Parliamentary Devices to Make Government Accountable – UPSC Polity Notes

Parliamentary Devices to Make Government Accountable | UPSC Polity Notes | Legacy IAS Bangalore
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Introduction & Constitutional Basis

In a parliamentary democracy, the executive is collectively responsible to the legislature. This means Parliament must have effective tools to question, scrutinise, and if necessary, remove the government. The Indian Constitution and Rules of Procedure of both Houses provide a rich array of such instruments.

🔑 Article 75 — Collective Responsibility Article 75(3) states that the Council of Ministers shall be collectively responsible to the House of the People (Lok Sabha). This is the constitutional bedrock of executive accountability — if the Lok Sabha withdraws confidence, the government must resign. Parliamentary devices are the practical tools that enforce this principle every day.

Why Parliamentary Accountability Matters

  • Democratic check: Parliament represents citizens; accountability ensures power is not abused
  • Transparency: Ministers must answer for policies, decisions, and failures
  • Informed public: Debates and questions create a public record that media and citizens can scrutinise
  • Deterrence: Awareness of accountability deters ministerial misconduct
  • Legitimacy: A government that can answer Parliament retains democratic legitimacy
🏛️ How Devices Work Parliamentary devices operate through procedural rules in the Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha / Rajya Sabha. Some are constitutionally anchored (No-Confidence Motion — Art. 75), some are in Rules (Question Hour — Rule 32), and some evolved through convention (Zero Hour — 1962 onwards).
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Classification of Parliamentary Accountability Devices

CategoryPurposeExamples
Questioning DevicesSeeking information & accountability from ministersQuestion Hour, Zero Hour, Half-Hour Discussion
MotionsExpress the opinion of the House; take formal decisionsNo-Confidence, Censure, Adjournment, Privilege
Discussion DevicesDebate important public issues in a structured mannerCalling Attention Motion, Short Duration Discussion (Rule 193)
Financial DevicesControl government expenditure & budget proposalsCut Motions (Policy Cut, Economy Cut, Token Cut)
💡 Simple Framework to Remember Think of Parliament as a board of directors. Questioning devices = asking management for updates. Motions = passing or defeating resolutions. Discussion devices = calling for a special briefing. Financial devices = approving or cutting the budget. All four together constitute democratic oversight.
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Question Hour ⭐ (Most Important)

The first hour of every parliamentary sitting is reserved for Question Hour. It is the most important daily accountability mechanism — where MPs question ministers directly on government policies, administration, failures, and performance.

🔑 Key Facts Rule 32 (Lok Sabha Rules) governs Question Hour. The Lok Sabha has about 20 oral questions per day. Questions must be submitted 15 days in advance (starred) or 10 days (short notice). The Speaker/Chairman has the power to disallow questions that are repetitive, vague, or violate privilege.

Types of Questions

⭐ Starred Question

Starred Question

  • Marked with an asterisk (*)
  • Requires an oral answer in the House
  • Supplementary questions are allowed
  • Creates lively debate and exchange
  • Minister must be present to answer
  • ~20 per day in Lok Sabha
📄 Unstarred Question

Unstarred Question

  • No asterisk
  • Requires a written answer (laid on the Table)
  • No supplementary questions allowed
  • More questions can be submitted per day
  • Useful for detailed statistical/factual information
  • Does not consume House time
⚡ Short Notice Question

Short Notice Question

  • For urgent matters of public importance
  • Notice period less than 10 days
  • Requires Speaker’s permission
  • Minister may decline if not ready
  • Oral answer given if minister agrees
  • Example: Sudden natural disaster, border crisis
🎯 UPSC Examiner Note Private Members’ Questions: Questions can be asked not just about government ministries but also about Private Member Bills. Zero Hour is often confused with Question Hour — remember, Zero Hour is informal and unscheduled, while Question Hour is procedurally structured. Also note: Question Hour was suspended during COVID-19 sessions in 2020, drawing significant criticism about parliamentary accountability.
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Zero Hour

Zero Hour is the period immediately after Question Hour (i.e., after 12 noon, when the “clock was at zero” before the regular agenda begins). It allows MPs to raise matters of urgent public importance without prior notice.

🕛 Origin

Started in 1962

Zero Hour emerged as an informal convention in 1962. Not mentioned in the Constitution or Rules of Procedure. It evolved because MPs felt Question Hour’s 10-15 day notice period was too slow for urgent national issues.

📋 Procedure

How it Works

An MP stands up immediately after Question Hour ends and raises an issue without any prior notice. The Speaker may or may not allow it. There is no formal debate or voting — it is a platform to highlight concerns and embarrass the government into responding.

