Elections and the Democratic Process
FPTP system, ECI, Model Code of Conduct, parties, EVMs, NOTA, challenges.
Elections and the Democratic Process
Electoral Politics in India
What you'll learn
- Why elections are central to democracy.
- How elections work in India — constituency system, voting, counting.
- Election Commission of India — independent body that conducts elections.
- Political parties and their role.
- Model Code of Conduct.
- Challenges to free and fair elections.
Key concepts
Why elections?
In a large democracy, citizens cannot directly make every decision — they elect representatives who make decisions on their behalf (representative democracy).
Elections allow people to:
- Choose their government.
- Hold rulers accountable (throw them out if they perform badly).
- Express preferences on policies.
India's electoral system
First-Past-the-Post (FPTP):
- India divided into constituencies (Lok Sabha: 543; each elects 1 MP).
- Candidate with most votes wins — even without majority (e.g., can win with 30% if others split votes).
- Simple but may not reflect overall preference of majority.
Voting process
| Step | Detail |
|---|---|
| Electoral rolls | List of all eligible voters (18+); updated annually |
| Nomination | Candidates file papers + deposit (₹25,000 for Lok Sabha; refunded if get >1/6 votes) |
| Campaign | 2–3 weeks; rallies, ads, manifestos |
| Voting day | Secret ballot using Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs); VVPAT (paper trail since 2019) |
| Counting | Same day as voting; results declared |
Booth capturing = illegal; punishable.
Election Commission of India (ECI)
- Constitutional body — Article 324.
- Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) + two Election Commissioners.
- CEC can only be removed like a Supreme Court judge (very secure tenure).
- Powers: announces election schedule, enforces Model Code, can transfer officers, cancel elections if malpractice.
Model Code of Conduct
- Set of guidelines for parties and candidates once elections are announced.
- Government cannot: announce new schemes, transfer key officials, use government resources for campaigning.
- Parties cannot: use communal/caste appeals, bribe voters, use government vehicles.
- Enforced by ECI.
Political parties
- Groups of people who share political views; contest elections together.
- National parties (recognised by ECI): must win 6%+ votes in 4+ states (e.g., BJP, INC, BSP, CPI-M).
- State parties: recognised in specific states (e.g., DMK in TN, TMC in WB).
- Role: contest elections, form government, provide opposition, aggregate public opinion.
Challenges
| Challenge | Detail |
|---|---|
| Money power | Candidates spend crores; levels playing field unfair |
| Muscle power | Intimidation of voters; booth capturing |
| Criminalisation of politics | Many candidates have criminal records |
| Caste & communal voting | Votes based on identity, not performance |
| Voter apathy | Low turnout in urban areas |
Reforms
- EVMs reduced booth capturing.
- NOTA (None of the Above) — option since 2013.
- Paid News ban.
- Candidate must declare criminal record and assets.
Quick check
- What is the First-Past-the-Post system? What is its main drawback?
- What is the Election Commission of India? How is the CEC's independence protected?
- What is the Model Code of Conduct? Give two things it prohibits.
- What is NOTA? When was it introduced?
- Name two challenges to free and fair elections in India.
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Electoral Politics.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Quick check
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