GK Questions

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polity hard mcq

Which constitutional provision implicitly requires public officials to avoid conflict of interest by prohibiting them from holding 'office of profit' under government?

  1. Article 102(1)(a)
  2. Article 74(1)
  3. Article 123
  4. Article 356
polity hard mcq

In which case did the Supreme Court emphasize that Constitutional Morality requires protection of minority rights against majoritarian impulses?

  1. Kesavananda Bharati case (1973)
  2. Navtej Singh Johar case (2018)
  3. SR Bommai case (1994)
  4. Minerva Mills case (1980)
polity medium mcq

Which body is responsible for enforcing the Code of Conduct for Union Ministers in India?

  1. Supreme Court
  2. Prime Minister's Office
  3. Central Vigilance Commission
  4. Parliamentary Committee on Ethics
polity medium mcq

The concept of 'Constitutional Morality' in Indian jurisprudence emphasizes adherence to:

  1. Only the literal text of the Constitution
  2. Core constitutional values like liberty, equality, fraternity, and rule of law
  3. Majority opinion in Parliament
  4. Traditional social customs
polity hard mcq

Which statement best captures India's approach to borrowing constitutional features from other democracies?

  1. India copied provisions verbatim without adaptation
  2. India selectively borrowed features, adapting them to Indian context of diversity, post-colonial nation-building, and social transformation
  3. India rejected all foreign influences to create a purely indigenous Constitution
  4. India borrowed only from Western democracies, ignoring Asian/African experiences
polity hard mcq

Which statement correctly compares judicial appointment systems in India and USA?

  1. India: Executive appoints; USA: Legislature appoints
  2. India: Collegium system (judges appoint judges); USA: President appoints with Senate confirmation
  3. Both follow identical appointment procedures
  4. India: Direct election of judges; USA: Executive appointment
polity hard mcq

How does Indian secularism differ from American secularism?

  1. India prohibits all religious practices; USA allows them
  2. India maintains principled distance and can intervene in religions for reform; USA maintains strict separation of Church and State
  3. India has State religion; USA has none
  4. Both follow identical secular models
polity hard mcq

Which feature distinguishes Indian Emergency provisions from those in Germany's Weimar Constitution?

  1. India has no judicial review of Emergency proclamation
  2. India requires Parliamentary approval and has non-suspendable rights
  3. India allows indefinite Emergency without review
  4. India excludes Fundamental Rights suspension entirely
polity hard mcq

How do Fundamental Rights in India differ from the Bill of Rights in USA regarding restrictions?

  1. Indian rights have no restrictions; US rights have many
  2. Indian rights have reasonable restrictions explicitly mentioned; US rights are absolute with judicially implied limitations
  3. Both have identical restriction frameworks
  4. US rights can be suspended during emergency; Indian rights cannot
polity hard mcq

Which statement correctly distinguishes federalism in USA and India?

  1. USA has residuary powers with States; India with Union
  2. USA has dual citizenship; India has single citizenship
  3. USA has rigid Constitution; India has flexible amendment procedure
  4. All of the above
polity easy mcq

The procedure for amendment of the Constitution requiring special majority was borrowed from which country?

  1. South Africa
  2. Russia
  3. Japan
  4. France
polity medium mcq

Which feature of the Indian Constitution reflects borrowing from the Canadian Constitution?

  1. Concurrent List
  2. Residuary powers with States
  3. Unitary features in federal structure
  4. Both (a) and (c)
polity easy mcq

Which feature of the Indian Constitution was borrowed from the United Kingdom?

  1. Fundamental Rights
  2. Parliamentary system of government
  3. Federal structure
  4. Judicial review
polity hard mcq

Which statement best describes the trajectory of electoral reforms in Indian democracy?

  1. Reforms have focused only on technology upgrades like EVMs
  2. Reforms have evolved through judicial interventions, legislative amendments, and EC initiatives to enhance transparency, accountability, and inclusiveness
  3. Reforms have reduced the role of political parties in elections
  4. Reforms have centralized electoral administration under the Union Government
polity hard mcq

The era of coalition governments in India (post-1989) has led to which significant change in parliamentary practice?

  1. Abolition of no-confidence motions
  2. Increased importance of consensus-building and pre-poll/post-poll alliances
  3. Reduction in number of political parties
  4. Elimination of regional parties
polity hard mcq

Under the Tenth Schedule (Anti-Defection Law), after the 91st Amendment, which exception allows legislators to avoid disqualification when changing parties?

  1. Split of one-third members
  2. Merger of two-thirds members with another party
  3. Resignation and re-election
  4. Governor's permission
polity hard mcq

In Association for Democratic Reforms v. Union of India (2024), the Supreme Court struck down the Electoral Bonds Scheme holding it violated which fundamental right?

  1. Right to Equality (Article 14)
  2. Right to Freedom of Speech (Article 19)
  3. Right to Information (implicit in Article 19)
  4. Right to Constitutional Remedies (Article 32)
polity hard mcq

In Lily Thomas v. Union of India (2013), the Supreme Court struck down which provision that allowed convicted legislators to retain membership by filing appeal within 3 months?

  1. Section 8(1) of R.P. Act
  2. Section 8(4) of R.P. Act
  3. Section 62(5) of R.P. Act
  4. Section 33A of R.P. Act
polity hard mcq

In which case did the Supreme Court direct candidates to disclose criminal antecedents while filing nomination papers?

  1. Kihoto Hollohan case (1992)
  2. Association for Democratic Reforms case (2002)
  3. Lily Thomas case (2013)
  4. Subramanian Swamy case (2016)
polity medium mcq

For recognition as a National Party, a political party must secure at least 6% of valid votes in Lok Sabha or Assembly elections in at least how many States, along with winning 4 Lok Sabha seats?

  1. 2
  2. 3
  3. 4
  4. 5