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Decoding Governor's Role in Indian Federal Politics

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The Governor is simultaneously the constitutional head of state government and the Centre's representative in each state. Under Article 153, each state must have a Governor; under Article 155, the Governor is appointed by the President (in practice, on the advice of the Union Council of Ministers). The Governor's constitutional functions are largely ceremonial: they summon and prorogue the state legislature, appoint the Chief Minister and swear in the Cabinet, and address the legislature at the beginning of each year. In the ordinary course of a state government with a clear majority, the Governor acts on the advice of the state Council of Ministers and functions as a constitutional figurehead. The Sarkaria Commission (1988) on Centre-State relations described the intended role as that of "a neutral arbiter and not a Centre's agent." Representational Image: Decoding Governor's Role in Indian Federal Politics In practice, Governors have frequently been politica...

Fiscal Federalism — How Money Flows in India

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Fiscal federalism in India addresses one of the most consequential questions in governance: how financial resources are divided between the central government and 28 states that collectively spend more than the Centre on services that directly affect citizens' lives. The constitutional framework for fiscal federalism has two main pillars.  First, Articles 264–293 allocate specific tax sources to the Centre (income tax, corporation tax, customs, central excise) and the states (land revenue, stamp duties, excise on alcohol, state GST); they also require mandatory sharing of central taxes with states through the divisible pool mechanism.  Representational Image: Fiscal Federalism — How Money Flows in India Second, Article 280 mandates a Finance Commission every five years to recommend the principles governing tax devolution and grants-in-aid from Centre to states — creating a periodic, constitutionally-grounded settlement of the fiscal federal relationship. The Goods and Servic...

Decoding Centre–State Conflict as a Political Tool

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Centre-state conflict in India has a persistent dual character: it is simultaneously a constitutional question about the division of powers and a political instrument deployed by both central and state governments to advance their electoral interests, mobilise constituencies, and deflect responsibility for governance failures. When the BJP-led Union government and a state government governed by a regional or opposition party dispute GST compensation, the conflict is partly about money and partly about who gets credit for state fiscal management in the next election.  When a Governor delays assenting to state bills, the constitutional question about Article 200 timelines is inseparable from the political reality that the Governor was appointed by the Union government to serve as its representative in an opposition-ruled state. When a state government blames the Centre for inadequate flood relief funds and the Centre blames the state for poor preparedness, both descriptions may be fa...

Why Indian Federalism Produces Uneven Outcomes

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India's constitutional framework applies uniformly to all states. The Union List, State List, and Concurrent List are the same for Tamil Nadu as for Bihar; the Finance Commission formula distributes the same national tax pool among all of them; the Centrally Sponsored Schemes — MGNREGA, Ayushman Bharat, PM Awas Yojana, Samagra Shiksha — are available in every state with the same central co-financing.  But the outcomes these common frameworks produce are vastly different across states. NITI Aayog's Health Index has consistently shown Kerala at the top and Uttar Pradesh near the bottom among large states, despite both states operating under the same constitutional and legal framework and both receiving significant Finance Commission devolution. Child mortality, literacy, maternal health, and access to clean water all show state-level variation that dwarfs India's overall performance divergence from comparable countries. Representational Image: Why Indian Federalism Produces U...

Decoding The Promise vs Practice of Panchayati Raj

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The 73rd Constitutional Amendment of 1992 represented the most ambitious formal decentralisation of governance in Indian history. By giving constitutional status to Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs), it sought to implement Article 40 of the Directive Principles — which directed the state to organise village panchayats as units of self-government — and to shift the locus of rural governance from distant state governments to elected local bodies.  The amendment's provisions were transformative on paper: mandatory three-tier elected structure, regular elections every five years, one-third reservation for women, reservation for Scheduled Castes and Tribes proportional to their population, State Finance Commissions to recommend fiscal devolution, State Election Commissions to conduct elections, and devolution of the 29 subjects listed in the Eleventh Schedule including land reform implementation, libraries, social forestry, sanitation, and poverty alleviation programmes. Representation...

Understanding Language as Federal Politics in India

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Language is one of the most politically charged axes of India's federal politics. The Constitution of India, adopted in 1950, recognised this by providing an intricate framework for official languages: Article 343 made Hindi in Devanagari script the official language of the Union, with English continuing for official purposes for an initial 15-year transitional period; Article 345 allowed each state to adopt its own official language; and Articles 350A and 350B protected linguistic minority rights in education and guaranteed a Special Officer for Linguistic Minorities.  The 1956 States Reorganisation Act reorganised India's state boundaries primarily along linguistic lines, creating states whose populations spoke the same major language — Andhra Pradesh for Telugu, Kerala for Malayalam, Karnataka for Kannada — thereby making language the primary structural principle of Indian federalism after independence. Representational Image: Understanding Language and Federal Politics in ...
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