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Why Regional Parties Shape National Policy

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From 1989 to 2014, and sporadically since, India was governed by coalitions in which regional parties — parties with primary base in one or two states — held the balance of power at the national level. The Janata Dal, Telugu Desam Party (TDP), Trinamool Congress, Samajwadi Party, Bahujan Samaj Party, Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK), All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), Biju Janata Dal, and Shiv Sena are among the parties that have at various points determined whether Union governments survived, which ministers came from which states, and which policies were advanced or blocked in Parliament. This period — often called the "coalition era" of Indian politics — produced a distinctive model of governance in which regional parties extracted specific policy concessions, ministerial portfolios, and fiscal transfers in exchange for parliamentary support. Representational Image: Why Regional Parties Shape National Policy Even after the BJP's majority governments (201...

Why India Is Federal on Paper, Unitary in Practice

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The Indian Constitution uses the word "federation" nowhere. Article 1 describes India as a "Union of States" — a deliberate choice by the Constituent Assembly that signalled from the outset that India's sub-national units were not sovereign entities that had voluntarily ceded some powers to the Centre, but administrative divisions of a unitary whole that had been given specific governance authorities.  Constitutional scholar K.C. Wheare described India's system as "quasi-federal" — having federal appearance but unitary substance. The Constituent Assembly designed the Constitution explicitly to bias the system toward the Centre: the Emergency period saw this unitary tendency made explicit, but even in ordinary governance, the constitutional architecture consistently advantages the Centre over the states in ways that comparable federations do not. Representational Image: Why India Is Federal on Paper, Unitary in Practice The unitary features are exte...

How Local Governments Actually Work in India

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India has three tiers of elected government: the Union, the states, and local bodies. The 73rd Constitutional Amendment (1992) gave constitutional status to rural local bodies — the Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) — mandating a three-tier system of gram panchayats (village level), intermediate panchayats or panchayat samitis (block level), and zila parishads (district level) in states with populations exceeding two million.  The 74th Constitutional Amendment (1992) did the same for urban areas, requiring Municipal Corporations for large cities, Municipal Councils for smaller towns, and Nagar Panchayats for transitional areas. Both amendments required regular elections every five years, mandated reservation of seats for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, and women (one-third of total seats reserved for women), required State Finance Commissions to recommend devolution of funds to local bodies, and listed subjects that states should devolve to these bodies — 29 subjects for PRIs ...

Why States Matter More Than Outsiders Assume

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Most coverage of Indian governance focuses on the Prime Minister, the Union Cabinet, and Parliament in New Delhi. This gives a misleading picture of where governance actually happens. For the vast majority of India's 1.4 billion citizens, the state government is the primary interface with the state: the police force that patrols their street is a state police; the school their children attend is administered by a state education department; the hospital they visit is a state public health facility; the land records that determine their property rights are maintained by state revenue departments; the ration card that determines their food security entitlement under the National Food Security Act is issued by the state PDS system. Even programmes that originate in Parliament — MGNREGA, PM-KISAN, Ayushman Bharat — are implemented by state bureaucracies under supervision of state governments that have discretion in operationalisation. Representational Image: Why States Matter More Than...

How Central Agencies Affect State Politics

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India's central investigative and enforcement agencies — the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), Enforcement Directorate (ED), Income Tax (IT) Department, and National Investigation Agency (NIA) — operate from New Delhi under Union government direction, but their jurisdiction extends into state territory on specific categories of cases. Their use has become one of the most contested aspects of Centre-state relations in contemporary India.  The constitutional position is that law and order and policing are State List subjects; state police investigate most crime. But central agencies have jurisdiction over corruption cases involving central government employees and politicians (CBI under the Delhi Special Police Establishment Act), foreign exchange violations and money laundering (ED under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, PMLA), income tax evasion (IT Department under the Income Tax Act), and terrorism (NIA under the National Investigation Agency Act). In states where oppo...

Why Inter-State Councils Rarely Matter

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The Constitution of India provides for an Inter-State Council under Article 263, enabling the President to establish a council to inquire into and advise on disputes between states, investigate and discuss subjects of common interest between the Union and states, and make recommendations on any subject. The article itself does not mandate the Council's existence — it only enables the President to constitute one "if it appears to the President that the public interest would be served by the establishment of a Council."  The Inter-State Council was eventually constituted by Presidential order in 1990 — 40 years after the Constitution came into force — chaired by the Prime Minister and comprising all Chief Ministers, Cabinet Ministers of the Union and states as members. Despite its impressive membership and the breadth of its mandate, the Council has met infrequently and its recommendations have had modest policy impact relative to the significance of Centre-state issues it ...

How Federalism Works in India in Practice

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India's Constitution describes the country not as a "federation" but as a "Union of States" — a deliberate choice by the drafters to signal that Indian unity was not contingent on a voluntary compact among pre-existing sovereign states. The distinction matters: Indian states have no right to secede, no independent constitutions, and — unlike American states — no residual sovereignty over domains not assigned to them. Constitutional scholar K.C. Wheare described India's system as "quasi-federal": it has the formal architecture of a federation — written constitution, division of powers, independent judiciary — but its operational tilt consistently favours the Centre over the states. Emergency provisions (Articles 352–356) can temporarily convert the federation into near-unitary rule; the Governor (appointed by the Centre) presides over each state; the all-India services (IAS, IPS, IFS) serve both Centre and states under central control; and residual ...
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