By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Define a political party and its three components
  • 2List the functions of political parties
  • 3Distinguish one-party, two-party and multi-party systems
  • 4Differentiate national and state parties
  • 5Explain the challenges to parties and reforms to address them
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Why this chapter matters
A high-certainty civics chapter. Functions of parties, party systems, and the challenges-and-reforms question appear almost every year and are easy to score with clear points.

Political Parties — RBSE Class 10 (Civics / Political Science)

Every time you hear about an election, you hear about parties. Why can't we just vote for good individuals and skip parties altogether? Because in a large democracy, parties are the machinery that organises choices, forms governments and holds them accountable. This chapter explains what parties do — and how to fix what's wrong with them.


1. What is a political party?

A political party is a group of people who come together to contest elections and hold power in government. Members agree on some policies and programmes for the society's collective good. A party has three components:

  1. The leaders — who contest elections and run government.
  2. The active members — who work for the party.
  3. The followers/supporters — who believe in its ideology and vote for it.

2. Functions of political parties

  • Contest elections — put up candidates.
  • Put forward policies and programmes — voters choose between them.
  • Make laws — parties in the legislature pass laws.
  • Form and run governments — the majority party/coalition forms the executive.
  • Play the role of Opposition — losing parties check the government and voice criticism.
  • Shape public opinion — raise and highlight issues.
  • Provide access — link citizens to government machinery and welfare schemes.

Why we need parties: without them, every candidate would be independent, no one could promise policy to the people, and no one would be responsible for how the country is run. Parties make representative democracy work.


3. Party systems

  • One-party system — only one party is allowed (e.g. China) — not democratic.
  • Two-party system — power usually alternates between two major parties (e.g. USA, UK).
  • Multi-party system — several parties compete; governments are often formed by alliances/coalitions (e.g. India). It looks messy but allows a variety of interests and regions to be represented.

India has a multi-party system, which suits its huge social and geographic diversity.


4. Parties in India

  • National parties — recognised in several states, meeting the Election Commission's criteria (e.g. share of votes/seats). Examples include the major all-India parties.
  • State (regional) parties — strong in particular states, reflecting regional aspirations. Their growth has made India's democracy more federal and inclusive, and given rise to coalition politics.

5. Challenges and reforms

Challenges parties face:

  1. Lack of internal democracy — power concentrated in a few leaders; ordinary members have little say.
  2. Dynastic succession — top posts controlled by one family.
  3. Money and muscle power — funding and criminalisation distort elections.
  4. No meaningful choice — parties sometimes offer little ideological difference.

Reforms to strengthen parties:

  • A law regulating parties' internal affairs (register members, hold organisational elections, maintain accounts).
  • Reservation for women in party tickets.
  • State funding of elections in kind (some support to candidates).
  • Citizen pressure, media and public opinion — and voters themselves demanding better.

6. Closing thought

Political parties are indispensable to democracy — they contest elections, form governments and give voters real choices — yet they suffer from weak internal democracy, dynasty and money power. Learn the functions, the three party systems, national vs state parties, and the challenges with reforms. In the RBSE board this chapter reliably gives functions and challenges/reforms questions worth 5–6 marks.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Political party
group that contests elections to hold power
Leaders + active members + followers.
Key functions
contest elections, form government, opposition, make laws, shape opinion
Make representative democracy work.
Party systems
one-party, two-party, multi-party
India = multi-party.
National vs state party
recognised across states vs strong in one/few states
By Election Commission criteria.
Challenges
no internal democracy, dynasty, money/muscle, no choice
Weaken parties.
Reforms
regulation law, women's tickets, state funding, citizen pressure
Strengthen parties.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Confusing party systems
One-party = only one allowed (not democratic); two-party = power alternates between two; multi-party = many compete (India).
WATCH OUT
Saying a multi-party system is bad
It looks messy but represents India's diversity; coalitions are a normal, inclusive feature.
WATCH OUT
Mixing national and state parties
National parties are recognised in many states; state (regional) parties are strong in particular states.
WATCH OUT
Listing only good functions
Include the Opposition role and access-to-government among functions.
WATCH OUT
Vague reforms
Give concrete reforms: internal-democracy law, women's tickets, state funding, citizen/media pressure.

