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29 January 2026

Centre Acts With Full Sensitivity: Murmu | No Notice To 88% T.N. Voters | NHRC Flags Disability recheck Issues | India The Functional Comes First | New Logic Of The Chinese Economy | Mature And Pragmatic | Abysmal Failure | Urban Politics Shape Better Cities | ListenTto Nature’s Silent Workers | UGC Rules Force a Needed Reckoning | Baramati Tragedy, Sparks Churn

 CENTRE ACTS WITH FULL SENSITIVITY: MURMU

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News
  • Droupadi Murmu addressed a joint sitting of Parliament at the beginning of the Budget Session.
  • The address highlighted the Union government’s commitment to social justice, national security, swadeshi, and Viksit Bharat by 2047.
  • Emphasis was placed on unity beyond ideological differences, invoking national leaders across the political spectrum.
  • The speech came amid debates on UGC equity regulations, cross-border terrorism, and India– EU Free Trade Agreement negotiations.

Key Points

  • Viksit Bharat 2047: Government accelerating reforms (“reform express”) to transform India into a developed nation by the centenary of Independence.
  • Social Justice & Inclusion:
    • Social security coverage expanded from 25 crore (2014) to 95 crore beneficiaries.
    • Focus on Dalits, Backward Classes, tribals, and marginalised communities.
  • Constitutional Values:
    • Reiteration of equality and social justice as core constitutional principles, inspired by R. Ambedkar.
  • National Security:
    • Reference to Operation Sindoor, projecting India’s policy of decisive yet responsible use of force against terrorism.
  • Decolonisation of Mindset:
    • Critique of colonial-era policies associated with Thomas Macaulay, highlighting efforts to overcome historical inferiority complexes.
  • Cultural Civilisational Narrative:
    • 75 years of reconstruction of Somnath Temple; linked to cultural resilience and civilisational continuity.
  • Economic Diplomacy:
    • India–EU FTA expected to boost manufacturing, services, exports, and employment.

Static Linkages

  • Preamble’s commitment to Justice (social, economic, political) and Equality
  • Directive Principles promoting welfare state and reduction of inequalities
  • Fundamental Rights ensuring non-discrimination and equal opportunity
  • National security doctrine of strategic restraint with deterrence
  • Post-Independence reconstruction of cultural heritage sites
  • Trade liberalisation as a tool for export-led growth  
  • Social security as part of inclusive development model

Critical Analysis

  • Positive Dimensions
    • Reinforces constitutional nationalism over partisan politics.
    • Expansion of social security aligns with inclusive growth.
    • Clear signalling of zero tolerance towards terrorism enhances deterrence.
    • India–EU FTA supports Make in India and global value chain integration.
  • Concerns & Challenges
    • Social security expansion faces issues of quality, fiscal sustainability, and last-mile delivery.
    • UGC equity regulations raise concerns on institutional autonomy and federal balance.
    • Cultural-civilisational narrative risks politicisation of heritage if not handled inclusively.
    • FTAs may expose MSMEs and agriculture to import competition without adequate safeguards.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen outcome-based monitoring of social security schemes.
  • Ensure consultative federalism in higher education reforms.
  • Balance security doctrine with international law and diplomatic engagement.
  • Complement FTAs with domestic competitiveness reforms (skills, logistics, MSME support).
  • Promote cultural heritage through inclusive, non- exclusionary frameworks.
  • Anchor Viksit Bharat goals in human development indicators, not just GDP growth.

NO NOTICE TO 88% T.N. VOTERS

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls conducted in Tamil Nadu.
  • Ruling party leaders alleged mass exclusion of voters due to “logical discrepancies” and mapping errors.
  • Petition filed before the Supreme Court seeking urgent hearing.
  • Supreme Court agreed to hear the matter with the Election Commission present.
  • Objections-and-claims phase nearing closure, raising risk of irreversible voter deletion.

Key Facts / Data

  • 1.7 crore voters flagged for “logical discrepancies”.
  • 32.19 lakh notices not generated/printed.  Only 18.25 lakh notices formally served.
  • About 1.21 crore voters (~88%) received no notice.
  • Grounds for exclusion: data mismatch, address mapping, booth rationalisation.
  • Petition sought extension of safeguards earlier applied in West Bengal SIR case.

