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Book No. – 005 (Indian Polity)
Book Name – Indian Government and Politics (Bidyut Chakrabarty)
What’s Inside the Chapter? (After Subscription)
1. A THOUGHTFUL CHOICE
2. LIMITATIONS/FEATURES OF INDIAN PARLIAMENT
3. COMPOSITION OF THE PARLIAMENT
3.1. Rajya Sabha
3.2. Lok Sabha
4. CHANGING SOCIO-ECONOMIC PROFILE
5. PARLIAMENTARY COMMITTEES
5.1. Estimates Committee
5.2. Public Accounts Committee
5.3. Committee on Public Undertakings
5.4. Standing Subject Committees
6. CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS
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Parliament
Chapter – 4
Parliament is the cardinal precept of parliamentary democracy in India.
Stands at the core of the institutional arrangement envisioned by the Constitution of India to ensure a democratic polity.
Modeled on the British Parliament but with substantive modifications suited to Indian context.
Positioned in such a way that no institution or function of government exists in non-attachment with it.
Represents the will of the people through their elected representatives.
Govern the basic norms of functioning of various other institutions.
Exercises control over the executive to ensure its accountability.
Critical to analyze basic issues in the structure and functioning of the Indian Parliament.
Functions as the central authority in maintaining the democratic framework of the country.
Plays a pivotal role in law-making, policy oversight, and regulating other institutions.
Ensures that the executive remains answerable to the people’s representatives.
A THOUGHTFUL CHOICE
The choice of parliamentary system over the presidential model was influenced not only by past experience but by the future imperatives of Indian polity.
Adoption of parliamentary governance aligned more with expected advantages of Parliament than mere familiarity with representative bodies.
The framers were guided by the legacy of the national movement against authoritarian colonial rule and aimed for a democratic polity.
Austin emphasized that the system sought to achieve unity through popular government, universal adult suffrage, and direct representation in popular assemblies culminating in the Parliament.
Penderel Moon argued that parliamentary democracy was unsuitable due to Hindu-Muslim divisions, but Austin countered that the problem was fragmented franchise based on property, education, and other qualifications.
Parliament as the supreme representative body addressed unity by representing all Indians without discrimination, fostering a sense of national cohesion.
The parliamentary system could accommodate federalism, flexible governance, and the supremacy of the Constitution.
The framers aimed for a flexible system to solve expected and unexpected challenges to unity, democracy, and constitutional governance.
Adopting a presidential model could have risked authoritarianism, as seen in other newly-independent nations.
The framers created a hybrid system incorporating virtues of existing governance models suitable for India as a sovereign, democratic, federal republic.
Parliament was the operational guarantee for federalism, ensuring harmonious Centre-state relations under the Union of India.
The Supreme Court could resolve disputes between Centre and states, but Parliament was the primary mechanism for maintaining federal integrity.
The Rajya Sabha was given special powers to safeguard state rights and regulate Centre-state relations.
Equal representation of states in Rajya Sabha was not possible due to administrative divisions but provisions ensured protection of state autonomy.
Example: creation of a new All India Service requires a two-thirds Rajya Sabha resolution, preventing excessive central control and protecting state functional autonomy.
