Lok Sabha (House of the People)

TABLE OF CONTENTS

  1. Introduction
  2. Historical Background
  3. Constitutional Provisions
  4. Composition of Lok Sabha
  5. Reservation of Seats
  6. Qualifications for Membership
  7. Disqualifications
  8. Duration of Lok Sabha
  9. Sessions of Lok Sabha
  10. Presiding Officers (Speaker & Deputy Speaker)
  11. Powers and Functions of Lok Sabha
  12. Special Powers of Lok Sabha
  13. Legislative Procedure (Relation with Rajya Sabha)
  14. Officers and Secretarial Support
  15. Limitations on Lok Sabha
  16. Key Committees of Lok Sabha
  17. Important Parliamentary Terms
  18. Summary

1. Introduction

Lok Sabha is the lower house of the Indian Parliament, but in practice it is the more powerful house, representing the people of India directly.

  • It embodies popular sovereignty.
  • Responsible government in India derives its legitimacy from Lok Sabha.
  • The Council of Ministers is collectively responsible to Lok Sabha (Article 75).

2. Historical Background

  • 1919 Government of India Act: Introduced bicameralism at central level (Legislative Assembly + Council of State).
  • 1935 Government of India Act: Strengthened central legislature.
  • 1947: Constituent Assembly adopted parliamentary form of government.
  • 1952: First Lok Sabha constituted after first general elections.

3. Constitutional Provisions

Lok Sabha is governed primarily by Articles:

  • Art. 79โ€“122 (Parliament structure, privileges, officers)
  • Art. 327โ€“329 (Elections)
  • Art. 81โ€“84 (Composition & qualifications)
  • Art. 93โ€“97 (Speaker, Deputy Speaker, salaries)
  • Art. 100โ€“108 (Voting, joint sittings)
  • Art. 109โ€“111 (Money Bills, Presidentโ€™s assent)

4. Composition of Lok Sabha

Article 81: Composition of the House of the People

Maximum strength (original): 552 members

  • 530: States
  • 20: Union Territories
  • 2: Anglo-Indian members (nominated by President) โ€” abolished by 104th Amendment, 2020

Current Structure

  • 543 elected seats
    • 530 from States
    • 13 from Union Territories

Method of election

  • Direct elections
  • By first-past-the-post system (FPTP)
  • Single-member constituencies

Delimitation

  • Based on population; frozen till 2026 by 84th and 87th Amendments.

5. Reservation of Seats

Article 330 & 332

  • Seats reserved for SCs and STs in proportion to population.
  • Determined by Delimitation Commission.

Article 331 (Abolished)

  • President could nominate Anglo-Indian members (ended in 2020).

6. Qualifications for Membership (Article 84)

A person must:

  1. Be an Indian citizen
  2. Be 25 years or older
  3. Be a registered voter in India
  4. Meet any additional qualifications set by Parliament (e.g., anti-defection, office of profit).

7. Disqualifications (Article 102)

A member can be disqualified for:

  • Holding an office of profit
  • Unsound mind declared by court
  • Undischarged insolvent
  • Not a citizen of India / acquired foreign citizenship
  • Disqualified under Representation of People Act (RPA) 1951
    • Corrupt practices
    • Criminal conviction (2+ years)
    • Failure to declare election expenses
    • Defection under Tenth Schedule

8. Duration of Lok Sabha (Article 83)

  • 5-year term from first sitting
  • Can be dissolved earlier by the President
  • During national emergency, Parliament can extend term by 1 year at a time
  • Must conduct elections within 6 months after Emergency ends.

9. Sessions of Lok Sabha

  • President summons Lok Sabha sessions (Article 85)
  • Must meet at least twice a year
  • Interval between two sessions cannot exceed 6 months

Important Sessions

  1. Budget Session (Febโ€“May)
  2. Monsoon Session (Julyโ€“Aug)
  3. Winter Session (Novโ€“Dec)

10. Presiding Officers of Lok Sabha


10.1 Speaker of Lok Sabha (Article 93)

Elected by members of Lok Sabha from among themselves.

