With reference to the concept of 'Doctrine of Pleasure' in the Indian Constitution, which of the following statements is/are correct?
1. The President can dismiss a Minister on his own pleasure without the consent of the Prime Minister.
2. A Governor can dismiss a State Minister during the pleasure of the President.
3. The doctrine has been significantly limited by judicial interpretation over time.
Select the correct answer using the code given below:
A1 and 2 only
B2 and 3 only
C1 and 3 only
D1, 2 and 3
Correct Answer:
B. 2 and 3 only
Explanation:
The Doctrine of Pleasure refers to the constitutional position of ministers holding office during the pleasure of the President/Governor.
Statement 1 is incorrect because the President cannot independently dismiss a minister; this requires the PM's recommendation, as per constitutional conventions and practice.
Statement 2 is correct as State Ministers hold office during the pleasure of the President as per Article 164.
Statement 3 is correct because landmark judgments have restricted the arbitrary exercise of this doctrine, establishing that dismissal cannot be arbitrary or violate natural justice principles.
Consider the following regarding the amendment procedures under the Indian Constitution:
1. All amendments require ratification by at least half of the State Legislatures.
2. Amendments to the Basic Structure require approval by both Houses with a 2/3 majority but NOT ratification by States.
3. The procedure for amendment is itself amenable to constitutional amendment.
Which of the above statements is/are correct?
A1 only
B2 and 3 only
C1 and 2 only
D2 only
Correct Answer:
D. 2 only
Explanation:
Statement 1 is incorrect; only amendments affecting federal provisions (Article 368) require State ratification.
General amendments need only Parliamentary approval.
Statement 2 is correct—Basic Structure amendments require 2/3 majority in both Houses but do NOT require State ratification, as established by judicial precedent.
Statement 3 is incorrect because while amendment procedures can be amended, alterations to the basic amendment mechanism itself are restricted by the Basic Structure doctrine following the Kesavananda Bharati judgment, creating an implicit limitation on amending Article 368 itself.
The Supreme Court's judgment in Golaknath case (1967) is primarily significant for establishing which constitutional principle?
AFundamental Rights cannot be amended by any amendment to the Constitution
BThe Parliament's amending power is limited and cannot override Fundamental Rights
CThe President's veto power extends to constitutional amendments
DState Legislatures can reject central constitutional amendments
Correct Answer:
B. The Parliament's amending power is limited and cannot override Fundamental Rights
Explanation:
The Golaknath case established that Parliament's amending power under Article 368, though broad, is not absolute and cannot be used to abridge or take away Fundamental Rights guaranteed under Part III of the Constitution.
This judgment held that constitutional amendments were 'laws' subject to Article 13, making any amendment curtailing Fundamental Rights void.
However, this decision was later overturned by the 24th Amendment Act (1971), which clarified that amendments are not 'laws' under Article 13.
The question asks about the principle established by Golaknath itself, not subsequent developments.
Which of the following best describes the constitutional relationship between the Union and State Governments regarding concurrent matters under the Indian federal system?
AStates have exclusive authority and the Union can only legislate in emergencies
BUnion law prevails in case of conflict, but States retain residual powers in areas not explicitly covered
CThe Union has absolute supremacy and State legislation is merely recommendatory
DBoth must legislate jointly through a cooperative mechanism before any law can be enacted
Correct Answer:
B. Union law prevails in case of conflict, but States retain residual powers in areas not explicitly covered
Explanation:
Under the Indian Constitution's concurrent list (List III), both Union and States can legislate.
However, Article 254 establishes a hierarchy: if there is a conflict between Union and State law on a concurrent subject, the Union law prevails.
But States retain significant residual powers—they can legislate on concurrent matters where Parliament has not yet legislated, or they can provide more stringent provisions complementing Union law.
This maintains the federal character while establishing Union supremacy in case of direct conflict, rather than absolute dominance or complete State autonomy.
Consider the following statements about the President's legislative role in India:
1. The President can return a bill for reconsideration by Parliament only once.
2. If Parliament passes the same bill again with a simple majority after Presidential return, the President must give assent.
3. The President's power to return a bill is available for Private Members' Bills as well as Government Bills.
Which statement(s) is/are correct?
A1 and 2 only
B2 and 3 only
C1 only
DAll of the above
Correct Answer:
B. 2 and 3 only
Explanation:
Statement 1 is incorrect; the Constitution does not restrict the President to returning a bill only once—theoretically, a bill could be returned multiple times, though this is rare in practice.
Statement 2 is correct as per Article 111; if Parliament passes the same bill again (whether with or without amendments) after Presidential return, the President cannot withhold assent and must give it.
Statement 3 is correct; the President's power under Article 111 applies to all bills, including Private Members' Bills, making the President a constitutional check on both Government and Private legislation.
Which of the following statements about the Dharmashastras in ancient India is most accurate?