✅ Significance

Why It’s Popular

Zero Hour gives Parliament the ability to respond to breaking news and current crises in real time. It has become the most vibrant and media-friendly part of parliamentary proceedings. Issues raised here often make headlines and force government responses.

Question Hour

Formally structured. Advance notice of 10–15 days required. Questions screened by Speaker. Oral/written answers. Supplementary questions allowed for starred Qs.

Zero Hour

Informal convention. No prior notice. No formal rules. No voting or motion. Speaker discretion. Purely a platform to highlight issues urgently.

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Motions — Overview & Definition

A motion is a formal proposal brought before the House for the purpose of eliciting a decision of the House — to express an opinion, draw attention to an issue, or take a formal action (such as removing the government).

🔑 Key Principle Motions are the formal, procedural face of parliamentary accountability. Unlike questions (which seek information) or discussions (which are exploratory), motions require the House to take a formal stand through voting. The outcome of a motion can have constitutional consequences — the most dramatic being a No-Confidence Motion bringing down the government.
🏛️ Substantive Motion

Independent Motion

A self-contained proposal expressing the House’s opinion on a specific subject. Example: Motion of Thanks on President’s Address; No-Confidence Motion.

📋 Subsidiary Motion

Amendment Motion

Depends on another motion. Seeks to amend or supersede a main motion. Example: Cut Motions moved during discussion of Demands for Grants.

⚡ Closure Motion

Ends Debate

Moved to cut off debate on a motion. Types: Simple closure, Kangaroo closure, Guillotine closure. Stops filibustering by opposition.

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No-Confidence Motion Art. 75(3)

The No-Confidence Motion is the ultimate weapon of the legislature against the executive. It directly tests whether the government still commands the confidence of the Lok Sabha. If passed, the entire Council of Ministers must resign.

Key Rules & Procedure

  • Only in Lok Sabha — Rajya Sabha cannot pass a No-Confidence Motion
  • Requires minimum 50 members’ support to admit the motion
  • Speaker admits and fixes a date for discussion within 10 days
  • Discussion and voting must happen within that period
  • If the motion is passed by simple majority, the government falls
  • The President may dissolve Lok Sabha or invite another leader to form government
⚠️ Critical Consequence A successful No-Confidence Motion does NOT automatically dissolve Parliament. The President has discretion — he/she may invite the leader of the largest party to form a new government, or dissolve Lok Sabha and call fresh elections.

Historic Examples

YearGovernmentOutcomeSignificance
1979Morarji Desai (Janata Party)Government fellFirst PM to resign due to withdrawal of support by coalition partners before floor test
1990V.P. Singh (Janata Dal)Government fellLost confidence after Mandal controversy and BJP withdrawal of support
1997H.D. Deve Gowda (United Front)Government fellCongress withdrew support — PM resigned without floor test
1999Atal Bihari Vajpayee (NDA)Lost by 1 vote (269–270)Closest defeat in Indian parliamentary history — AIADMK withdrawal decisive
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Adjournment Motion Rule 56

An Adjournment Motion is moved to draw the attention of the House to a definite matter of urgent public importance. If admitted, it interrupts the normal business of the House — a significant privilege that makes it a powerful accountability tool.

Conditions for Admission

  • The matter must be definite — not vague or general
  • Must be urgent — recent occurrence, not old matter
  • Must involve government responsibility — cannot be about private individuals
  • Must be a matter of fact — not based on allegations alone
  • Must relate to a recent happening — not sub judice or already under discussion
  • Speaker has sole discretion on admission
⚠️ Important — Only in Lok Sabha Adjournment Motion can only be moved in Lok Sabha, not Rajya Sabha. Rajya Sabha has its own equivalent: the Special Mention procedure. The motion, if carried, is considered a censure of the government, though this rarely happens in practice.
🎯 Practical Reality Adjournment Motions are rarely admitted. The Speaker applies strict conditions. Most attempts result in the Speaker ruling the matter inadmissible. However, the very process — the debate, the notice, the media attention — serves accountability purposes even when technically not admitted.
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Calling Attention Motion Rule 197

The Calling Attention Motion allows an MP to call the attention of a minister to an urgent matter of public importance. The minister must make a brief statement on the matter, after which members may seek clarifications.

💡 Indian Original The Calling Attention Motion is an Indian parliamentary innovation — it originated in India and has since been adopted by several other Commonwealth parliaments. It fills the gap between Question Hour (pre-scheduled) and Adjournment Motion (full debate) by providing a quick, focused accountability mechanism.
Calling Attention Motion

Minister gives a statement. Brief clarifications allowed. Does NOT interrupt normal business. Less dramatic. Faster. Used frequently in Rajya Sabha too. Minister must respond — cannot ignore.

