GK Question

polity hard mcq

Under Article 163, the Governor acts on aid and advice of Council of Ministers except in limited discretionary situations. Which of the following is a legitimate discretionary power of Governor under Article 356?

  1. Dismissing Ministry based on subjective assessment without floor test
  2. Sending report to President based on objective material of constitutional breakdown
  3. Appointing Chief Minister based on political preference
  4. Dissolving Assembly without Parliamentary approval

Answer: Sending report to President based on objective material of constitutional breakdown

Governor's discretionary powers under Article 356: (a) Constitutional framework: Article 163 - Governor acts on aid and advice of Council of Ministers except in limited discretionary situations, (b) Legitimate discretion under Article 356: (i) Sending report to President based on objective material of constitutional breakdown (e.g., loss of majority verified through floor test, breakdown of constitutional machinery), (ii) NOT legitimate: Dismissing Ministry without floor test, appointing CM based on political preference, dissolving Assembly without Parliamentary approval, (c) SR Bommai safeguards: (i) Objective material requirement: Report must be based on verified facts, not subjective opinion, (ii) Floor test principle: Majority tested on Assembly floor, not Governor's assessment, (iii) Judicial review: Courts examine whether report based on objective material, not political considerations, (d) Applications: (i) Post-1994: Governors more cautious in recommending President's Rule; floor test, objective material required, (ii) Judicial oversight: Courts strike down proclamations based on unverified reports, political considerations, (e) Illustrates constitutional federalism: Governor's discretion limited to genuine constitutional breakdown; safeguards protect State autonomy against arbitrary Centre overreach via gubernatorial discretion.

Topic Article 356 - Governor's Discretionary Powers
Exam Relevance Governor's discretionary powers critical for UPSC Mains and Judiciary exams