This MCQ module is based on: Meaning & Features of Federalism — Coming-Together vs Holding
Meaning & Features of Federalism — Coming-Together vs Holding
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Chapter 7 · Federalism — Part 1: Meaning, Features & India's Evolution as a Federation
Look at any political map of India in 1947 and place it next to one from 2017 — the boundaries, the names of States, even the number of States have all changed dramatically. Tell that story carefully and you have told the story of federalism in India. In this part we ask the foundational questions: What is federalism? How is it different from a unitary system? What are its essential features? Why did the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Pakistan all fragment while India, born in painful partition in 1947, has stayed united for over seven decades? And what was the colossal task of integrating more than 500 princely states that confronted the makers of our Constitution?
7.0 Setting the Stage — Two Maps, One Republic
When India became independent in August 1947, our political map looked very different from today. The British had organised provinces purely for administrative convenience. Alongside these, more than 500 princely states? had to be merged into the new Indian Union. Boundaries were redrawn many times after that. States changed not just their borders but even their names — Mysore became Karnataka, Madras became Tamil Nadu. In a single span of seventy-plus years the political map has been redrawn again and again, and each redrawing tells us something about how federalism? in India actually works.
By the end of this part you will be able to define federalism, distinguish it from a unitary system, list its core features, and explain how India evolved into a federation by integrating its provinces and princely states under the leadership of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and V. P. Menon.
7.1 What Is Federalism?
Federalism does not consist of a fixed set of principles applied identically to every country. Rather, federalism as a principle of government has evolved differently in different historical situations. American federalism — one of the first major attempts to build a federal polity — is different from German federalism, which in turn is different from Indian federalism. Yet a few key ideas are common to all federations.
Defence and currency, for example, are matters that concern the nation as a whole, so they are the responsibility of the Union government. Local matters such as agriculture or police are the responsibility of regional or State governments. To prevent conflicts between the centre and the States, an independent judiciary is empowered to settle disputes about the division of power.
7.1.1 Federations That Failed — A Cautionary Roll-Call
The USSR was once one of the world's two superpowers. After 1989 it simply broke up into several independent countries. One major reason was excessive centralisation and the domination of Russia over other regions with their own languages and cultures — for example, Uzbekistan. Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Pakistan also faced the division of their countries. Canada too came close to a break-up between its English-speaking and French-speaking regions. All of these were federations — yet they could not stay united. Therefore, apart from adopting a federal constitution, the nature of the federal system and the day-to-day practice of federalism are equally important.
7.2 Federalism vs Unitary Government — Two Constitutional Models
Before we examine India's federation in detail, the cleanest way to grasp federalism is to set it next to its opposite — the unitary system?. In a unitary system there is essentially one government for the whole country; whatever powers regions enjoy are delegated to them by the centre and can be taken back. In a federation, by contrast, both levels enjoy powers granted directly by the Constitution.
🇺🇸 Federal: USA, India, Germany
- Two levels of government, each constitutionally created
- Written and rigid constitution
- Independent judiciary settles centre–State disputes
- Bicameral legislature with a House of States
- Powers shared through lists or enumeration
🇬🇧 Unitary: UK, France, Sri Lanka
- One sovereign legislature for the whole country
- Constitution may be unwritten or flexible
- No constitutional power for sub-units
- Centre can create or abolish lower units at will
- Sub-national bodies exist as administrative conveniences
7.3 Six Essential Features of a Federation
While there are many flavours of federalism, six features are common to most federations — including India's. Together they convert a paper constitution into a functioning federal polity.
| Feature | What it means |
|---|---|
| 1. Dual government | A Union (central) government and State governments, each with its own institutions — legislature, executive, sometimes its own bureaucracy. |
| 2. Division of powers | Subjects are divided between the Union and the States. India does this through three Lists in Schedule VII (Union, State, Concurrent), explored in Part 2. |
| 3. Supremacy of the Constitution | A written constitution is the source of authority for both governments. Neither can override it. Both must function within its boundaries. |
| 4. Rigid constitution | Federal provisions cannot be altered by ordinary law. Amendment usually requires a special majority and (for some matters) ratification by States. |
| 5. Independent judiciary | An impartial court resolves centre–State and inter-State legal disputes. In India this is the Supreme Court under Articles 131 and 132. |
| 6. Bicameral legislature | Two Houses — one elected directly by the people, the other representing the States. Examples: US Senate, Indian Rajya Sabha, German Bundesrat. |
Apply the six features of federalism to three real-world examples and decide whether each country is a federation or a unitary state.