Adjournment Motion

Full debate takes place. Normal business interrupted. Only in Lok Sabha. More dramatic effect. Rarely admitted. If carried = implicit censure. Requires Speaker’s admission.

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Censure Motion

A Censure Motion is moved to express strong disapproval of a specific policy, decision, or action of the government or a particular minister. Unlike a No-Confidence Motion, it does not bring down the government even if passed.

Censure Motion

Criticises a specific policy/action. Government need NOT resign if passed. Can mention reasons for criticism. Can be moved against an individual minister. Only in Lok Sabha.

No-Confidence Motion

Tests overall confidence in the government. Government MUST resign if passed. Cannot state reasons. Against the Council of Ministers as a whole. Only in Lok Sabha.

🔑 Practical Impact Even though a Censure Motion doesn’t automatically remove the government, its passage is politically devastating — it signals a loss of moral authority. A government that survives a Censure Motion by a thin majority is politically weakened and under pressure to change course.
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Short Duration Discussion Rule 193

Also called the Rule 193 discussion, this device allows Parliament to discuss matters of urgent public importance without a formal motion or voting. It is a more relaxed, discussion-oriented tool that avoids the dramatic procedural requirements of Adjournment Motion.

  • Available in both Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha
  • No motion, no voting — purely a discussion
  • Duration is limited — usually a few hours
  • Speaker/Chairman fixes the date
  • Minister must reply at the end of discussion
  • Examples: Farmer distress, price rise, communal incidents, flood relief
💡 Analogy Rule 193 discussion is like a town hall meeting within Parliament — everyone gets to voice concerns, the government has to respond, but there’s no formal resolution or vote at the end. The accountability lies in the public record of the debate.
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Half-Hour Discussion Rule 55

Half-Hour Discussion is held in the last half-hour of a sitting (usually 5:30 PM – 6:00 PM) on three days a week. It is specifically meant to seek further clarification on a question that has already been answered during Question Hour.

  • Available when a Question Hour answer needs elaboration or contains inaccuracies
  • The member who raised the original question moves for Half-Hour Discussion
  • The minister provides clarification
  • No voting at the end
  • Maximum of three members can participate
  • Held on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays in Lok Sabha
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Privilege Motion

A Privilege Motion is moved when a member feels that a minister has provided misleading or false information to the House, or has otherwise committed a breach of parliamentary privilege.

⚠️ What is Parliamentary Privilege? Parliamentary privilege includes the right of Parliament to regulate its own proceedings, freedom of speech within Parliament (Art. 105), right to publish debates, and protection of members from arrest during sessions. Any infringement = breach of privilege.
  • Moved by a member against a minister who misled the House
  • Speaker/Chairman examines the motion — may refer to Privilege Committee
  • Privilege Committee investigates and submits report
  • House may censure, reprimand, or even suspend the concerned minister/member
  • Acts as a strong deterrent against deliberate misinformation by ministers
🎯 Notable Examples Privilege Motions have been moved against ministers who gave incorrect figures on defence expenditure, farmer subsidies, and economic data. The mere notice of a Privilege Motion often prompts a minister to issue a correction on the floor of the House.
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Cut Motions ⭐ (Very Important for UPSC)

Cut Motions are devices available to members of Lok Sabha during the Budget session when Demands for Grants of various ministries are being discussed. They allow the opposition to express disapproval of government policy or demand reduction in expenditure.

🔑 Constitutional Basis Cut Motions are moved under Rule 209 (Lok Sabha Rules) during the stage of Voting on Demands for Grants. They are a subsidiary motion — moved in relation to a Demand for Grant. Only in Lok Sabha (since the Consolidated Fund is under Lok Sabha’s control via Money Bills).
Policy Cut

Policy Disapproval

Demand → ₹1

The demand is reduced to a nominal ₹1 to signal that the member disapproves of the entire policy behind the demand. It is the most drastic cut — a symbolic rejection of the ministry’s policy direction. The member must state an alternative policy.

Economy Cut

Specific Reduction

Demand → Specified ₹

The demand is reduced by a specified amount on grounds of economy — i.e., the government is spending too much or inefficiently. The member must specify the amount by which the demand should be reduced and explain why.

Token Cut

Grievance Ventilation

Demand − ₹100

The demand is reduced by a token ₹100 to draw attention to a specific grievance within the purview of that ministry. It is not about the full policy or overall economy — just a targeted complaint. Member must specify the matter of complaint.

