Class 9 Civics - Chapter 3 Notes and Q&A

πŸ“˜ Chapter 3 – Electoral Politics

Subject: Civics (Political Science) | Class: 9 CBSE

Textbook: Democratic Politics – I

✍️ DETAILED NOTES

πŸ”Ή 3.1 Why Elections?

  • In a democracy, people cannot rule directly in large communities.
  • Elections are essential to select representatives who will make decisions on behalf of the people.
  • Elections give people a mechanism to choose or change their representatives and governments.
  • Example: 1987 Haryana Elections – Devi Lal’s party (Lok Dal) won due to public dissatisfaction with the ruling party and his promise to waive loans of small farmers.

πŸ”Ή 3.2 What Makes an Election Democratic?

  • Equal participation – one vote per person with equal value.
  • Real choice – multiple parties and candidates must be free to contest.
  • Regular elections – held every 5 years.
  • People’s preference wins – candidate with most votes wins.
  • Free and fair conduct – no fraud or coercion.

πŸ”Ή 3.3 Political Competition

Merits:

  • Holds parties accountable.
  • Reflects people’s preferences.

Demerits:

  • Leads to dirty politics, accusations, and violence.
  • Discourages good candidates.

πŸ”Ή 3.4 Our System of Elections

  • Lok Sabha elections: 543 constituencies.
  • Vidhan Sabha (State): MLAs elected from assembly constituencies.
  • Each constituency = 1 representative = 1 seat.

πŸ”Ή Reserved Constituencies

Certain constituencies are reserved for SCs and STs to ensure their representation. This system exists in Parliament and local bodies.

πŸ”Ή Voters’ List (Electoral Roll)

  • Updated list of all eligible voters (18+).
  • Voter ID (EPIC) issued but not compulsory.
  • Universal Adult Franchise: Every adult has the right to vote.

πŸ”Ή Nomination of Candidates

  • Any citizen aged 25+ can contest elections.
  • Must submit a nomination form and security deposit.
  • Must disclose criminal records, assets, liabilities, and educational qualifications.

πŸ”Ή Election Campaign

  • Duration: Two weeks before polling.
  • Laws and Model Code of Conduct:
    • No bribery or threats.
    • No religious/caste appeals.
    • No use of government resources.

πŸ”Ή Polling and Counting of Votes

  • Voters go to polling booths.
  • Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs) are used.
  • Votes are counted and results declared.

πŸ”Ή Role of Election Commission (EC)

  • Independent and powerful body.
  • Appointed by President but works independently.
  • Enforces Model Code of Conduct, transfers officials, and orders repolls.

πŸ”Ή Popular Participation

  • Higher voter turnout in India than many developed countries.
  • Poor and underprivileged vote more than the rich.

πŸ”Ή Acceptance of Election Outcome

  • Ruling parties often lose elections.
  • Defeated parties accept results – sign of a healthy democracy.

πŸ”Ή Challenges to Free and Fair Elections

  • Money power, criminal candidates, dynastic politics.
  • Parties offering similar promises reduce real choice.

πŸ“š EXERCISE QUESTIONS & ANSWERS

Q1: Which of the following statements about the reasons for conducting elections are false?
Answer: Statement (c) is false – "Elections enable people to evaluate the performance of the judiciary."
Q2: Which of these is not a good reason to say that Indian elections are democratic?
Answer: (a) India has the largest number of voters in the world – This is not a reason for calling elections democratic.
Q3: Match the following:
a β†’ iv
b β†’ i
c β†’ ii
d β†’ iii
Q4: List all election-related activities in a time sequence.
1. Making of voters’ list
2. Announcing election schedule
3. Filing nominations
4. Releasing election manifestos
5. Election campaign
6. Casting of votes
7. Ordering of re-poll (if needed)
8. Counting of votes
9. Declaration of election results
Q5: What should Surekha focus on in these stages?
a. Election campaign: Monitor expenses, fairness, no hate speech or bribery.
b. Polling day: Security, proper voter identification, no bogus voting.
c. Counting day: Transparent counting, presence of party agents.
Q6: Should there be reservations in the US Congress?
Answer: Yes, for Blacks and Hispanics who are underrepresented in comparison to their population.
Q7: Can we draw these conclusions?
a. ❌ False – EC has enormous powers.
b. βœ… True – Poor and disadvantaged participate more.
c. ❌ False – Ruling parties often lose.
d. βœ… True – More reforms are still needed.
Q8: Chinappa and Satbir barred from contesting. Is this against democracy?
Answer: No. Criminals being barred maintains the integrity of elections and democracy.
Q9: Suggest reforms for each case:
a. Nigeria – Independent election body, EVMs.
b. Fiji – Ban hate campaigns, ensure voter safety.
c. USA – Uniform voting laws in all states.
Q10: Identify problems and solutions:
a. Minister's promise – Violation of Model Code.
b. Media bias – Equal coverage must be ensured.
c. Fake voters – Conduct voter list verification.
d. Violence – Ensure security and punish offenders.
Q11: Ramesh’s misconceptions corrected:
a. ❌ Women vote independently.
b. ❌ Elections must have competition for choice.
c. ❌ No education bar in democracy. All citizens can contest.
Scroll to Top
0

Subtotal