Static Linkages

  • Universal Adult Franchise under Article 326.  
  • Free and fair elections as part of Basic Structure Doctrine.
  • Principles of Natural Justice – right to notice and hearing.
  • Judicial review over constitutional authorities.
  • Independence and accountability of constitutional bodies.
  • Distinction between electoral roll accuracy and voter disenfranchisement.

Critical Analysis

  • Issues
    • Mass exclusion without notice violates due process.
    • Digitisation increases risk of systemic errors.
    • Short objection window disadvantages migrants, elderly, urban poor.
    • Perceived arbitrariness undermines trust in electoral machinery.
  • Institutional Concerns
    • Accuracy vs inclusiveness dilemma in electoral roll management.
    • Risk of fait accompli if judicial intervention is delayed.
  • Constitutional Angle
    • Possible violation of Articles 14 and 326.
    • Procedural lapses invite judicial correction.

Way Forward

  • Mandatory prior notice before any voter deletion.
  • Minimum uniform objection window across states.
  • Independent audit of SIR exercises.
  • Use of technology with human verification.  
  • Clear SOPs and public disclosure by ECI.
  • Judicially enforceable safeguards for electoral revisions.

NHRC FLAGS DISABILITY RECHECK ISSUES

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) raised concerns over mass re- verification of disability certificates of government employees with disabilities.
  • The issue arose after a Central Government advisory and revised SOP (October 2025) on disability verification in government jobs and educational institutions.
  • NHRC clarified that the advisory was prospective in nature, meant for new applicants, and not for retrospective reassessment of existing beneficiaries.
  • NHRC recommended verification only in cases of specific suspicion, not blanket reassessment.

Key Points

  • Mass re-verification may:
    • Violate dignity and mental well-being of persons with disabilities.
    • Create fear regarding job continuity and livelihood.
  • Retrospective application of SOP:
    • May have legal and constitutional implications.
  • NHRC recommendations include:
    • Prohibition of blanket medical reassessment.
    • UDID-based digital verification as default.
    • Medical reassessment only as an exception, based on evidence-based suspicion.
  • Safeguards such as:
    • Written reasons for verification  
    • Opportunity to respond
    • Time-bound decision-making  
    • Right to appeal
    • Protection from adverse service action during verification
  • For permanent and irreversible disabilities:
    • Exemption from repeated medical testing.
    • Elimination of requirement for re-issuance of certificates.

Static Linkages

  • Equality before law and non-arbitrariness are core constitutional principles.
  • Protection of livelihood forms part of the right to life with dignity.
  • Reasonable accommodation is an accepted principle in disability rights.
  • Beneficiary-oriented legislation requires liberal interpretation.
  • Administrative actions must comply with:
    • Natural justice
    • Proportionality
    • Non-discrimination

Critical Analysis

  • Positive Aspects
    • Protects dignity and mental well-being of persons with disabilities.
    • Prevents administrative arbitrariness.
    • Strengthens trust in welfare governance.
    • Aligns with inclusive and rights-based policy approach.
  • Concerns
    • Possibility of misuse of disability benefits.
    • Lack of clear criteria for defining “specific suspicion”.
    • Digital divide may affect UDID accessibility.
    • Implementation depends on administrative sensitivity.

Way Forward

  • Define clear legal thresholds for initiating verification.
  • Strengthen and universalise UDID infrastructure.
  • Sensitisation and training of officials on disability rights.
  • Independent grievance redressal mechanisms.  
  • Regular oversight by human rights institutions.
  • Ensure dignity-centred, rights-based verification protocols.
INDIA AND FUNCTIONAL COMES FIRST
KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Context of the News
  • India recorded 5.6 million Foreign Tourist Arrivals (FTAs) till August 2025, significantly lower than regional peers.
  • Singapore attracted 11.6 million FTAs in the same period despite a much smaller size.
  • Thailand earned over USD 60 billion from tourism, while India earned roughly one-third.
  • Highlights structural gaps in India’s tourism ecosystem despite cultural and natural advantages.
  • Tourism identified as a high employment- generating sector in policy discussions.

