This MCQ module is based on: Bill Procedures, Anti-Defection & Exercises
Bill Procedures, Anti-Defection & Exercises
This assessment will be based on: Bill Procedures, Anti-Defection & Exercises
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Chapter 5 · Legislature — Part 3: How Parliament Makes Laws, Controls the Executive, Anti-Defection & All Exercises
In Parts 1 and 2 we built the Parliament from the ground up: why we need it, how it is structured, and what the two Houses do. This concluding part now zooms in on the law-making process stage by stage, the day-to-day instruments of executive control, the parliamentary committee system, and the much-debated anti-defection law (52nd Amendment, 1985, modified by the 91st Amendment, 2003). It closes with all 10 NCERT end-of-chapter exercises answered fully, plus a Summary and Key Terms list ready for revision.
5.18 How Does the Parliament Make Laws?
The basic function of any legislature is to make laws for its people. A definite procedure is followed in the process of making law. Some of the procedures of lawmaking are mentioned in the Constitution; others have evolved from conventions. As you follow a bill through the legislative process you will see that lawmaking in India is technical and even tedious — precisely because the framers wanted hasty laws to be impossible.
5.18.1 The Four Types of Bills
Within Parliament, four broad categories of bills appear. The NCERT chart classifies them as follows.
5.18.2 The Bill’s Journey — From Cabinet to Statute
Even before a bill is introduced in the Parliament, there can be a lot of debate on the need for such a bill. A political party may pressurise the government to initiate a bill in order to fulfil its election promises or to improve its chances of winning forthcoming elections. Interest groups, the media and citizens’ forums may also persuade the government for a particular legislation. Lawmaking is thus not merely a legal procedure but also a political course of action.
The preparation of a bill itself involves many considerations — resources required to implement the law, the support or opposition the bill is likely to produce, the impact on the electoral prospects of the ruling party, and so on. In coalition politics, a bill proposed by the government has to be acceptable to all the partners of the coalition. The Cabinet considers all these before deciding to enact a law. Once the Cabinet approves the policy, the task of drafting begins. The draft of any bill is prepared by the concerned ministry. (For instance, a bill raising the marriageable age of girls from 18 to 21 will be prepared by the Law Ministry, with inputs from the Ministry of Women and Child Welfare.)
5.18.3 The Three Readings & the Role of Committees
Within Parliament, a bill may be introduced in the Lok Sabha or Rajya Sabha by a member of the House. Often a minister responsible for the subject introduces the bill. A Money Bill can be introduced only in the Lok Sabha; once passed there, it is sent to the Rajya Sabha for its (limited) action.
A large part of the discussion on bills takes place in the Standing Committees?. The recommendation of the committee is then sent to the House. That is why committees are called miniature legislatures. This is the second stage in the lawmaking process. In the third and final stage, the bill is voted upon. If a non-money bill is passed by one House, it is sent to the other House where it goes through exactly the same procedure.
If there is disagreement between the two Houses on a non-money bill, attempt is made to resolve it through a joint sitting. In the few instances when joint sittings have been called to resolve a deadlock, the decision has always gone in favour of the Lok Sabha (because of its larger size). Once a bill is passed by both Houses, it is sent to the President for assent. The President’s assent results in the bill becoming a law.
- 1961 — The Dowry Prohibition Bill: passed by joint sitting, became the foundation of India’s anti-dowry legal framework.
- 1977 — The Banking Service Commission (Repeal) Bill: a procedural law about banking sector personnel was passed in joint sitting.
- 2002 — The Prevention of Terrorism Bill (POTA): the Rajya Sabha had rejected the bill; the joint sitting passed it. (POTA was later repealed in 2004.)
5.19 How Does the Parliament Control the Executive?
In a parliamentary democracy, the executive is drawn from the party or a coalition that has a majority in the Lok Sabha. It is not difficult for such an executive to exercise unlimited and arbitrary powers. Parliamentary democracy may slip into Cabinet dictatorship, where the Cabinet leads and the House merely follows. Only an active and vigilant Parliament can keep an effective check on the executive.
