Elections — RBSE Class 9 (Social Science · NCF)
Once every few years, the world's largest democracy does something extraordinary: hundreds of millions of Indians — rich and poor, from cities and remote villages — walk to a polling booth and press a button, and by that simple act peacefully decide who will govern them. Elections are how the abstract idea of "rule by the people" becomes real. This theme is about how they work, and what makes them fair.
1. Why do we need elections?
In a large democracy, people cannot all govern directly, so they choose representatives. Elections are the mechanism for this choice. Through elections, people can:
- select who will make laws and form the government;
- choose the policies and party they prefer; and
- hold rulers accountable — reward good performance or vote out those who failed.
Elections turn citizens' opinions into a peaceful transfer or renewal of power.
2. What makes an election democratic?
Simply holding an election is not enough. A democratic election must meet these conditions:
- Everyone should be able to choose — one person, one vote, one value (universal adult franchise).
- There should be something to choose from — parties and candidates offering real alternatives.
- Elections are held regularly, at fixed intervals.
- The candidate people prefer actually wins.
- Elections are conducted freely and fairly, so people can truly choose whom they wish.
3. How elections work in India
India holds general elections (for the Lok Sabha and state assemblies) in a series of clear steps:
- Constituencies: the country is divided into areas called constituencies; each elects one representative. Voters in a constituency elect their MP (Lok Sabha) or MLA (assembly).
- Voters' list (electoral roll): all eligible citizens (adults, 18+) are registered; each gets a voter card (EPIC).
- Nomination: candidates file nomination papers; each declares assets and background (transparency for voters).
- Election campaign: parties and candidates put forward their programme; there is a fixed campaign period and a Model Code of Conduct all must follow.
- Polling and voting: on polling day, voters cast a secret vote using an Electronic Voting Machine (EVM); an indelible ink mark prevents repeat voting.
- Counting: votes are counted and the candidate with the most votes in a constituency wins (the first-past-the-post system).
Reserved constituencies: some seats are reserved for Scheduled Castes (SC) and Scheduled Tribes (ST) so that these communities get fair representation; seats are also reserved for women in local bodies.
4. The Election Commission of India
Free and fair elections in India are conducted by an independent Election Commission of India (ECI). It:
- prepares and updates the voters' list;
- fixes the election schedule and supervises the whole process;
- enforces the Model Code of Conduct and can act against violations;
- controls the conduct of parties, candidates and even the government during elections.
Its independence is what allows it to hold even the ruling party to the rules.
5. Challenges to free and fair elections
Elections in India are largely free and fair, but challenges remain:
- Money power — wealthy candidates and parties can gain an unfair advantage.
- Muscle power / intimidation — threats or violence in some areas.
- Misuse of government machinery by the ruling party.
- Criminalisation of politics and lack of a level playing field for smaller parties.
Reforms — transparency, spending limits, voter awareness, technology (EVMs, VVPAT) — aim to keep elections clean.
6. Closing thought
Elections are democracy in action — the moment when power actually returns to the people. For an election to be truly democratic, it must offer every adult an equal vote, a real choice, held regularly and conducted freely and fairly — and India's process, run by an independent Election Commission with constituencies, voter lists, EVMs and a code of conduct, is built to deliver exactly that. The remaining challenges (money, muscle, unfair advantage) are reminders that a fair election is something a democracy must keep working to protect.
For the RBSE board (new NCF Class 9 SST), master why we need elections and what makes them democratic, the steps of the Indian electoral process, the role of the Election Commission, reserved constituencies, and the challenges to free and fair elections. This theme builds directly on Democracy.
