This MCQ module is based on: Caste and Politics
Caste and Politics
Caste and Politics
NCERT Democratic Politics-II | Chapter 3: Gender, Religion and Caste
Caste Inequalities in Indian Society — Past and Present
Unlike gender and religion, the caste system? is a form of social stratification that is unique to India. While all societies have some degree of inequality and occupational division, the Indian caste system took this to an extreme. Hereditary occupational divisions were sanctioned by rituals. Members of a caste group were expected to practise the same or similar occupations, marry within their own caste, and not share meals with members of other castes.
The system was built on the systematic exclusion of and discrimination against groups labelled as "outcaste." These communities were subjected to the dehumanising practice of untouchability?. Social reformers like Jotiba Phule, Mahatma Gandhi, B.R. Ambedkar, and Periyar Ramaswami Naicker dedicated their lives to building a society free of caste discrimination.
Changes in the Caste System
Partly due to the efforts of reformers and partly due to broader socio-economic transformations, the caste system in modern India has undergone significant changes:
Occupational Mobility: The transition from one occupation to another, typically when a new generation chooses a different livelihood than their ancestors.
Caste Hierarchy: A ranked arrangement of caste groups from the so-called "highest" to the "lowest."
Persistent Inequalities
Despite these changes, caste has not disappeared from Indian society. Several aspects of the old system persist:
- Most marriages still take place within the same caste or tribe.
- Untouchability has not been fully eliminated despite constitutional prohibition.
- Caste groups that historically had access to education have continued to benefit from modern education systems, while those denied such access have naturally fallen behind.
- This is why "upper caste" groups are disproportionately represented among the urban middle class.
- Caste remains closely linked to economic status.
Poverty by Caste & Community — Below Poverty Line (%, 1999–2000)
L4 AnalyseSocial Composition of India's Population
L4 AnalyseHow Caste Influences Indian Politics and Elections
Just as communalism reduces identity to religion, casteism? treats caste as the sole basis of social community — assuming all members of a caste share identical interests that conflict with those of other castes. This simplistic view does not hold up in practice. Caste is one dimension of a person's identity, but it is neither the only nor always the most important one.
Caste manifests in Indian politics in several ways:
Why Caste Alone Cannot Determine Elections
Although caste influences elections, it is a misconception that elections are solely about caste. Several factors limit the role of caste in determining electoral outcomes:
- No single-caste majority: No parliamentary constituency in India has a clear majority of one single caste. Every candidate must win support from multiple caste and community groups.
- No guaranteed vote bank: No party wins the votes of all members of any caste. A "vote bank" only means a larger proportion of that caste votes for a particular party — not all of them.
- Multiple candidates from the same caste: Several parties may field candidates from the same caste in a constituency, splitting the "caste vote."
- Incumbents frequently lose: If caste loyalties were frozen, sitting MPs and MLAs would never lose. The fact that ruling parties regularly lose elections shows that other factors — governance performance, party loyalty, economic interests, and leadership popularity — matter significantly.
Politics in Caste — How Democracy Is Changing Caste Dynamics
The relationship between caste and politics is not a one-way street. Politics also influences and reshapes the caste system itself. When caste enters the political arena, identities and groupings change in several ways:
Positive and Negative Aspects
Caste plays different roles in different political contexts. On the positive side, it has given disadvantaged communities — particularly Dalits and OBCs — a platform to demand their share of political power, greater dignity, and better access to land, resources, and opportunities. Various political and non-political organisations have campaigned to end discrimination and expand opportunity.
On the negative side, exclusive attention to caste can divert public discourse from pressing issues like poverty, development, and corruption. In some cases, caste-based politics leads to tensions, social conflict, and even violence. A healthy democracy requires that caste identity be one factor among many — not the only lens through which citizens and politicians view the world.
The textbook includes a dialogue between two students. One asks: "I don't care about my caste. Why are we discussing this in a textbook? Are we not promoting casteism by talking about caste?" The other responds: "You told me that wherever there is domination, we should discuss it in Political Science. Will caste disappear if we keep quiet about it?"
Reflect on:
- Does discussing caste in educational settings reinforce caste divisions, or does it help challenge them?
- Can a problem be solved if people refuse to acknowledge it exists?
- How does ignoring caste benefit those who already hold privilege?
The textbook poses the question: Do you think political leaders are right to treat people belonging to a caste as "vote banks"?
- What does the term "vote bank" actually mean? Does it imply that every member of a caste votes the same way?
- Find examples from recent elections where a party that relied on a single caste's support lost the election. What does this tell us?
- How do economic class, gender, and regional identity cut across caste when people vote?
Competency-Based Questions
Reason (R): This is why every candidate must win support from more than one caste or community to win elections.
Reason (R): Most people in India now marry outside their own caste or tribe.
Reason (R): The Census of India directly counts all three categories — SC, ST, and OBC — as part of its enumeration.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does caste affect politics in India Class 10?
Caste affects Indian politics in multiple ways as explained in NCERT Class 10 Civics. During elections, political parties consider caste composition of constituencies when selecting candidates, voters often prefer candidates from their own caste, and parties try to build caste-based coalitions. However, caste alone does not determine election outcomes because no single caste forms a majority in any constituency, voters consider multiple factors including policy and performance, and parties must appeal across caste lines to win.
What factors have weakened the caste system in India?
Several factors have weakened the traditional rigid caste system in India. These include urbanisation and the growth of cities where caste boundaries blur, expansion of modern education promoting rational thinking, large-scale occupational mobility where people no longer follow hereditary occupations, the constitutional abolition of untouchability, economic development creating new employment opportunities, and the spread of democratic values through universal adult franchise.
What is politics in caste?
Politics in caste refers to the reverse influence where democratic politics transforms the caste system itself. Through political mobilisation, disadvantaged castes have gained awareness of their rights, formed organisations, and demanded social justice. Universal adult franchise has given every caste group an equal political voice. Reservation policies in education and government jobs have created new opportunities for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, and OBCs. The democratic process is gradually reshaping caste hierarchies.
Does caste alone determine election results in India?
No, caste alone does not determine election results in India. NCERT Class 10 Civics explains several reasons for this. No parliamentary constituency has a single caste forming a clear majority. Voters consider the performance of the ruling party, candidate qualities, policy promises, and economic issues alongside caste identity. Political parties form alliances across castes to secure victories. Many elections are won or lost on issues like development and corruption that cut across caste lines.
What is the impact of caste on Indian democracy?
The impact of caste on Indian democracy is complex. On one hand, caste-based politics can lead to social tensions, perpetuate divisions, and reduce elections to caste arithmetic. On the other hand, the politicisation of caste has empowered marginalised communities, brought issues of social justice into mainstream politics, led to reservation policies for disadvantaged groups, and given a political voice to those historically denied it. The democratic process is gradually transforming caste from a rigid hierarchy into a more fluid identity marker.