The features of principles of parliamentary government in
India are:
1.
Nominal
and Real Executives: the President is the nominal executive (de jure
executive or titular executive) while the Prime Minister is the real executive
(de facto executive). Thus, the President is head of the State, while the Prime
Minister is head of the government. Article 74 provides for a council of
ministers headed by the Prime Minister to aid and advise the President in the
exercise of the functions. The advice so tendered is binding on the President!
2.
Majority
party Rule: The political party which secures majority seats in the Lok
Sabha forms the government. The leader of that party is appointed as the Prime
minister by the President; other ministers are appointed by the President on
the advice of the Prime minister. However, when no single party gets, the
majority, a coalition of parties may be invited by the President to form the
government.
3.
Collective
Responsibility: This is the bedrock principle of parliamentary government.
The ministers are collectively responsible to the Parliament in general and to
the Lok Sabha is particular (Article 75). They act as a team and swim and sink
and sink together. The Principle of collective responsibility implies that the
Lok Sabha can remove the ministry (i.e. council of ministers headed by the
prime minister) from office by passing a vote of no confidence.
4.
Political
Homogeneity: Usually members of the council of ministers belong to the same
political party, and hence they share the same political ideology. In case of
coalition government, the ministers are bound by consensus.
5.
Double
Membership: the ministers are members of both the legislature and the
executive .this means that a person cannot be a minister without being a member
of the Parliament. The Constitution stipulates that a period of six consecutive
months ceases to be a minister.
6.
Leadership
of the Prime Minister: the Prime Minister plays the leadership role in this
system of government. He is the leader of council of ministers, leader of the
parliament and leader of the party in power. In these capacities, he plays a
significant and highly crucial role in the functioning of the government.
7.
Dissolution
of the Lower House: the lower house of the Parliament (Lok Sabha) can be
dissolved by the President on recommendation of the Prime Minister. In other
words, the prime minister can advise the President to dissolve the Lok Sabha
before the expiry of its term and hold fresh elections. This means that the
executive enjoys the right to get the legislature dissolved in a parliamentary
system.
8.
Secrecy:
the ministers operate on the principle of secrecy of procedure and cannot divulge
information about their procedure and cannot divulge information about their
proceedings, policies and decisions. They take the oath of secrecy before
entering their office. The oath of secrecy to the ministers is administered by
the President.
No comments:
Post a Comment