peaceful transfer of power.
Important Points:
- Election Process:
- Voter registration.
- Nomination of candidates.
- Campaigning.
- Polling and counting.
- Declaration of results.
- Universal Adult Franchise:
- Every Indian citizen 18+ years can vote (Art 326).
- First Past the Post System:
- Candidate with the highest votes wins (even if not absolute majority).
- Recent Reforms:
- VVPAT with EVMs.
- NOTA option (None Of The Above).
- Electoral bonds for transparent political funding.
- Proposed Reforms:
- Simultaneous elections (One Nation, One Election).
- Decriminalization of politics.
- State funding of elections.
Key Highlight:
Electoral integrity is essential for a strong democracy.
Chapter 56: Anti-Defection Law
Summary:
The law prevents elected members from changing parties after elections (political defections).
Important Points:
- Constitutional Basis:
- Tenth Schedule, inserted by 52nd Amendment Act, 1985.
- Key Provisions:
- Disqualification if:
- Voluntarily gives up party membership.
- Votes/abstains against party directions without permission.
- Disqualification if:
- Exceptions:
- Merger of two-thirds of a party with another party.
- Decision-making Authority:
- Presiding officer (Speaker/Chairman) of the House.
- Challenges:
- Speaker’s bias towards ruling party.
- Delayed decisions on disqualification.
- Recent Update:
- Supreme Court in 2020: Disqualification petitions should be decided within 3 months.
Key Highlight:
Anti-Defection Law aims to promote stability but needs strengthening to avoid misuse.
Chapter 57: Official Language
Summary:
The Constitution provides for Hindi and English as official languages, with protection for regional languages.
Important Points:
- Constitutional Provisions:
- Article 343-351 → Official language provisions.
- Key Points:
- Hindi in Devanagari script = Official language of the Union.
- English to continue along with Hindi for official work.
- States can adopt their own official languages.
- Special Bodies:
- Committee of Parliament on Official Language.
- Promotion of Hindi:
- Without affecting usage of English and regional languages.
- Language of Judiciary and Supreme Court:
- English.
Key Highlight:
India has no National Language — only Official Languages!
Chapter 58: Tribunals
Summary:
Tribunals are quasi-judicial bodies that decide specialized disputes.
Important Points:
- Constitutional Provision:
- Art 323-A (Administrative Tribunals).
- Art 323-B (Other Tribunals).
- Important Tribunals:
- Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT) — for public servants.
- National Green Tribunal (NGT) — for environmental cases.
- Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT).
- Advantages:
- Speedy disposal.
- Less technical, more accessible than courts.
- Concerns:
- Lack of judicial independence in appointments.
- Parallel system weakening judiciary.
Key Highlight:
Tribunals are essential for specialized and quick justice but need reforms for independence.
Quick Recap:
Chapter No. | Topic Covered |
---|---|
54 | Political Parties |
55 | Elections |
56 | Anti-Defection Law |
57 | Official Language |
58 | Tribunals |
Chapter 59: Cooperative Societies
Summary:
Cooperative societies are voluntary organizations where people come together for mutual economic benefit.
Important Points:
- Constitutional Status:
- Given by 97th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2011.
- Key Provisions:
- Part IX-B added (Articles 243-ZH to 243-ZT).
- Right to form cooperative societies → Fundamental Right (Art 19(1)(c)).
- Principles for their management:
- Regular elections within 5 years.
- Professional management.
- Democratic functioning.
- Multi-State Cooperative Societies:
- Registered under Centre’s law (for societies operating across states).
- Recent Development:
- Ministry of Cooperation (new ministry) created in 2021 to promote ease of doing business for cooperatives.
Key Highlight:
Cooperatives now have constitutional protection ensuring democracy + autonomy.
Chapter 60: Political Dynamics
Summary:
Understanding recent trends in Indian politics is crucial for exams and for governance understanding.
Important Points:
- Coalition Governments:
- Became common since 1989 (end of Congress dominance).
- Examples: UPA, NDA, various state-level alliances.
- Regionalism:
- Rise of regional parties in governance (TMC, DMK, AAP).
- Caste and Religion:
- Still influence electoral outcomes heavily.
- Criminalization of Politics:
- Increase in candidates with criminal backgrounds.
- Supreme Court orders for political parties to explain candidate selections.
- Voter Behavior:
- Increasing awareness.
- Rise of women voters.
- Urban apathy vs rural enthusiasm.
Key Highlight:
Indian politics is maturing but faces challenges like money power, muscle power and identity politics.
Chapter 61: Judicial Reforms and Important SC Judgments
Summary:
Recent Supreme Court decisions have greatly influenced Indian governance and civil rights.
Important Points:
- Important Recent Judgments:
- Right to Privacy (2017):
- Declared as a Fundamental Right under Art 21 (Justice K.S. Puttaswamy case).