🎯 UPSC Critical Point If a Cut Motion is passed by Lok Sabha, it amounts to a vote of no-confidence in the government on that particular demand — and the government is expected to resign. In practice, Cut Motions are rarely passed due to party discipline, but they are a potent tool for opposition to delay and debate government spending.
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Comparison Table — Major Motions ⭐

MotionPurposeEffect if PassedHouseVoting
No-ConfidenceRemove entire governmentGovernment MUST resignLok Sabha onlyYes — simple majority
Censure MotionCriticise specific policy/ministerGovernment need not resign; politically weakenedLok Sabha onlyYes
Adjournment MotionUrgent public issueNormal business interrupted; implicit censureLok Sabha onlyYes (rarely carried)
Calling AttentionMinister’s statement on urgent matterMinister must give statementBoth HousesNo
Short Duration DiscussionDebate important issueMinister must reply; no resolutionBoth HousesNo
Privilege MotionBreach of parliamentary privilegeCensure/reprimand; refer to committeeBoth HousesYes (if referred to full House)
Policy Cut MotionReject ministry’s policy (Demand → ₹1)Equivalent to No-Confidence if passedLok Sabha onlyYes
Economy Cut MotionReduce expenditure by specific amountDemand reduced; spending curtailedLok Sabha onlyYes
Token Cut MotionVentilate specific grievance (−₹100)Draws attention; demand marginally reducedLok Sabha onlyYes
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India vs UK vs USA — Comparative View

FeatureIndiaUKUSA
Question HourFirst hour daily; starred/unstarred/short noticePrime Minister’s Questions (PMQs) — 30 mins weekly (Wednesdays)No formal Question Hour; Congressional hearings instead
No-Confidence MotionOnly Lok Sabha; 50 members to admit; PM must resign if passedVote of No Confidence — PM must resign or seek dissolutionNo equivalent — President not accountable to Congress for tenure; impeachment is different
Zero HourInformal convention post-1962; no rulesNo direct equivalent; Urgent Questions (UQs) are rule-basedNo equivalent; members raise issues through committee hearings
Budget ScrutinyLok Sabha debates + Cut Motions on Demands for GrantsDetailed committee scrutiny; budget resolutionsCongressional appropriations committees; detailed line-by-line approval
Congressional Oversight (USA)PAC, Estimates Committee, Dept. Standing CommitteesSelect Committees; Public Accounts CommitteePowerful Congressional committees with subpoena power; GAO audits
Financial ControlLok Sabha — Money Bills; Appropriation Act; Vote on AccountHouse of Commons — Supply Days; Consolidated Fund BillsHouse of Representatives originates revenue bills; Senate concurs
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Importance for Democratic Governance

  • Transparency: Question Hour forces ministers to publicly disclose government actions, schemes, and failures — creating a permanent public record
  • Ministerial accountability: Ministers know they will face scrutiny — this deters arbitrary decisions and incentivises better governance
  • Public debate: Adjournment Motions, Rule 193 discussions, and Zero Hour create deliberative spaces that enrich democracy beyond elections
  • Opposition voice: These devices give opposition parties a formal platform — ensuring that majoritarian governments cannot silence dissent
  • Media and civil society: Debates and questions covered by media multiply accountability by informing millions of citizens
  • Fiscal discipline: Cut Motions and PAC scrutiny prevent wasteful and unauthorised government expenditure
  • Constitutional check: No-Confidence Motion is the ultimate expression of legislative supremacy over the executive
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Limitations of Parliamentary Accountability

⚠️ Reality Check Parliamentary accountability devices are only as effective as the political culture, party discipline, and institutional will that surround them. In practice, several factors dilute their effectiveness.
  • Frequent disruptions: Parliamentary disruptions have drastically reduced Question Hour and discussion time in recent sessions — Parliament lost hundreds of hours to disruptions in the 2010s
  • Anti-defection law: The 10th Schedule discourages MPs from voting against their party line, weakening Cut Motions and No-Confidence Motions as genuine accountability tools
  • Party discipline: In a strong majority government, the ruling party whips MPs — most questions become friendly and unchallenging
  • Short sessions: Parliament sits for fewer days than ideal (~60–70 days annually) — limiting the time available for debate and scrutiny
  • Ordinance route: Government bypasses Parliamentary scrutiny by frequently using ordinances when Parliament is not in session
  • Information asymmetry: Ministers have vast bureaucratic resources; MPs often lack research support to ask penetrating questions
  • Zero Hour overuse: The popularity of Zero Hour has made it chaotic, with multiple members shouting simultaneously, reducing its effectiveness
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Reforms Suggested