5.19.1 The Five Daily Instruments
The legislature in a parliamentary system ensures executive accountability at three stages: policy making, implementation, and post-implementation. It does so through a set of formal instruments.
| Instrument | What it does | Used when |
|---|---|---|
| Question Hour | First hour of every sitting day. MPs ask written or oral questions; ministers must reply. | To extract information on prices, food grains, atrocities, riots, black-marketing, etc. |
| Zero Hour | Hour after Question Hour. Members are free to raise any matter; ministers are not bound to reply. | Urgent issues that have not gone through formal notice. |
| Half-an-hour discussion | 30-minute structured debate on a matter of recent public importance. | For deeper engagement than Question Hour permits. |
| Calling Attention motion | An MP “calls the attention” of a minister to an urgent matter; the minister responds in the House. | When information is needed quickly without formal censure. |
| Adjournment motion | Suspends the regular business to discuss a definite matter of urgent public importance. | Riot, disaster or grave administrative failure. |
| No-confidence motion | If passed in the Lok Sabha, the entire Council of Ministers must resign. | The deepest power of the legislature; used several times after 1989. |
5.19.2 Why Question Hour Matters Most
Perhaps the question hour is the most effective method of keeping vigil on the executive and the administrative agencies of the government. Members of Parliament have shown great interest in question hour and maximum attendance is recorded during this time. Most questions aim at eliciting information on issues of public interest such as price rise, availability of food grains, atrocities on weaker sections of society, riots and black-marketing. The discussions during question hour are often heated — members raise their voice, walk to the well of the House, or walk out in protest. Even though such actions cause loss of legislative time, they remain political techniques to gain concessions from the government and force executive accountability.
5.19.3 Approval, Financial Control and No-Confidence
Beyond debate, Parliament controls the executive through three structural levers:
- Approval and ratification of laws. A bill can become law only with Parliament’s approval. A government with disciplined majority finds this easy — but never automatic. Bargaining among ruling and opposition parties is constant. The 1977 Janata Party rule and the 2000 NDA rule both saw the government with a Lok Sabha majority but not a Rajya Sabha majority — forcing concessions to pass laws. Some bills, like the Lok Pal Bill, have failed; the Prevention of Terrorism Bill (2002) was rejected by the Rajya Sabha.
- Financial control. Preparation and presentation of the budget is a constitutional obligation. Through this, Parliament controls the government’s purse strings — it can refuse to grant resources, can enquire into misuse of funds (using reports of the Comptroller and Auditor General and the Public Accounts Committee), and through financial control it ultimately controls the policies of the government.
- No-confidence motion. The most powerful weapon. As long as the government has the support of its party or coalition, the power of the Lok Sabha to dismiss the government is largely fictional. But after 1989, several governments have been forced to resign because they failed to retain the support of their coalition partners.
5.20 What Do the Committees of Parliament Do?
A significant feature of the legislative process is the appointment of committees for various legislative purposes. Since the Parliament meets only during sessions, it has very limited time at its disposal. Lawmaking requires in-depth study, which demands more attention and time than a House debate can spare. Other important functions — studying demands for grants, looking into expenditure, investigating corruption — also need detailed work. Parliamentary committees perform these functions.
Since 1983, India has developed a system of parliamentary standing committees?. There are over twenty such departmentally related Standing Committees. Standing Committees supervise the work of various departments, their budget, their expenditure and bills that come up in the House relating to the department.
5.20.1 Three Kinds of Committees
The committee system has reduced the burden on Parliament. Many important bills have been referred to committees. Parliament has merely approved the work done in the committees with few occasional alterations. Of course, legally speaking, no bill can become law and no budget can be sanctioned unless approved by Parliament. But Parliament rarely rejects the suggestions made by the committees.