- Decriminalization of Section 377 IPC (2018):
- Decriminalized homosexuality.
- Triple Talaq Verdict (2017):
- Instant triple talaq declared unconstitutional.
- Sabarimala Verdict (2018):
- Women allowed to enter the temple.
- Ayodhya Verdict (2019):
- Land awarded for Ram temple; mosque to be built elsewhere.
- Electoral Bonds Judgments:
- Pending; concerns on transparency vs privacy.
- Right to Privacy (2017):
- NJAC Case (2015):
- National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) Act struck down → Collegium system continues.
Key Highlight:
SC is asserting itself as the “guardian of Fundamental Rights” and “arbiter of Constitutional morality.”
Chapter 62: Important Government Schemes and Policies (Quick Revision)
Summary:
Some important schemes you MUST remember for MCQs and GS-II:
Scheme Name | Purpose |
---|---|
Beti Bachao Beti Padhao | Save and educate the girl child |
PM-KISAN | Direct income support to farmers |
Ayushman Bharat | Health insurance for poor families |
Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan | Self-reliant India campaign |
Swachh Bharat Mission | Clean India (sanitation, toilets) |
Jal Jeevan Mission | Tap water supply to all rural households |
Digital India | Improve internet infrastructure and access |
Key Highlight:
Latest schemes show shift towards inclusive development and digital governance.
Chapter 63: Electoral Reforms
Summary:
Electoral reforms aim to improve transparency, fairness, and efficiency in the election process.
Important Points:
- Major Electoral Reforms Implemented:
- Lowering of voting age to 18 years (61st Amendment, 1989).
- Introduction of Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs).
- Use of Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail (VVPAT) with EVMs.
- Introduction of NOTA (None of the Above) option (2013).
- Disclosure of criminal records, assets, and liabilities of candidates.
- Ceiling on election expenditure by candidates.
- Pending Reforms (Suggestions):
- Simultaneous elections for Lok Sabha and State Assemblies.
- State funding of elections.
- Decriminalization of politics.
- Regulating inner-party democracy.
- Strengthening the Election Commission.
Key Highlight:
Free and fair elections = cornerstone of democracy → continuous reforms needed!
Chapter 64: Simultaneous Elections
Summary:
Simultaneous elections refer to holding Lok Sabha and State Assembly elections at the same time.
Important Points:
- Advantages:
- Reduces election costs.
- Reduces policy paralysis and Model Code of Conduct restrictions.
- Better governance and continuity.
- Challenges:
- Requires constitutional amendments (Articles 83, 172, etc.).
- Difficult to synchronize all State elections.
- Federal structure issues (states’ autonomy concerns).
- Recent Efforts:
- Law Commission Report (2018) supported the idea.
- NITI Aayog Discussion Paper on “One Nation, One Election.”
Key Highlight:
Simultaneous elections = efficiency vs federalism debate.
Chapter 65: Separation of Powers
Summary:
Separation of powers is the division of functions among Legislature, Executive, and Judiciary.
Important Points:
- Indian Context:
- No strict separation (like USA).
- Functional separation maintained (based on British model).
- Examples:
- Parliament can impeach President and Judges.
- Judiciary can review laws made by Parliament.
- Executive administers laws but under Judiciary’s scrutiny.
- Recent Issues:
- Judicial activism sometimes seen as encroaching into executive/legislative domains.
- Legislature sometimes attacks judiciary on grounds of overreach.
Key Highlight:
Indian Constitution ensures a “system of checks and balances” — not absolute separation.
Chapter 66: Judicial Accountability and Transparency
Summary:
Judicial accountability ensures that judiciary remains independent, responsible, and ethical.
Important Points:
- Mechanisms Proposed:
- Judicial Standards and Accountability Bill (lapsed).
- Internal mechanisms within judiciary for discipline.
- More transparency in appointment and performance evaluation.
- Challenges:
- Lack of effective external oversight.
- Collegium system lacks transparency.
- Recent Initiatives:
- Supreme Court judgments mandating disclosure of judges’ assets.
- Public interest movements demanding transparency in judicial appointments.
Key Highlight:
Judicial accountability strengthens public trust in justice delivery.
Chapter 67: Digital Governance and e-Governance
Summary:
Digital governance is transforming service delivery, transparency, and citizen-government interaction.
Important Points:
- Major Initiatives:
- Digital India Mission (2015).
- e-Courts Project (digitization of judiciary).
- MyGov platform (citizen engagement).
- UMANG App (Unified Mobile Application for New-age Governance).
- Aadhaar integration in governance.
- Benefits:
- Transparency.
- Speedy services.
- Reduced corruption.
- Citizen empowerment.
- Challenges:
- Digital divide (rural-urban gap).
- Cybersecurity threats.
- Privacy issues.
Key Highlight:
E-Governance = Citizen-centric, transparent, efficient governance.