Dr. Ram Prasath Manohar IAS

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Dr. Ram

Study Materials

General Studies - Polity

State Legislature

Constitutional Provisions

  • Covered under Part VI (Articles 168–212) of the Constitution.
  • Article 168 → Constitution of State Legislature.

State Legislature consists of:

  • Governor
  • Legislative Assembly (Vidhan Sabha)
  • Legislative Council (Vidhan Parishad) – in some states

Structure of State Legislature

A. Unicameral System

  • Only the Legislative Assembly
  • The majority of states follow this model

B. Bicameral System

  • Legislative Assembly (Lower House)
  • Legislative Council (Upper House)

Creation/abolition of Legislative Council:

  • Article 169
  • Parliament can create/abolish a State Assembly resolution (special majority)

Composition

Legislative Assembly (Vidhan Sabha)

  • Directly elected
  • Maximum: 500 members
  • Minimum: 60 (exceptions: smaller states)
  • Tenure: 5 years (unless dissolved earlier)

Minimum age: 25 years

Legislative Council (Vidhan Parishad)

  • Permanent body
  • 1/3 members retire every 2 years
  • Maximum strength: 1/3 of the Assembly
  • Minimum: 40 members

Minimum age: 30 years

Composition:

  • 1/3 elected by local bodies
  • 1/12 by graduates
  • 1/12 by teachers
  • 1/3 by Assembly members
  • Remaining nominated by the Governor (experts in literature, science, art, and social service)

Qualifications (Article 173)

A person must:

  • Be a citizen of India
  • Take an oath before an authorised person
  • Age:
    • 25 years (Assembly)
    • 30 years (Council)
  • Possess qualifications prescribed by Parliament

Under Representation of the People Act, 1951:

  • Must be an elector in the concerned state
  • SC/ST candidate required for reserved seats
  • For Council nomination → Resident of the state

Disqualifications

A. Constitutional (Article 191)

A person is disqualified if:

  • Holds office of profit
  • Unsound mind (declared by the court)
  • Undischarged insolvent
  • a Not a citizen of India
  • Disqualified under parliamentary law

Decision:

  • Governor decides (Article 192)
  • Must act on the advice of the Election Commission

B. Disqualification on Ground of Defectiothe n

  • Under Tenth Schedule of the Constitution of India
  • Decision:
    • Speaker (Assembly)
    • Chairman (Council)
  • Subject to judicial review (SC 1992)

C. Disqualification under RPA 1951

  • Conviction (2+ years imprisonment)
  • Corrupt electoral practices
  • Failure to file election expenses
  • Government contract interest
  • Promoting enmity, bribery
  • Social offences (untouchability, dowry, sati)

Oath or Affirmation

  • Before a Governor or person appointed
  • Cannot vote or participate without oath
  • Penalty: ₹500 per day for sitting without oath

Vacation of Seats (Article 190)

Seat becomes vacant if:

1. Double Membership

  • a Cannot be member of both Houses simultaneously

2. Disqualification

  • If subject to any disqualification

3. Resignation

  • To Speaker (Assembly) / Chairman (Council)
  • Effective upon acceptance

4. Absence

  • 60 days without permission

5. Other Cases

  • Election declared void
  • The expulsion by the House
  • Elected President/Vice-President
  • Appointed Governor

Powers & Functions

A. Legislative Powers

  • State List subjects
  • Concurrent List (subject to Article 254)

B. Financial Powers

  • Money Bill introduced only in Assembly
  • A Council has an advisory role (14-day limit)

C. Executive Control

  • The Council of Ministers is collectively responsible to the Assembly

D. Constitutional Amendment

  • Ratification role (where required)

Privileges (Article 194)

  • Freedom of speech in the House
  • Immunity from court proceedings
  • Publication privilege

Comparison: Assembly vs Council

Feature

Assembly

Council

Nature

Temporary

Permanent

Dissolution

Yes

No

Minimum Age

25

30

Money Bill Power

Dominant

Advisory

Executive Responsibility

Yes

No

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