KEY POINTS

  • Tourism contributes about 5% to India’s GDP and 8%+ to total employment (Economic Survey).
  • India ranks lower on:
    • Safety perception
    • Ease of travel and visa processes  
    • Tourist infrastructure quality
  • Key challenges identified:
    • Poor global image due to safety, sanitation, scams
    • Weak last-mile connectivity
    • Inadequate tourist-friendly services
  • Hospitality sector faces ~40% shortage of trained manpower (Ministry of Tourism).
  • GST on hotels at 5% without Input Tax Credit, reducing sector competitiveness.
  • Existing initiatives:
    • Incredible India campaign  
    • E-Visa facility
    • Adopt a Heritage Scheme
    • Tourist Police deployment (limited coverage)

STATIC LINKAGES

  • Tourism as part of tertiary (service) sector.
  • High employment elasticity compared to manufacturing.
  • Concept of multiplier effect in services. Soft power and cultural diplomacy.
  • Sustainable development and carrying capacity of destinations.
  • Cooperative federalism in tourism governance.

CRITICAL ANALYSIS

  • Pros / Potential
    • Rich cultural, spiritual, natural diversity.  Strong domestic tourism base.
    • Tourism creates more jobs per unit investment (UNWTO).
    • Digital payments and e-visa improve accessibility.
  • Cons / Challenges
    • Negative international perception on safety and hygiene.
    • Poor last-mile infrastructure.
    • Fragmented branding strategy.
    • Skill deficit in hospitality services.
    • GST structure discourages investment.
    • Restrictive and inconsistent immigration practices.

WAY FORWARD

  • Destination-based and circuit-based branding.
  • Improve last-mile connectivity and urban amenities.
  • Expand tourist police with women personnel.
  • Skill development through vocational and language training.
  • Rationalise GST and restore input tax credit.
  • Simplify and liberalise visa regime for low-risk countries.
  • Promote sustainable and community-based tourism. 

NEW LOGIC OF THE CHINESE ECONOMY

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context

  • China’s GDP crossed 140 trillion yuan (~USD 20 trillion) in 2025 with 5% growth despite global slowdown.
  • China claims ~30% contribution to global economic growth.
  • Statement addresses concerns related to:
    • Growth drivers
    • Export “overcapacity”
    • Trade imbalance with India
  • Relevant amid global trade fragmentation, protectionism, and supply-chain reorientation.

Key Exam-Oriented Facts

  • Growth composition (2025):
    • Final Consumption Expenditure: 52%  
    • Net Exports: 32.7%
    • Gross Capital Formation: 15.3%  
  • Structural shift:
    • From investment-led to consumption-led growth.
  • Exports:
    • High-tech exports growth: 13.2%  
    • Key markets: ASEAN, EU.
  • Industrial capacity utilisation:
    • 74.4% (comparable to US/EU).
  • India–China trade (2025):
    • Total trade: USD 155.6 billion
    • India’s exports: USD 19.7 billion (+9.7% YoY).
  • Tariff level:
    • China’s average tariff: 7.3%.
  • Demographics:
    • Middle-income group: 400+ million.

Static Linkages

  • Consumption-led growth and Keynesian demand theory.
  • Trade deficit vs welfare gains from imports.
  • Capacity utilisation as indicator of over/under production.
  • Global Value Chains (GVCs) and intermediate goods trade.
  • Comparative advantage and economic complementarity.
  • South–South trade cooperation model.
  • Balance of Payments adjustment mechanism.

Critical Analysis

  • Positives
  • Consumption-driven growth improves economic resilience.
  • High-tech exports strengthen technological leadership.
  • Affordable Chinese inputs aid Indian manufacturing and infrastructure.
  • Large Chinese market offers export potential for Indian goods.
  • Concerns
    • Persistent India–China trade deficit
    • Strategic dependence on Chinese intermediates.
    • Market access barriers for Indian pharma, IT, agri-products.
    • Risk of deindustrialisation for MSMEs.

Way Forward

  • Diversify India’s export basket to China.
  • Improve standards compliance (SPS/TBT).
  • Align PLI with export competitiveness.  
  • Reduce critical import dependence.
  • Use trade diplomacy for market access.
  • Strengthen domestic manufacturing ecosystems.
MATURE AND PRAGMATIC

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • India concluded a comprehensive FTA with the European Union after negotiations spanning ~19 years (since 2007).
  • EU accounts for ~12% of India’s total trade; other 8 recent FTAs together ~16%.
  • Deal assumes significance amid rising global protectionism and US tariff pressures.

