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Answer: Speaker/Chairman, Kihoto Hollohan
Paragraph 6 of the Tenth Schedule empowers the Speaker/Chairman of the House to decide on disqualification petitions. In Kihoto Hollohan v. Zachillhu (1992), the Supreme Court upheld the Speaker's role but made their decision subject to judicial review on grounds of mala fides, perversity, or violation of constitutional mandates. This balances legislative autonomy with constitutional supremacy.
Answer: 265
Article 265 establishes the principle of 'no taxation without law'. It states: 'No tax shall be levied or collected except by authority of law.' This ensures that taxation requires legislative sanction, protecting citizens from arbitrary executive taxation. It applies to both Union and State taxes.
Answer: True
The Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala (1973) judgment established the 'Basic Structure Doctrine'. While Parliament can amend Fundamental Rights under Article 368, it cannot destroy or alter the Constitution's basic structure (e.g., supremacy of Constitution, secularism, federalism, judicial review, free and fair elections). This doctrine has been used to strike down several amendments.
Answer: Article 370
Article 370 granted special autonomous status to Jammu and Kashmir, allowing it to have its own Constitution, flag, and autonomy over all matters except defense, foreign affairs, finance, and communications. It was abrogated on August 5, 2019, via Presidential Order and the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act, 2019, bifurcating the state into two Union Territories.
Answer: Appointing the Chief Minister when no party has clear majority
The Governor's discretionary powers (not bound by Council of Ministers' advice) include: (1) Appointing CM when no party has clear majority, (2) Dismissing a ministry that loses majority but refuses to resign, (3) Dissolving Assembly if ministry loses majority, (4) Reserving a Bill for President's consideration. Options B and C are normally done on ministerial advice.
Answer: True
The landmark Maneka Gandhi case (1978) revolutionized Article 21 interpretation. The Supreme Court held that 'personal liberty' under Article 21 includes a wide range of rights making life meaningful, not just physical restraint. It established that any law depriving liberty must be 'fair, just, and reasonable', not merely procedurally valid.
Answer: Provide detailed procedural mechanisms, safeguards, and transitional arrangements to operationalize constitutional values
Miscellaneous provisions serve critical functions: (a) Operationalize core principles (e.g., Article 330-342 for political representation of SC/ST), (b) Create institutional mechanisms (e.g., Article 312 for AIS, Article 323A for tribunals), (c) Provide safeguards (e.g., Article 361 for immunities, Article 350B for linguistic minorities), (d) Enable transition (e.g., Article 392-395). These 'technical' provisions are essential for making constitutional ideals practically enforceable while maintaining flexibility for evolving governance needs.
Answer: 1951-52
Articles 379-392 (Part XXI, Temporary Provisions): Enabled transitional arrangements: provisional Parliament (constituent assembly members), provisional President (Rajendra Prasad), adaptation of laws, etc. Most provisions ceased after first general elections (1951-52) and first Parliament constituted (1952). Illustrates Constitution's pragmatic approach: temporary mechanisms to ensure smooth transition to full constitutional democracy.
Answer: True
Article 368(2): Constitutional Amendment Bill passed by each House by special majority (majority of total membership + 2/3 present and voting). If affecting federal provisions, ratified by half of State Legislatures. President 'shall give assent' - no discretionary power to withhold assent or return for reconsideration. Ensures that once constitutional amendment procedure completed, it becomes law without executive veto, preserving parliamentary sovereignty in constitutional matters.
Answer: Provision for size of Legislative Assembly
Article 371-I (Goa): (a) Protection of existing laws, (b) Administrative arrangements for Goa's integration, (c) Unique provision: Legislative Assembly shall consist of not less than 30 members (smaller than typical State minimum of 60 under Article 170). Recognizes Goa's small size/population while ensuring democratic representation. Illustrates Constitution's flexibility to accommodate diverse State characteristics.
