Major
Policy Decision
- Government of India appointed a
Commission in 1979, headed by B.P. Mandal, called Second Backward
Commission.
- Commission gave a report in
1980. One of the suggestions was to reserve 27 per cent of government jobs
for Socially and Economically Backward Classes (SEBC).
- This issue was discussed this
for many years.
- Janata Dal won elections in
1989. V.P. Singh, the Prime Minister, decided to implement reservations.
- The President announced it in
his address to the Parliament.
- On 6 August 1990, the Cabinet
decided to implement and the Prime Minister announced it in both Houses of
Parliament.
- The senior officers drafted an
order, signed by an officer and it became the Memorandum issued on 13
August 1990.
- There was a heated debate on
the issue and it was finally taken to the Supreme Court. The case was
known as “Indira Sawhney and others vs Union of India case.”
- In 1992 Supreme Court declared
the Mandal order as valid but asked for some modifications.
Need
for Political Institutions
- A government has to perform
various duties, formulate policies and implement them.
- Some have to formulate schemes,
some have to take decisions, some have to implement the decisions.
- Hence the need for institutions
to do all the above.
- The Constitution of a country
lays down basic rules on powers and functions of each institution.
- The prime minister and the
cabinet take all policy decisions.
- The civil servants take the
steps to implement ministers decisions.
- Supreme court solves disputes
between citizen and government.
- The institutions are the
Legislative (Parliament), the Executive (the Government) and the
Judiciary.
Parliament :
In
all democracies , an assembly of elected representatives exercises supreme
political authority on the behalf of the people. At national level it is
parliament and at state level it is legislative assembly.
- It is needed as final authority
to make laws in the country.
- To exercise control over the
workings of the government.
- To control the expenditure of
the government,and control public money.
- As the highest forum of
discussion and debate it decides public issues and national policies.
•
Two Houses of Parliament. Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha. The former has elected
representatives and is the House of People.
•The
Rajya Sabha elected by the elected members of each State Assembly is called the
Council of States.
•
Lok Sabha is more important in money matters, control over the executive and
council of ministers., has more members. It is also called as lower chamber.
•Rajya
Sabha is more important in matters concerning the states. It is called as upper
chamber..
•
Lok Sabha is elected for a period of five years. The Rajya Sabha is a permanent
House, with one third members retiring every two years. The term of each member
is for six years.
The
President of India is part of the parliament although he/she is not a member of
either house.
Political
Executive
- The President, the Prime Minister
and his Council of Ministers and the civil servants form the executive.
- The Political Executive
consists of political leaders elected by the people, who act on their
behalf and are responsible to the public who elected them. They take all
the decisions,understand the overall picture.
- When we talk about the
government, we usually mean the executive.
- The second category is called
the permanent executive consisting of civil servants. They help the
political executive in carrying out the day to day work. They are experts
but do not take the final decision.
- Prime minister is the most
important political institution in the country.
- Prime Minister has three kind
of ministers to help him :
(i) Cabinet Ministers.
It is the inner ring of the council of ministers.
(ii) Ministers of State
with independent charges.- Usually in charge of smaller ministries.
(iii) Deputy Ministers.
- The Prime Minister’s position
is supreme. He chooses his Cabinet and his decision is final, except in a
coalition government where he has to listen to other party members.
- When the Prime Minister quits,
the entire ministry quits.
The
President is the nominal head in India. He is not directly elected by
the people as in USA. The elected members of parliament (MP) and MLA s elect
the President.
- All the Members of Parliament
and Members of the State Legislatures elect him. Since he is elected
indirectly, he does not have the same powers as the Prime Minister.
- The President exercises all his
legislative, executive, financial, judicial, military powers only on the
advice of the Prime Minister and his Council of Ministers.
- The President can only delay a
bill. If the Parliament passes it again, he has to sign it.
- President has the power to
appoint the leaders when there is a coalition on his own discretion.
- In countries like USA, France
have powerful President ship.
The
Judiciary: India has one of the most powerful judiciaries.
- The Judiciary is independent of
both the Executive and the Legislature.
- The Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court is appointed by the President on the advice of the Prime
Minister and his Council of Ministers.
- The other judges of the Supreme
Court and the State High Courts are appointed in the same way but on the
advice of the Chief Justice.
- Once appointed, the Judges can
be removed only by impeachment.
- The Judiciary is the custodian
of the Constitution, and the Supreme Court and the High Courts have the
power to interpret the Constitution.
- It can declare any law passed
by the Legislature as invalid, if it violates the Constitution.
- It safeguards the Fundamental
Rights of the people of India, and checks malpractice and misuse of power
by the Executive or the Legislature.
No comments:
Post a Comment