Dr. Ram Prasath Manohar IAS

Aspire

Dr. Ram

Study Materials

General Studies - Polity

Parliamentary Form of Government

Parliamentary Form of Government

1. Meaning

A parliamentary system is a democratic structure where:

  • The party with the majority in the legislature forms the government.
  • The executive (PM + Ministers) comes from the legislature and remains answerable to it.
  • India follows the British model.

2. Why Is It Called “Parliamentary”?

Because Parliament controls the Executive through confidence, questions, debates, motions, and committees.

3. Core Features

  1. Nominal & Real Executive
  • President → nominal (de jure).
  • PM → real (de facto).
  1. Executive from the Legislature
  • PM and Ministers are MPs.
  • Dual membership ensures linkage.
  1. Collective Responsibility
  • The entire Cabinet is responsible to the Lok Sabha.
  1. Prime Ministerial Leadership
  • PM is the pivot of policy and administration.
  1. Majority Party Rule
  • Leader of the majority becomes PM.
  1. No Fixed Tenure
  • The government survives only while it enjoys Lok Sabha confidence.
  1. Secret Cabinet Meetings
  • Ensures frank discussion.
  1. Bicameral Legislature
  • Lok Sabha + Rajya Sabha.
  1. Political Homogeneity
  • Ministers usually share the same ideology (coalition → common agenda).

4. Constitutional Provisions

Article

Level

Provision

74

Union

CoM to aid & advise the President

75

Union

Appointment; CoM is responsible to the Lok Sabha

163

State

CoM aids & advises the Governor

164

State

Appointment; CoM is responsible to the Assembly

5.Advantages

  1. Executive–Legislature Coordination
    Smooth lawmaking, quicker implementation.
  2. Responsible Government
    Questions, debates, and motions ensure accountability.
  3. Prevents Dictatorship
    Power is divided among a team, not one individual.
  4. Broad Representation
    Ministers from various regions/castes/communities.

6. Disadvantages

  1. No Real Separation of Powers
    A majority government can dominate Parliament.
  1. Instability
    Coalitions may collapse; frequent elections.
  1. Weak Lawmaking Quality
    MPs aspire to become ministers → less policy expertise.
  1. Bureaucratic Influence
    Civil servants often shape decisions more than ministers.
  1. Slow Decision-Making
    Political calculations delay long-term reforms.

7. Parliamentary System vs Presidential System

Feature

Parliamentary

Presidential

Head of State

President (ceremonial)

President (executive)

Head of Govt

PM

President

Executive-Legislature Relation

Fused

Separated

Responsibility

Collective to the legislature

Independent

Tenure

Not fixed

Fixed

Removal

No-confidence

Impeachment

Stability

Less

More

Decision-making

Collective

Independent

A parliamentary system blends accountability with flexibility, making it suitable for diverse, democratic, and coalition-driven societies like India.

wpChatIcon
wpChatIcon
Scroll to Top