Answer: False
Article 371J was proposed via Constitution (118th Amendment) Bill, 2012 for Hyderabad-Karnataka region. However, Bill lapsed; provisions implemented via Presidential Order under existing Article 371(1) (not constitutional amendment). Since Article 371(1) doesn't affect federal structure, State ratification not required. Illustrates flexibility in addressing regional imbalances: constitutional amendment vs executive order based on subject matter.
Answer: Vote on Account
Article 116(1)(a): Vote on Account - Lok Sabha may make grant for estimated expenditure for part of financial year pending completion of budget process. Typically for 2 months (extended to election year). Enables government functioning during transitional period without violating 'no taxation without representation' principle. Distinct from Supplementary Grant (unforeseen expenditure) and Excess Grant (post-facto approval).
Answer: False
Article 392(2): Orders made by President under this Article shall have effect subject to provisions of Constitution and can be altered/amended by competent legislature/authority. Though Article 392 was temporary (3 years), such orders were subject to judicial review if violating constitutional provisions. Ensures executive power to remove difficulties doesn't override constitutional supremacy or fundamental rights.
Answer: 3 years
Article 392 (Temporary provisions): President could make orders to remove difficulties in giving effect to Constitution during transitional period. Power available for 3 years from Constitution commencement (26.01.1950 to 25.01.1953). Enabled smooth transition from Government of India Act, 1935 to new constitutional framework. Illustrates Constitution's pragmatic approach to implementation challenges.
Answer: President
Article 371D (inserted by 32nd Amendment, 1973): President may by order provide for equitable opportunities/facilities for people of different regions of Andhra Pradesh in public employment/education. Implemented via Presidential Orders (1975) creating local cadres, reservation for locals. Continues to apply to Telangana post-bifurcation (2014). Addresses regional imbalances within States through constitutional mechanism.
Answer: True
97th Amendment (2011): (a) Added Article 43B (DPSP) for voluntary formation, autonomous functioning, democratic control of co-operative societies, (b) Added Part IXB for constitutional framework for co-operatives. Supreme Court in Union of India v. Rajendra N. Shah (2021) struck down Part IXB as it related to State co-operatives (required State ratification under Article 368), upheld only for UTs and multi-State co-operatives. Illustrates federal amendment procedure constraints.
Answer: Article 371
Article 371 (original): Special provisions for Maharashtra and Gujarat: (a) Governor's special responsibility for equitable development of Vidarbha, Marathwada (Maharashtra) and Saurashtra, Kutch (Gujarat), (b) Regional development boards, (c) Equitable allocation of funds. Addresses regional imbalances within States formed on linguistic basis in 1960. Model for subsequent Article 371 clauses for other States.
Answer: Balanced pluralism: promoting Hindi while protecting linguistic diversity and regional identities
Constitutional language/regional framework: (a) Promotes Hindi as Union official language (Article 343, 351) while allowing English continuation (Official Languages Act), (b) Recognizes 22 Eighth Schedule languages, (c) Allows States to adopt official languages (Article 345), (d) Grants special provisions to tribal/regionally distinct States (Articles 371 series, Fifth/Sixth Schedules). Balances national integration with respect for diversity; pragmatic pluralism as constitutional philosophy.
Answer: True
Asymmetric federalism: Different States have different powers/autonomy based on historical/cultural/tribal needs. Examples: (a) Article 370 (J&K, abrogated 2019), (b) Article 371 series (11 States), (c) Fifth/Sixth Schedules (tribal areas), (d) Special category status (fiscal). Enables flexible unity: accommodates diversity while maintaining constitutional framework. Unique Indian model of federalism.
Answer: local area preferences
Article 371D (Andhra Pradesh): President may order equitable opportunities for people of different regions in public employment/education through local area preferences. Implemented via Presidential Orders (1975) creating local cadres, reservation in jobs/education for locals. Addresses regional imbalances; similar provisions debated for other States with regional disparities.