Powers & Functions

  • Presides over meetings
  • Maintains order and decorum
  • Final interpreter of:
    • Constitution
    • Rules of Procedure
    • Conduct of Business
  • Decides whether a Bill is a Money Bill (Art. 110)
  • Can suspend disorderly members
  • Head of Parliamentary Committees
  • Votes only in case of a tie (casting vote)
  • Tenth Schedule โ€” decides disqualification under anti-defection law

10.2 Deputy Speaker (Article 93)

  • Elected by Lok Sabha members
  • Acts in absence of Speaker

10.3 Panel of Chairpersons

  • Appointed by Speaker
  • Preside when Speaker & Deputy Speaker absent

11. Powers and Functions of Lok Sabha

11.1 Legislative Powers

  • Equal power with Rajya Sabha in ordinary law-making
  • Money Bills originate only in Lok Sabha

11.2 Financial Powers

  • Budget presented in Lok Sabha
  • Money Bills must be passed by Lok Sabha
  • Rajya Sabha can only make recommendations
  • Control over public finances

11.3 Executive Control

Government is responsible to Lok Sabha.
Instruments of control include:

  • Question Hour
  • Zero Hour
  • Adjournment Motion
  • No-confidence Motion
  • Censure Motion
  • Calling Attention Motion
  • Cut motions in Budget

11.4 Electoral Functions

  • Elects Vice President (Electoral college with RS)
  • Participates in Presidential election (with states)

11.5 Judicial Functions

  • Impeachment of President
  • Removal of Supreme Court and High Court judges
  • Punish members for breach of privilege

12. Special Powers of Lok Sabha

  1. Money Bills
    • Lok Sabha has exclusive power to introduce and pass Money Bills.
  2. Control over Council of Ministers
    • Government must resign if Lok Sabha passes no-confidence motion.
  3. Joint Session
    • Speaker presides over joint sitting (Art. 108).
  4. Financial control
    • Demands for Grants are voted only in Lok Sabha.

13. Lok Sabha vs Rajya Sabha (Legislative Relation)

AreaLok SabhaRajya Sabha
Ordinary BillsEqual powersEqual
Money BillsDominantLimited role
BudgetFull controlDiscuss only
Govt responsibilityCollectively responsibleNot responsible
Joint sittingLarger strength dominatesSmaller role

14. Officers and Secretarial Support

Lok Sabha Secretariat

  • Provides administrative support
  • Non-partisan staff
  • Headed by Secretary-General (equivalent to Cabinet Secretary)

15. Limitations on Lok Sabha

  • Judicial review
  • Constitutional amendments require special majority
  • Federal nature โ€” Rajya Sabha important for states
  • Certain powers of President (ordinance, veto)
  • Money Bills cannot be used to amend Constitution (K.S. Puttaswamy case comment)

16. Key Committees of Lok Sabha

  • Public Accounts Committee (PAC) โ€” Chairman from Opposition
  • Estimates Committee
  • Committee on Public Undertakings
  • Committee on Privileges
  • Business Advisory Committee
  • Committee on Petitions
  • Committee on Absence of Members
  • Committee on Subordinate Legislation

17. Important Parliamentary Terms

  • Quorum โ€“ 10% of total membership
  • Whip โ€“ Party discipline enforcer
  • Point of Order โ€“ Member can challenge procedure
  • Division โ€“ Voting by recorded votes
  • Motion โ€“ Request for House to act

18. Summary

The Lok Sabha is the core of Indiaโ€™s parliamentary democracy.

  • It represents the people directly through 543 elected members.
  • Exercises superior financial powers, including exclusive authority over Money Bills and the annual budget.
  • The Council of Ministers is collectively responsible to Lok Sabhaโ€”giving it the power to make or break governments.
  • The Speaker plays a crucial constitutional role in maintaining order and interpreting rules.
  • Through legislative, financial, judicial, and executive control functions, Lok Sabha is the center of political authority in India.

This Post Has One Comment

  1. Chandramani Bag

    So helpful .

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