Key Features of the Agreement

  • EU to eliminate tariffs on 99.5% of Indian exports (majority at zero duty immediately).
  • India to grant tariff concessions on 97.5% of EU exports.
  • Sensitive sector protection:
    • India excluded agriculture and dairy.
    • EU excluded select sensitive farm products.
  • Automobiles:
    • Quota-based tariff liberalisation.
    • Protects India’s mass-market manufacturers.
    • Market access for EU luxury carmakers.
  • Wine & spirits:
    • Quota-based tariff cuts.
    • Balances EU export interest and Indian domestic industry protection.
  • Parallel agreements signed on mobility, defence cooperation, and technology.

Strategic & Economic Significance

  • Largest and most complex FTA negotiated by India with a developed bloc.
  • Reflects India’s shift from defensive to calibrated trade liberalisation.
  • Enhances India’s credibility as a rule-based trade partner.
  • Diversifies export markets amid US–China trade uncertainties.
  • Strengthens India’s position in global value chains (GVCs).

Static Linkages

  • FTAs permitted under Article XXIV of GATT (WTO).
  • Tariffs and quotas are instruments of trade policy under customs regulation.
  • Preferential Trade Agreements vs MFN principle.
  • Quota-based liberalisation used to protect infant industries.
  • Trade–environment interface and climate-linked trade measures.
  • Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM)
  • No India-specific exemption secured.
  • CBAM currently applies to 6 sectors (steel, cement, aluminium, fertiliser, electricity, hydrogen).
  • Designed to expand to all industrial goods.
  • Non-discriminatory: applies uniformly to all trading partners.
  • India secured automatic extension of concessions granted to any third country.

Challenges / Concerns

  • CBAM may increase compliance costs for Indian exporters.
  • Stringent EU standards (SPS, TBT, ESG norms) may hurt MSMEs.
  • Implementation delay due to:
    • Translation into 27 EU languages.
    • Ratification by national parliaments and the European Parliament.
  • Risk of India becoming an assembly base without deep manufacturing reforms.

Way Forward

  • Accelerate reforms in:
    • Land, labour, logistics, power.
  • Align manufacturing with EU sustainability and carbon norms.
  • Build domestic capacity in:  
    • Carbon accounting
    • Green technologies
  • Support MSMEs through technology upgradation and standards compliance.
  • Push for early ratification to counter short-term export shocks.

ABYSMAL FAILURE 

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Deadly fire in unauthorised warehouses in Kolkata (Anandpur area) around Republic Day.
  • Over 11 deaths, many migrant workers; casualties likely to rise.
  • Warehouses lacked fire safety approval and basic firefighting systems.
  • Incident follows Burrabazar hotel fire (2024) → indicates recurring urban fire disasters.
  • Structures located in an ecologically sensitive area.

Key Issues Highlighted

  • Proliferation of illegal commercial structures in urban areas.
  • Storage of highly inflammable materials without safety norms.
  • Use of warehouses as informal night shelters by migrant labourers.
  • Toxic smoke inhalation as major cause of death (not burns).
  • Weak enforcement by urban local bodies and fire departments.
  • Absence of preventive action despite past fire tragedies.

Static Linkages

  • Rapid urbanisation outpacing regulatory capacity.  
  • Informal economy and informal housing nexus.
  • Disaster risk increases due to regulatory invisibility.  
  • Fire disasters classified as man-made disasters.
  • Urban wetlands and sensitive zones vulnerable to encroachment.
  • Right to Life includes right to safe living and working conditions.

Governance and Administrative Concerns

  • Poor coordination between:  
    • Urban Local Bodies
    • Fire Services
    • Environmental authorities
  •  Reactive governance focused on compensation, not prevention.
  • Political-administrative accountability deficit.
  • Weak compliance monitoring and inspection mechanisms.

Disaster Management Perspective

  • Failure of prevention and mitigation stages of disaster management cycle.
  • Emphasis remains on response and relief, not preparedness.
  • Inadequate urban risk mapping and safety audits.
  • Fire safety norms exist but implementation gap persists.

Social Dimensions

  • Migrant workers forced into unsafe shelters due to:
    • Lack of affordable housing
    • Informal employment conditions
  • Urban planning largely excludes migrant populations.
  • Disproportionate impact of disasters on vulnerable groups.

Environmental Dimension

  • Illegal constructions in ecologically sensitive zones.  
  • Violation of land-use planning norms.
  • Increased disaster risk due to environmental degradation.

