Our Government

1. What Is Government?

GOVERNMENT is a group of people who RUN a country, state, or city.

'Think of government as a TEAM that makes DECISIONS for everyone. Without government, there would be CHAOS — no rules, no roads, no schools, no hospitals!'

Why Do We Need a Government?

NeedHow Government Helps
Law and orderMakes and enforces rules (police, courts)
Roads and transportBuilds and maintains roads, railways, airports
EducationRuns schools and colleges
HealthcareRuns hospitals and clinics
DefenceProtects the country from enemies (army, navy, air force)
MoneyPrints currency and manages the economy
Public servicesProvides water, electricity, waste collection

2. Levels of Government

India has THREE levels of government.

Central Government (National):

  • Governs the ENTIRE country.
  • Based in NEW DELHI.
  • Head: Prime Minister.
  • Looks after: Defence, foreign affairs, railways, currency.
  • 'The Central Government makes laws for the WHOLE country. Matters like DEFENCE and FOREIGN AFFAIRS are handled ONLY by the Central Government.'

State Government:

  • Governs an INDIVIDUAL state (like Maharashtra, Karnataka, etc.).
  • Based in the STATE CAPITAL.
  • Head: Chief Minister.
  • Looks after: Police, agriculture, local transport, education, healthcare.
  • 'Each state has its OWN government for state-specific matters. For example, the Maharashtra Government decides on schools in Maharashtra.'

Local Government:

  • Governs a SMALL area — village, town, or city.
  • Head: Sarpanch (village), Mayor (city).
  • Looks after: Street lights, garbage collection, water supply, local roads.
  • 'Local government is CLOSEST to the people. If your street light is broken, you contact the LOCAL government, not the Prime Minister!'
LevelHeadLooks After
CentralPrime MinisterDefence, railways, foreign affairs
StateChief MinisterPolice, agriculture, education
LocalSarpanch / MayorStreet lights, garbage, water

3. The Three Branches of Government

Legislative (Makes Laws):

LevelNameMembers
NationalParliamentLok Sabha + Rajya Sabha
StateVidhan Sabha (Legislative Assembly)MLAs (Members of Legislative Assembly)

Executive (Implements Laws):

  • Central: President, Prime Minister, Council of Ministers.
  • State: Governor, Chief Minister, Council of Ministers.
  • Local: Municipal Corporation / Panchayat.

Judiciary (Interprets Laws):

LevelCourt
HighestSupreme Court of India (New Delhi)
StateHigh Court
DistrictDistrict Court

'THE SUPREME COURT is the highest court in India. Its decisions are FINAL and binding on all other courts.'


4. Elections

ELECTIONS are how citizens choose their REPRESENTATIVES.

'In a DEMOCRACY, the government is "OF THE PEOPLE, BY THE PEOPLE, FOR THE PEOPLE." Elections are how we make this happen!'

Key Facts about Elections:

FactDetail
Who can vote?Every Indian citizen aged 18+
How often?Every 5 years (general elections)
What do we vote for?Members of Parliament (MPs) and Members of Legislative Assembly (MLAs)
Who conducts elections?Election Commission of India
Symbol of Election CommissionThe THUMB IMPRESSION (finger with ink mark)

Voting Process:

  1. You must be REGISTERED as a voter.
  2. On election day, go to your POLLING BOOTH.
  3. Show your VOTER ID card.
  4. Press the button next to your preferred candidate's SYMBOL on the EVM (Electronic Voting Machine).
  5. Your finger is marked with INDELIBLE INK — so you cannot vote twice!

'Voting is both a RIGHT and a RESPONSIBILITY. When you turn 18, MAKE SURE you vote!'


5. Rights and Responsibilities

Fundamental Rights (What We Are Entitled To):

RightWhat It Means
Right to EqualityAll are equal before the law
Right to FreedomFreedom of speech, movement, profession
Right against ExploitationNo forced labour or child labour
Right to Freedom of ReligionPractice ANY religion
Cultural and Educational RightsPreserve language and culture
Right to Constitutional RemediesCan go to court if rights are violated

Responsibilities (What We Should Do):

ResponsibilityWhy It Matters
Follow lawsKeeps society orderly and safe
Pay taxesFunds public services
Vote in electionsChoose good leaders
Keep the environment cleanHealthy surroundings for everyone
Respect othersPeaceful coexistence
Help in emergenciesCommunity support
Protect public propertySchools, hospitals, parks are FOR everyone

'RIGHTS and RESPONSIBILITIES go HAND in HAND. You have the right to FREEDOM — but you also have the RESPONSIBILITY not to harm others.'


6. Common Mistakes

  1. Thinking the President is the head of the government: 'The PRESIDENT is the HEAD OF STATE (ceremonial). The PRIME MINISTER is the HEAD OF GOVERNMENT (actual decisions).'
  2. Confusing the roles of different government levels: 'Your LOCAL council handles garbage collection. The CENTRAL government handles defence. They are DIFFERENT!'
  3. Believing only adults can contribute: 'Children CAN contribute to society — by following rules, keeping the environment clean, and respecting others. Good citizenship starts YOUNG!'
  4. Thinking voting is optional: 'Voting is a RIGHT, but it is also a RESPONSIBILITY. If you don't vote, you are letting OTHERS make decisions for you.'

7. Key Facts to Remember

  • 'India is a DEMOCRACY — the government is elected by the people.'
  • 'Government works at THREE levels: Central, State, and Local.'
  • 'Government has THREE branches: Legislative (makes laws), Executive (implements laws), Judiciary (interprets laws).'
  • 'Every citizen aged 18+ can VOTE in elections.'
  • 'We have FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS and also RESPONSIBILITIES as citizens.'
  • 'The SUPREME COURT is the highest court in India.'

8. Self-Test

Q1: What is government? Why do we need it?

Q2: Name the three levels of government in India.

Q3: Who is the head of the Central Government? Who is the head of a State Government?

Q4: What are the three branches of government? What does each do?

Q5: At what age can Indian citizens vote?

Q6: Who conducts elections in India?

Q7: Name two Fundamental Rights of Indian citizens.

Q8: Name two responsibilities of a good citizen.

Answers:

A1: Government is a group of people who run a country/state/city. We need it for law and order, infrastructure, education, healthcare, and public services. A2: Central Government (national), State Government, and Local Government (village/town/city). A3: Central: Prime Minister. State: Chief Minister. A4: Legislative (makes laws), Executive (implements laws), Judiciary (interprets laws/judges). A5: 18 years old. A6: The Election Commission of India. A7: Right to Equality, Right to Freedom, Right to Freedom of Religion, etc. (any two). A8: Follow laws, vote in elections, keep the environment clean, pay taxes, respect others (any two).

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