Council of Ministers in India

Table of Contents

  1. Constitutional Basis
  2. Composition of the Council of Ministers
  3. Categories of Ministers
  4. Appointment
  5. Oath & Tenure
  6. Collective and Individual Responsibility
  7. Powers and Functions
  8. Cabinet vs Council of Ministers
  9. Articles Related to Council of Ministers
  10. Role in Parliamentary System
  11. Limitations on Powers
  12. Summary

1. Constitutional Basis

  • Article 74(1) – There shall be a Council of Ministers (CoM) with the Prime Minister at the head to aid and advise the President.
  • Article 75 – Appointment, tenure, responsibility, salaries.
  • Based on the Westminster Parliamentary System.
  • The real executive authority rests with the Prime Minister + Council of Ministers.

2. Composition of the Council of Ministers

The CoM consists of all ministers collectively headed by the Prime Minister.

  • The maximum number → 15% of total seats in Lok Sabha (91st Constitutional Amendment Act, 2003).
  • Includes:
    • Cabinet Ministers
    • Ministers of State
    • Deputy Ministers

3. Categories of Ministers

A. Cabinet Ministers

  • Top decision-makers.
  • Handle important ministries: Home, Defence, Finance, External Affairs, Education, etc.
  • Part of Cabinet meetings.

B. Ministers of State (Independent Charge)

  • Not under any Cabinet Minister.
  • Head their own ministries.
  • May attend Cabinet meetings if invited.

C. Ministers of State

  • Assist Cabinet Ministers.
  • May be assigned specific subjects.

D. Deputy Ministers

  • Assist Ministers of State and Cabinet Ministers.
  • Rarely appointed nowadays.

E. Parliamentary Secretaries (not constitutionally recognized)

  • Assist Ministers; mostly ceremonial.
  • Many states avoid this due to office-of-profit restrictions.

4. Appointment

  • President appoints ministers on the advice of the Prime Minister (Art. 75(1)).
  • PM decides:
    • Who becomes a minister
    • Allocation of portfolios
    • Reshuffling
    • Dismissal recommendation

5. Oath & Tenure

Oath (Art. 75)

Administered by the President:

  • Faith in Constitution
  • Secrecy of office
  • Faithful discharge of duties

Tenure

  • Ministers hold office during the pleasure of the President,
  • But actually at the pleasure of the Prime Minister.
  • CoM stays as long as it enjoys majority support in Lok Sabha.

6. Collective and Individual Responsibility

Collective Responsibility (Art. 75(3))

  • The Council of Ministers is collectively responsible to Lok Sabha.
  • If Lok Sabha passes a no-confidence motion, the entire ministry must resign.

Individual Responsibility

  • Ministers are individually accountable to:
    • PM
    • Parliament
  • PM can ask any minister to resign.

7. Powers and Functions

A. Executive Powers

  • Real executive authority of the Union.
  • Implements decisions of the Central Government.
  • Supervises administration through ministries.
  • Advises the President on major appointments:
    • Governors
    • CEC & Election Commissioners
    • UPSC Chairman & Members
    • Ambassadors
    • High-level officials

B. Legislative Powers

  • Initiates most legislation in Parliament.
  • Controls the legislative agenda.
  • Responsible for:
    • Ordinary Bills
    • Money Bills
    • Budget
  • Ministers participate in Parliament debates.

C. Financial Powers

  • Controls national finances.
  • Prepares the Union Budget.
  • Responsible for passing money bills and financial bills.

D. Policy-Making Powers

  • Formulates domestic and foreign policies.
  • Coordinates inter-ministerial work.
  • Makes decisions on national security, economy, welfare schemes, etc.

E. Emergency Powers

  • Plays a crucial role in:
    • National Emergency (Art. 352)
    • President’s Rule (Art. 356)
    • Financial Emergency (Art. 360)
  • Cabinet’s written advice is needed for National Emergency.

8. Cabinet vs Council of Ministers

FeatureCabinetCouncil of Ministers
SizeSmaller (20–30)Larger (up to 15% of LS strength)
RoleReal decision-making bodyAssists Cabinet; not all take decisions
MeetingsFrequentRare
PowerHighestAdvisory
Constitutional MentionNot mentionedMentioned in Article 74

Cabinet is the core of the executive;
CoM is the broader political body.


9. Articles Related to CoM

ArticleTheme
74(1)CoM with PM to aid and advise President
74(2)Advice to President cannot be inquired by courts
75(1)Appointment of PM & ministers
75(2)Tenure – pleasure of President
75(3)Collective responsibility
75(4)Oath of ministers
75(5)Minister must be MP within 6 months
77Conduct of business of Union
352National Emergency – written advice from Cabinet

10. Role in Parliamentary System

  • Backbone of parliamentary democracy.
  • Ensures government functions smoothly.
  • Maintains majority support in Lok Sabha.
  • Bridges administration and legislature.
  • Acts as the real executive, unlike the President (nominal executive).

11. Limitations on Powers

  • Must retain majority in Lok Sabha.
  • Bound by the Constitution.
  • Judicial review applies to their actions.
  • Federal structure limits unilateral decision-making.
  • Coalition governments may reduce effectiveness.

12. Summary

The Council of Ministers is the real executive authority in India, headed by the Prime Minister.
It is responsible for executive decisions, policy-making, administration, drafting legislation, and maintaining majority support in Lok Sabha.
The Cabinet is the most powerful part of the Council, functioning as the high-level decision-making body.

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