Way Forward

  • Mandatory periodic fire safety audits for all commercial buildings.
  • Linking fire safety clearance with:  
    • Building permits
    • Trade licenses
  • GIS-based identification of unauthorised structures.  
  • Strengthening capacity of Urban Local Bodies.
  • Dedicated urban migrant housing policy.
  • Fixing accountability of officials for regulatory failures.
  • Public disclosure of fire safety compliance status.
  • Community-level fire awareness and evacuation planning.

URBAN POLITICS SHAPE BETTER CITIES

KEY HIGHLIGHTS
Contextof the News
  • Completion of 20 years of Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM).
  • Renewed focus on urbanisation as a political, economic and social force.
  • Urban issues gaining prominence amid environmental protests and labour agitations.
  • Marks transition from welfare-oriented planning to market-led urban development.

Key Points

  • India’s urban population:
    • ~25% in 1991
    • ~34% at present
    • Projected ~40% by 2030 (UN DESA, Census projections)
  • Urban areas contribute ~65% of India’s GDP (Economic Survey).
  • JNNURM (2005–2014):
    • First large-scale urban reform-linked funding programme
    • Focus on infrastructure + governance reforms
  • Subsequent missions:
    • AMRUT: basic services (water, sewerage, green spaces)
    • Smart Cities Mission: technology, PPPs, investment attraction
  • Urban planning increasingly driven by:  
    • Real estate
    • Infrastructure-led growth
    • Global capital flows

Static Linkages

  • 74th Constitutional Amendment Act
  • Urban Local Bodies and decentralisation  
  • Fiscal federalism and conditional grants
  • Right to life: housing, livelihood, environment
  • Sustainable development and inclusive growth  
  • Environmental governance and land-use planning

Critical Analysis

  • Pros
    • Improved urban infrastructure coverage  
    • Cities as engines of economic growth
    • Professionalisation of urban governance
  • Cons
    • Elite-centric urban development and gentrification
    • Marginalisation of informal sector and migrants
    • Environmental degradation of sensitive regions
    • Weak fiscal and functional autonomy of ULBs  
    • Reduced democratic participation in urban planning

Way Forward

  • Strengthen fiscal and functional autonomy of ULBs
  • Shift from project-based to people-centric urban planning
  • Integrate environmental safeguards in urban missions
  • Formalise and protect gig and informal workers  
  • Enhance participatory mechanisms (ward committees, area sabhas)
  • Align urban growth with climate resilience and SDGs
LISTEN TO NATURE’S SILENT WORKERS
KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Recent public and legal debates regarding developmental activities, mining, urbanisation and dilution of protections in the Aravalli Range.
  • Concerns raised over treating low hills and forested landscapes as dispensable in the name of economic growth.
  • Highlights broader issue of ecological ethics, sustainable development and human–nature disconnect.

Key Points

  • Aravallis are among the oldest fold mountain ranges in the world, older than the Himalayas.
  • Geographical spread: Rajasthan, Haryana, Delhi NCR, Gujarat.
  • Key ecological functions:
    • Acts as a barrier against desertification from the Thar Desert.
    • Major groundwater recharge zone for north-west India.
    • Supports biodiversity and wildlife corridors.
    • Regulates local climate and rainfall patterns.
  • Major threats:
    • Illegal mining and quarrying.
    • Urban expansion and infrastructure projects.  
    • Reclassification of forest land.
    • Weak enforcement of environmental regulations.

Static Linkages

  • Physical Geography:
    • Fold mountains and erosion-resistant ancient ranges (NCERT Geography).
  • Environment & Ecology:
    • Ecosystem services: regulating, supporting and provisioning services.
    • Habitat fragmentation and biodiversity loss.
  • Constitutional Provisions:
    • Article 48A – Protection and improvement of environment.
    • Article 51A(g) – Fundamental duty to protect natural environment.
  • Environmental Laws:
    • Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980.
    • Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.
  • Ethics:
    • Environmental stewardship and inter- generational equity.

Critical Analysis

  • Significance
    • Long-term ecological security for arid and semi-arid regions.
    • Ensures water availability through aquifer recharge.  
    • Supports biodiversity and ecological balance.
    • Acts as a natural climate buffer.
  • Challenges
    • Development-centric planning ignores cumulative ecological impacts.
    • Economic valuation of ecosystems remains weak.  
    • Fragmented governance across states.
    • Low public visibility reduces political priority. Ethical Dimension
    • Anthropocentric development model marginalises non-human life.
    • Conflict between short-term economic gains and long-term sustainability.