AThey were primarily concerned with ritual procedures and had no relevance to legal matters
BThey provided frameworks for social organization and legal codes but their prescriptive nature meant actual practice often deviated significantly from textual ideals
CThey were uniformly applied across all regions of the Indian subcontinent without any local variations
DThey explicitly rejected the varna system and advocated for complete social equality
Correct Answer:
B. They provided frameworks for social organization and legal codes but their prescriptive nature meant actual practice often deviated significantly from textual ideals
Explanation:
Dharmashastras like Manusmriti served as normative texts providing guidelines for conduct, governance, and legal matters, but archaeological and epigraphic evidence shows that actual social practices varied considerably based on regional, temporal, and local contexts.
The texts represented idealized frameworks rather than descriptive accounts of what was universally practiced.
Options A, C, and D misrepresent the nature and scope of these foundational texts.
The term 'Chakravartin' in ancient Indian political thought primarily denoted:
AA feudal lord who owed allegiance to a central kingdom
BA universal monarch whose authority extended over multiple kingdoms, conceptually deriving legitimacy from righteous rule rather than mere military conquest
CThe chief priest in the royal court responsible for religious ceremonies
DA merchant who controlled trade routes across the subcontinent
Correct Answer:
B. A universal monarch whose authority extended over multiple kingdoms, conceptually deriving legitimacy from righteous rule rather than mere military conquest
Explanation:
Chakravartin literally means 'one who turns the wheel' and represented the ideal of a universal ruler in Indian political theory, whose sovereignty was justified by adherence to Chakravartin-defined duties and dharma rather than force alone.
This concept influenced political aspirations and legitimacy frameworks throughout Indian history, from the Mauryas to later kingdoms.
The term embodied a philosophical rather than purely military conception of imperial authority.
Consider the following regarding the Bhakti Movement in medieval India:
1. It uniformly rejected the authority of Vedic texts across all its manifestations
2. It emphasized devotion to deity as a path to salvation, often bypassing ritualistic intermediaries
3. It was exclusively an upper-caste phenomenon with limited participation from lower social groups
Which of the statements above is/are correct?
A1 and 2 only
B2 only
C1 and 3 only
D1, 2 and 3
Correct Answer:
B. 2 only
Explanation:
Statement 2 is correct—the Bhakti Movement fundamentally emphasized direct devotional relationship with the divine, reducing the role of Brahmanical ritualism and priestly intermediaries.
Statement 1 is incorrect as many Bhakti teachers engaged with Vedic traditions selectively rather than uniformly rejecting them.
Statement 3 is incorrect because Bhakti movements actively attracted lower-caste and marginalized communities, as evidenced by saints like Ravidas and Kabir, making it socially more inclusive than brahminical orthodoxy.
The movement's democratic spiritual approach was indeed revolutionary for medieval society.
The Subsidiary Alliance system introduced by Wellesley fundamentally differed from earlier European colonial strategies in India primarily because it:
ACompletely avoided military confrontation and relied exclusively on trade agreements
BAchieved political subordination of Indian states without always requiring direct territorial annexation, while simultaneously reducing their military independence and creating financial dependencies
CGranted Indian rulers complete autonomy in internal and external affairs while establishing only nominal British suzerainty
DEliminated the zamindari system across all of India within a single decade
Correct Answer:
B. Achieved political subordination of Indian states without always requiring direct territorial annexation, while simultaneously reducing their military independence and creating financial dependencies
Explanation:
The Subsidiary Alliance was a sophisticated mechanism that brought Indian states under British control through enforced military presence, treaty obligations, and financial burdens, without necessarily annexing territories immediately—achieving hegemony through structural dependence rather than conquest alone.
This system was more efficient than direct annexation as it used Indian resources and rulers' compliance to expand British dominion, creating a buffer of nominally independent but practically subordinate states.
It represented an evolution in colonial strategy that would become the template for much of British Indian expansion in the nineteenth century.
Which of the following best characterizes the relationship between the Jain principle of 'Anekantavada' (many-sidedness) and its political implications in ancient Indian history?
AIt promoted absolute monarchy and centralized authority as the only valid political system
BIt theoretically supported pluralistic acceptance of diverse viewpoints and institutions, though this did not necessarily translate into democratic governance in Jain-influenced kingdoms
CIt explicitly advocated for complete separation of religious and political authority
DIt had no meaningful impact on political structures and remained purely philosophical
Correct Answer:
B. It theoretically supported pluralistic acceptance of diverse viewpoints and institutions, though this did not necessarily translate into democratic governance in Jain-influenced kingdoms
Explanation:
Anekantavada emphasized that truth could be perceived from multiple perspectives, fostering intellectual pluralism that influenced how Jain kingdoms approached governance and coexistence with other faith communities—yet this philosophical openness did not automatically produce democratic institutions but rather created space for relatively greater tolerance and institutional diversity within monarchical structures.
Mauryan Emperor Ashoka and other Jain-influenced rulers demonstrated this tendency toward acknowledging multiple traditions while maintaining centralized authority.
The principle had real political consequences in promoting religious tolerance and accommodating diverse practices, even if it did not fundamentally alter autocratic governance systems.