- The United Kingdom — one Parliament at Westminster, regions enjoy ‘devolved’ (delegated) powers.
- The United States — 50 States, each with its own constitution, governor and legislature, Senate represents States.
- India — 28 States and 8 Union Territories, three subject Lists, Rajya Sabha represents the States.
7.4 Coming-Together vs Holding-Together Federations
Political scientists often classify federations into two big families based on how they came into being. The distinction explains a lot about why the United States looks different from India, even though both are federations.
🤝 Coming-together federation
- Independent States voluntarily pool sovereignty
- States usually have equal status
- Clear, defined Union powers; rest stays with States
- Residuary powers usually with States
- Examples: USA, Switzerland, Australia
🏛 Holding-together federation
- A large, diverse country adopts federalism to stay united
- Centre is constitutionally stronger than units
- States may have unequal sizes and special provisions
- Residuary powers usually with the Centre
- Examples: India, Spain, Belgium
India is a textbook holding-together federation. The Constituent Assembly designed a centre strong enough to hold together a country of continental dimensions, but recognised regional autonomy to keep the country united. Article 1 of our Constitution does not call India a federation at all — it calls India a “Union of States”. The choice of words is deliberate, and we will unpack it in Part 2.
7.5 India 1947 — The Three-Front Challenge
When the Constituent Assembly began its work in late 1946, the framers faced three simultaneous challenges that no other country had ever solved at the same time:
- To integrate the British Indian provinces and the more than 500 princely states into a single Indian Union;
- To divide powers between the Union and the units in a way that would prevent secession yet leave room for regional self-government;
- To recognise India's enormous diversity — over 20 major languages, several major religions, several million indigenous people — while still building national unity.
India is a land of continental proportions. Yet the framers managed to fold all of this into a single constitutional document. The leaders of the national movement had long visualised India as a country of “unity in diversity” — sometimes called “unity with diversity”. Federalism was the institutional answer.
7.5.1 The Partition Backdrop
Even before Independence, most leaders of the national movement recognised that to govern a country of India's size it would be necessary to divide powers between provinces and the centre. There was also growing awareness that Indian society had deep regional and linguistic diversity. The only question was: how much power should the regions enjoy? In view of the agitation of the Muslim League for greater representation, a compromise formula giving very large powers to the regions was discussed during the negotiations before Partition. Once the decision to partition India was taken, the Constituent Assembly framed a government based on cooperation between the centre and the States with separate powers for the States. The most important feature of this design is the principle that centre–State relations are based on cooperation, not confrontation. While recognising diversity, the Constitution emphasises unity.
7.6 The Integration of the Princely States
Of all the tasks the Government of India undertook in 1947, none was bigger than the merger of the princely states. When the British left, India had two distinct kinds of territory: the British Indian provinces (directly ruled by the Crown) and the princely states (ruled indirectly, through treaties with hereditary princes). The princely states covered roughly 40 per cent of the territory of the Indian subcontinent. They had the legal option of joining India, joining Pakistan, or remaining independent.
The framers believed that India needed a strong centre because the country was not just divided into British provinces; it had to integrate hundreds of princely states, redraw boundaries on a linguistic basis, and tackle staggering social and economic problems. A weak centre would not have survived the strain.
The framers of our Constitution deliberately built a federation with a strong central government. Analyse the historical reasons that justified this choice in 1947.
- Painful Partition had just split India along religious lines — threats of further fragmentation were real.
- More than 500 princely states had to be integrated; many resisted accession.
- Continental dimensions and immense diversity raised the risk of disintegration.
- Mass poverty, illiteracy and inequalities of wealth needed centralised planning and coordination.
7.7 Wrap-Up — Federalism Begins With a Choice
Federalism is essentially an institutional arrangement that lets two levels of government coexist, each autonomous in its own sphere, both bound by a written supreme constitution and policed by an independent judiciary. The model has many variants — coming-together federations like the United States and holding-together federations like India. The Indian Constitution chose holding-together with a strong centre because the alternative — given Partition, the princely states, and continental diversity — could have meant disintegration.
In Part 2 we open Schedule VII of the Constitution and look closely at how Indian federalism is engineered: the Union, State and Concurrent Lists; the unitary tilt of Article 248 and 356; the role of the Finance Commission and the GST Council in centre–State financial relations.
Competency-Based Questions — Part 1
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.