NCERT exercises (with solutions)

Every NCERT exercise from this chapter — what it covers and how many questions to expect.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Definition
What is a political party?
Show solution
A group of people who come together to contest elections and hold power in government, agreeing on shared policies. ✦ Answer: a group that contests elections to hold power.
Q2EASY· Components
Name the three components of a political party.
Show solution
The leaders, the active members, and the followers/supporters. ✦ Answer: leaders, active members, followers.
Q3EASY· System
What type of party system does India have?
Show solution
A multi-party system. ✦ Answer: multi-party system.
Q4MEDIUM· Functions
State any four functions of political parties.
Show solution
Step 1 — Contest elections and put forward policies/programmes. Step 2 — Make laws, form and run the government (or act as Opposition). ✦ Answer: contest elections, offer policies, make laws, form government/opposition.
Q5MEDIUM· Need
Why do we need political parties?
Show solution
Step 1 — In a large democracy, parties organise candidates and offer policy choices to voters. Step 2 — They form accountable governments and provide an Opposition. ✦ Answer: they make representative democracy workable and accountable.
Q6MEDIUM· Systems
Differentiate a two-party and a multi-party system.
Show solution
Step 1 — Two-party: power usually alternates between two major parties (USA, UK). Step 2 — Multi-party: several parties compete, often forming coalitions (India). ✦ Answer: two main parties vs many parties with coalitions.
Q7HARD· Challenges
Explain three major challenges faced by political parties.
Show solution
Step 1 — Lack of internal democracy — power with a few leaders. Step 2 — Dynastic succession — top posts kept within families. Step 3 — Money and muscle power distorting elections; and often little real choice for voters. ✦ Answer: no internal democracy, dynasty, and money/muscle power.
Q8HARD· Reforms
Suggest reforms to strengthen political parties.
Show solution
Step 1 — A law to regulate internal affairs (membership, organisational elections, accounts). Step 2 — Reservation of tickets for women. Step 3 — State funding of elections and pressure from citizens and media. ✦ Answer: regulation law, women's tickets, state funding, citizen/media pressure.
Q9MEDIUM· Parties
How is a national party different from a state party?
Show solution
Step 1 — A national party is recognised in several states as per Election Commission criteria. Step 2 — A state (regional) party is strong mainly within a particular state. ✦ Answer: national = multi-state recognition; state = strong in one/few states.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Party = group contesting elections to hold power (leaders, members, followers).
  • Functions: contest elections, offer policies, make laws, form govt/opposition, shape opinion.
  • Systems: one-party (undemocratic), two-party, multi-party (India).
  • National parties recognised across states; state parties strong regionally.
  • Challenges: no internal democracy, dynasty, money/muscle, no real choice.
  • Reforms: regulation law, women's tickets, state funding, citizen pressure.
  • Parties make representative democracy work.

Rajasthan (RBSE) marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5–6 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / very short11–2Definition, components, systems
Short answer21Functions, need for parties, party types
Long answer31Challenges or reforms
Prep strategy
  • Memorise the functions and the three party systems
  • Learn national vs state party distinction
  • Prepare the challenges-and-reforms long answer
  • Note why parties are necessary for democracy

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Understanding elections

Explains how parties shape the choices voters face.

Civic participation

Shows how citizens can pressure parties to reform.

Governance

Clarifies how governments and the Opposition are formed.

Policy debate

Parties frame the public issues of the day.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. List functions as clear bullet points.
  2. Distinguish the three party systems with examples.
  3. Separate challenges from reforms in long answers.
  4. State national vs state party criteria.
  5. Explain why parties are necessary, not optional.

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Anti-defection law and party discipline.
  • Electoral bonds and party finance transparency.
  • Cadre-based vs mass-based parties.
  • Coalition dynamics and government stability.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

RBSE Class 10 Board (BSER Ajmer)High — functions and challenges/reforms every year
NTSE / state scholarshipMedium — polity MCQs
UPSC/State PSC FoundationHigh — parties and party systems are core polity
Social Science OlympiadMedium — political science

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Yes — RBSE (BSER, Ajmer) prescribes the NCERT Social Science textbooks, so Civics chapters match the national syllabus while RBSE sets its own exam pattern.

They organise candidates, offer policy choices, form accountable governments and provide an Opposition — without them representative democracy could not function.

A multi-party system, suited to its vast diversity, in which governments are often formed by alliances or coalitions.

Lack of internal democracy, dynastic succession, the growing role of money and muscle power, and sometimes offering voters little real choice.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 1 July 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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