Election and Representation
"The vote is the most powerful non-violent instrument of change." — Martin Luther King Jr.
1. Chapter Overview
Elections are the MECHANISM through which democracy works. This chapter explains: WHY India chose the First-Past-The-Post (FPTP) system over Proportional Representation, the principle of universal adult franchise, the role of the Election Commission of India, and the ongoing process of electoral reform.
2. Why Elections?
- In a democracy of 1.4 BILLION people, direct democracy (everyone votes on everything) is IMPOSSIBLE
- Indirect/Representative democracy: people ELECT representatives who govern on their behalf
- Elections are the mechanism that MAKES representatives ACCOUNTABLE to the people
3. Electoral Systems
FPTP (First-Past-The-Post)
- The candidate with the MOST votes wins — even if NOT a majority (>50%)
- Used in: India (Lok Sabha, State Assemblies), UK, USA, Canada
- ADVANTAGES: Simple. Stable (usually produces a clear winner). Direct constituency-representative link.
- DISADVANTAGE: A party with, say, 35% of votes can win a MAJORITY of seats → 'wasted votes.' Small parties disadvantaged.
Proportional Representation (PR)
- Seats allocated in proportion to VOTES received
- If a party gets 25% of votes, it gets ~25% of seats
- Used in: Israel, Netherlands, most European countries
- ADVANTAGE: FAIR representation. Small parties get a voice.
- DISADVANTAGE: Often leads to coalition governments → potential instability. No direct constituency-representative link.
Why India Chose FPTP
- India adopted the FPTP system because:
- Simple: easy for voters (many of whom were illiterate in 1950s) to understand
- Stable government: FPTP tends to give a clear majority to one party
- Constituency-representative link: MP/MLA is accountable to a SPECIFIC constituency
- Discourages caste/community-based parties (in PR, even tiny groups can get seats)
- The Constituent Assembly DELIBERATELY chose FPTP over PR
4. Reservation of Constituencies
Why Reserved?
- To ensure representation of historically MARGINALISED groups
- SC (Scheduled Castes) and ST (Scheduled Tribes) have reserved constituencies
- Only SC/ST candidates can contest reserved seats (but ALL voters in that constituency vote)
- Reservation is PROPORTIONAL to population
- Was originally for 10 years (1950); extended every 10 years; currently until 2030
5. Universal Adult Franchise
The Revolutionary Decision
- India adopted UNIVERSAL ADULT FRANCHISE from independence
- Every citizen 18+ (originally 21, lowered to 18 by 61st Amendment, 1989) can vote
- This was RADICAL: even 'old democracies' took centuries — UK (women couldn't vote until 1928), USA (African Americans effectively disenfranchised until the 1960s)
- India gave EVERY adult the vote at the MOMENT of independence — a profound statement of faith in its citizens
6. The Election Commission of India (ECI)
Constitutional Body (Article 324)
- INDEPENDENT body responsible for conducting FREE AND FAIR elections
- Chief Election Commissioner + Election Commissioners (currently 3 members)
- Powers:
- Delimitation of constituencies
- Preparing electoral rolls
- Schedule elections
- Recognise political parties, allot symbols
- Enforce the Model Code of Conduct (MCC)
- Can countermand elections if not free/fair
Model Code of Conduct (MCC)
- Set of rules for parties/candidates during elections
- Prohibits: hate speech, religious appeal for votes, bribing voters, using government machinery for campaigning
- Comes into force IMMEDIATELY upon election announcement
- No force of law — but respected because ECI can use administrative powers
7. Electoral Reforms
- Lowered voting age from 21 → 18 (61st Amendment, 1989)
- EVMs (Electronic Voting Machines) — introduced in 1990s, now universal
- VVPAT (Voter Verified Paper Audit Trail) — paper slip for verification, introduced 2013
- NOTA (None of the Above) — voter can reject all candidates, 2013
- Ceiling on election expenditure by candidates
- Criminalisation of politics: Supreme Court directions on disclosure of criminal records
- Proposal (not yet passed): simultaneous elections (One Nation, One Election)
- Proposal: state funding of elections
8. Exam Focus
- FPTP vs PR — what, why India chose FPTP
- Universal adult franchise — radical nature at independence
- Election Commission — independence, powers, MCC
- Reservation of constituencies for SC/ST
- Key electoral reforms (voting age 18, EVMs, NOTA, VVPAT)
9. Conclusion
India's electoral system is the ENGINE of its democracy:
- FPTP: Simple, stable, constituency-linked. Chosen deliberately.
- FRANCHISE: Universal from Day One — a radical act of democratic faith
- ECI: An independent constitutional body that makes elections FREE and FAIR
- REFORMS: EVMs, VVPAT, NOTA — democracy modernises
Every election, ~900 million Indians are eligible to vote. It is the LARGEST democratic exercise in human history — and it happens, repeatedly, peacefully. That is India's electoral miracle.