Way Forward

  • Declare comprehensive Eco-Sensitive Zones (ESZs) across Aravalli landscapes.
  • Shift from project-based clearance to landscape- level environmental assessment.
  • Integrate ecosystem service valuation in development planning.
  • Strengthen monitoring and enforcement against illegal mining.
  • Promote nature-based solutions in urban and regional planning.
  • Enhance public participation and local stewardship.
UGC RULES FORCE A NEEDED RECKONING

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • University Grants Commission notified UGC (Promotion of Equity in Higher Education Institutions) Regulations, 2026.
  •  Regulations replace the UGC Regulations on Curbing the Menace of Ragging and Social Discrimination, 2012.
  • Triggered by rising cases of caste-based discrimination in higher education institutions.
  • UGC data to Parliamentary Standing Committee on Education (2025):
    • Complaints increased from 173 (2019–20) to 378 (2023–24).
  • Regulations faced protests citing overreach, misuse, and institutional capacity concerns.

Key Points

  • Explicit recognition of caste-based discrimination (earlier only “social discrimination”).
  • Mandatory Equity Committees / Grievance Redressal Mechanisms in HEIs.
  • Coverage extended to SCs, STs, and OBCs.
  • Time-bound inquiry and disposal of complaints.
  • Provision for penal action, including derecognition for non-compliance.

Critical Analysis

  • Strengths
    • Addresses structural and covert caste discrimination.
    • Aligns higher education governance with constitutional mandates.
    • Moves from symbolic recognition to institutional enforcement.
    • Responds to empirical evidence of rising complaints.
  • Concerns
    • Risk of false or frivolous complaints.
    • Capacity constraints in smaller and under- funded institutions.
    • Strict timelines may affect quality of inquiry.
    • Fear of excessive centralisation and reduced autonomy.
    •  Need for clarity on procedural safeguards.

Way Forward

  •  Clear procedural safeguards and appeal mechanisms.
  • Capacity building of institutions through training and funding.
  • Phased implementation with graded penalties.
  • Independent review and audit of equity committees.
  • Sensitisation programmes alongside regulatory enforcement.
  • Periodic public disclosure of compliance data by UGC.

BARAMATI TRAGEDY, SPARK CHURN 

KEY HIGHLIGHTS

Context of the News

  • Sudden demise of Ajit Pawar, senior leader of the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) and six- time Deputy Chief Minister of Maharashtra.
  • Event occurs amid continuing political realignment following the split of NCP (2023) and Shiv Sena (2022).
  • Raises questions on coalition stability, leadership succession, and party legitimacy in Maharashtra politics.

Key Points

  • Eight-time MLA; represented Baramati region, a cooperative-dominated political economy.
  • Known for administrative decisiveness and emphasis on fiscal discipline as Finance Minister.
  • Central figure in 2019 Raj Bhavan swearing-in episode and later realignment with BJP-led NDA.
  • Maintained organisational control through cooperatives, sugar mills, and rural institutions.
  • Majority of NCP legislators aligned with his faction after the 2023 split.
  • His death creates leadership vacuum within NCP and uncertainty in Mahayuti coalition.

Static Linkages

  • Political parties recognised under Election Symbols (Reservation and Allotment) Order, 1968.
  • Party splits adjudicated by Election Commission of India, not the Speaker.
  • Anti-defection governed by Tenth Schedule of the Constitution.
  • Coalition politics linked to multiparty system and federal structure.
  • Cooperative institutions historically influence state-level political mobilisation.

Critical Analysis

  • Strengths
    • Strong grassroots mobilisation through cooperative networks.
    • Administrative efficiency and fiscal management experience.
    • Ability to navigate complex coalition politics.
  • Concerns
    • Weakening of ideological politics due to frequent realignments.
    • Personalised leadership limiting institutional party growth.
    • Allegations of corruption impacting public trust.
    • Dynastic influence affecting internal democracy.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen internal democracy within political parties.
  • Reform anti-defection law to prevent opportunistic splits.
  • Reduce politicisation of cooperative institutions.
  • Promote transparent leadership succession mechanisms.
  • Encourage ideology-based rather than personality-centric politics