5.21 How Does the Parliament Regulate Itself?
Parliament is, above all, a debating forum. It is through debates that Parliament performs its vital functions. Such discussions must be meaningful and orderly so that the dignity of the House is intact. The Constitution itself has made certain provisions to ensure smooth conduct of business. The presiding officer of the legislature is the final authority in matters of regulating business.
There is one more way in which presiding officers control the behaviour of members — the anti-defection law. Most members of legislatures are elected on the ticket of some political party. What if they decide to leave the party after getting elected? For many years after independence, this issue was unresolved. Eventually there was an agreement among the parties that a legislator elected on one party’s ticket must be restricted from defecting to another party. An amendment to the Constitution was made (the 52nd Amendment Act, 1985). This is known as the anti-defection amendment?. It has been subsequently modified by the 91st Amendment, 2003.
5.21.1 What Counts as Defection?
The presiding officer? (the Speaker in the Lok Sabha and State Assemblies, the Chairman in the Rajya Sabha) is the authority who takes the final decision on all such cases. If it is proved that a member has defected, the member loses the membership of the House. Besides, such a person is also disqualified from holding any political office like ministership.
5.21.2 The 52nd vs 91st Amendments — Why the Change?
| Feature | 52nd Amendment (1985) | 91st Amendment (2003) |
|---|---|---|
| Defection by an individual | Disqualification | Disqualification (unchanged) |
| “Split” protection | If 1/3 of party members defected together, treated as a “split” — no disqualification | Split provision deleted. Only a full merger of 2/3 with another party is exempt. |
| Defectors becoming ministers | Could become ministers immediately | Disqualified from any ministerial post until re-elected |
| Cabinet size | No limit | Cap at 15% of total Lok Sabha / Assembly strength |
| Final authority | Speaker / Chairman | Speaker / Chairman (with judicial review post-decision) |
5.21.3 Has Anti-Defection Worked?
Experience of the past decades shows that the anti-defection amendment has not been fully able to curb defections, but it has given additional powers to party leadership and to presiding officers over members. NCERT’s assessment is sober: the law strengthens party discipline at the cost of the individual conscience of the legislator. The debate over whether this trade-off is healthy for democracy continues.
An MP from the ruling party feels strongly that a particular bill her party is whipping in favour of will harm her constituency. The party whip orders her to vote yes. Should she follow the whip or her conscience?
- List the arguments for following the whip (party discipline, anti-defection law, accountability to the party).
- List the arguments for following conscience (representation of constituency, democratic deliberation).
- Suggest one institutional reform that might allow conscience votes without violating the anti-defection law.
5.22 Conclusion — The Democratic Potential of the Parliament
If you watch a live telecast of Parliament, you will find that our Parliament is truly a rainbow of colourful dresses symbolising different regions of the country. Members speak in different languages. They come from various castes, religions and sects. They often fight bitterly. Many times an impression is created that they are wasting the time and money of the nation. But, as we have seen in this chapter, these same parliamentarians can effectively control the executive. They express the interests of various sections of our society. On account of its composition, the legislature is the most representative of all organs of government. The sheer presence of members of diverse social backgrounds makes the legislature potentially more responsive to people’s expectations. Herein lies the democratic potential of the Parliament.
5.23 NCERT Exercises — All Ten Questions, Fully Answered
Exercise 1
Alok thinks that a country needs an efficient government that looks after the welfare of the people. So, if we simply elected our Prime Minister and Ministers and left to them the task of government, we will not need a legislature. Do you agree? Give reasons for your answer.
Exercise 2
A class was debating the merits of a bicameral system. Read the arguments and say if you agree or disagree with each, giving reasons.
(a) Neha said that bicameral legislature does not serve any purpose.
(b) Shama argued that experts should be nominated in the second chamber.
(c) Tridib said that if a country is not a federation, then there is no need to have a second chamber.
Exercise 3
Why can the Lok Sabha control the executive more effectively than the Rajya Sabha can?
Exercise 4
Rather than effective control of the executive, the Lok Sabha is a platform for the expression of popular sentiments and people’s expectations. Do you agree? Give reasons.
Exercise 5
The following are some proposals for making the Parliament more effective. State if you agree or disagree with each of them and give your reasons. Explain what would be the effect if these suggestions were accepted.
(a) Parliament should work for longer period.
(b) Attendance should be made compulsory for members of Parliament.
(c) Speakers should be empowered to penalise members for interrupting the proceedings of the House.
Exercise 6
Arif wanted to know that if ministers propose most of the important bills and if the majority party often gets the government bills passed, what is the role of the Parliament in the law making process? What answer would you give him?
Exercise 7
Which of the following statements you agree with the most? Give your reasons.
(a) Legislators must be free to join any party they want.
(b) Anti-defection law has contributed to the domination of the party leaders over the legislators.
(c) Defection is always for selfish purposes and therefore, a legislator who wants to join another party must be disqualified from being a minister for the next two years.
Exercise 8
Dolly and Sudha are debating about the efficiency and effectiveness of the Parliament in recent times. Dolly believed that the decline of Indian Parliament is evident in the less time spent on debate and discussion and increase in the disturbances of the functioning of the House and walkouts etc. Sudha contends that the fall of different governments on the floor of Lok Sabha is a proof of its vibrancy. What other arguments can you provide to support or oppose the positions of Dolly and Sudha?
Exercise 9
Arrange the different stages of passing of a bill into a law in their correct sequence:
· A resolution is passed to admit the bill for discussion
· The bill is referred to the President of India — write what happens next if s/he does not sign it
· The bill is referred to other House and is passed
· The bill is passed in the house in which it was proposed
· The bill is read clause by clause and each is voted upon
· The bill is referred to the subcommittee — the committee makes some changes and sends it back to the house for discussion
· The concerned minister proposes the need for a bill
· Legislative department in ministry of law, drafts a bill
Exercise 10
How has the system of parliamentary committee affected the overseeing and appraisal of legislation by the Parliament?
5.24 Summary — Chapter 5 at a Glance
The whole chapter in 12 takeaways
- The legislature is the heart of representative democracy — it makes laws, controls the executive, approves the budget, debates, represents diverse voices, and amends the Constitution.
- Article 79 declares that the Indian Parliament consists of the President + Rajya Sabha + Lok Sabha.
- India follows a bicameral system because the country’s size and diversity require representation of States plus reconsideration of every bill.
- Six States — Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Telangana, Uttar Pradesh — have bicameral legislatures; the rest are unicameral.
- Lok Sabha (Article 81): max 545 seats, 543 elected, 5-year term, directly elected by FPTP.
- Rajya Sabha (Article 80): max 250 seats, 233 elected by State Assemblies via STV, 12 nominated, 6-year staggered term, permanent House.
- Money Bills (Article 109) can be introduced only in the Lok Sabha; Rajya Sabha cannot reject them.
- Special powers of the Rajya Sabha: Article 249 (legislate on State subjects) and Article 312 (creation of All-India Services).
- Lawmaking goes through three readings; ordinary bills can be sent to a Joint Sitting if the two Houses disagree. Only three joint sittings have ever been held: 1961 (Dowry Prohibition), 1977 (Banking Service Commission), 2002 (Prevention of Terrorism).
- Executive control tools: Question Hour, Zero Hour, Calling Attention, Half-an-hour discussion, Adjournment motion and No-Confidence motion.
- Standing Committees (since 1983), Select Committees and Joint Parliamentary Committees act as “miniature legislatures”.
- The Anti-defection law (52nd Amendment 1985, modified by 91st Amendment 2003) deletes the “split” protection, requires full merger only, bans defectors from ministerial office and caps Cabinet size at 15%.
5.25 Key Terms
Competency-Based Questions — Part 3
(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.