  • Strengthen Parliamentary Committees: Departmentally Related Standing Committees (DRSCs) should have more resources, subpoena powers, and their reports should be debated on the floor — making committee scrutiny as effective as UK’s Select Committees
  • More sitting days: Parliament should sit for at least 100 days per year; National Commission to Review the Working of the Constitution (NCRWC) recommended minimum 110 days
  • Restore Question Hour: The suspension of Question Hour during COVID-19 sessions set a dangerous precedent; it must always remain sacrosanct
  • Digital transparency: Real-time publication of parliamentary questions, answers, and committee reports in searchable formats online
  • Research support for MPs: Strengthen Parliament Research Service; provide each MP with dedicated research staff
  • Anti-disruption norms: Clear rules with stricter penalties for members who disrupt proceedings and deprive Parliament of its accountability function
  • Structured Zero Hour: Formalise Zero Hour with time limits per member, written submission requirement, and ministerial response obligation
  • Review Anti-Defection Law: Apply it only to confidence votes and money bills — not to all votes — so MPs can exercise independent judgment on policy questions
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UPSC Prelims MCQs (10 Questions)

Q1

Which of the following parliamentary devices interrupts the normal business of the House?

  • a) Calling Attention Motion
  • b) Adjournment Motion ✓
  • c) Short Duration Discussion
  • d) Privilege Motion
Explanation: Only the Adjournment Motion, when admitted by the Speaker, interrupts the normal business of Lok Sabha. Calling Attention and Short Duration Discussion don’t interrupt normal business. Privilege Motion leads to committee referral, not interruption.
Q2

Which of the following statements about Zero Hour is INCORRECT?

  • a) It started as a convention in 1962
  • b) It allows MPs to raise issues without prior notice
  • c) It is mentioned in the Rules of Procedure of Lok Sabha ✓
  • d) It takes place after Question Hour
Explanation: Zero Hour is NOT mentioned in the Constitution or the Rules of Procedure. It is an informal parliamentary convention that emerged in 1962. Options a, b, and d are all correct statements about Zero Hour.
Q3

In a Policy Cut Motion, the demand for a grant is reduced to:

  • a) ₹100
  • b) Zero (₹0)
  • c) ₹1 ✓
  • d) A specified amount stated by the mover
Explanation: In a Policy Cut, the demand is reduced to ₹1 to express disapproval of the policy. Token Cut reduces by ₹100. Economy Cut reduces by a specified amount. Zero would mean complete rejection, which is different from the ₹1 convention.
Q4

Which of the following parliamentary devices is described as an Indian parliamentary innovation adopted by other Commonwealth parliaments?

  • a) Zero Hour
  • b) Adjournment Motion
  • c) Calling Attention Motion ✓
  • d) Privilege Motion
Explanation: The Calling Attention Motion originated in India and has since been adopted by several Commonwealth parliaments. It allows an MP to call a minister’s attention to an urgent matter, after which the minister makes a statement.
Q5

Which of the following is TRUE about the No-Confidence Motion?

  • a) It can be moved in both Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha
  • b) It requires support of 100 members to admit
  • c) If passed, the Council of Ministers must resign ✓
  • d) It automatically dissolves Lok Sabha if passed
Explanation: No-Confidence Motion is only in Lok Sabha. It requires 50 (not 100) members’ support. If passed, the Council of Ministers must resign (not just the PM). Dissolution of Lok Sabha is at the President’s discretion — not automatic.
Q6

Consider the following about the Censure Motion: 1. It can be moved only against the entire Council of Ministers. 2. If passed, the government must resign. 3. It must state specific reasons for criticism. Which of the above is/are CORRECT?

  • a) 1 and 2 only
  • b) 2 only
  • c) 3 only ✓
  • d) 1 and 3 only
Explanation: Statement 1 is wrong — Censure can be moved against individual ministers too. Statement 2 is wrong — Government need NOT resign even if Censure Motion is passed. Statement 3 is correct — Censure Motion must specify the actions/policies it criticises (unlike No-Confidence Motion which need not).
Q7

Half-Hour Discussion is held to:

  • a) Raise urgent matters without prior notice
  • b) Discuss budget demands in detail
  • c) Seek further clarification on a Question Hour answer ✓
  • d) Express disapproval of a specific ministry’s policy
Explanation: Half-Hour Discussion is specifically held when a member feels that an answer given during Question Hour needs further elaboration or clarification. It is held for 30 minutes at the end of a sitting, on three days a week.
Q8

Which of the following requires a minister to make a statement on an urgent matter without the normal business being interrupted?

  • a) Calling Attention Motion ✓
  • b) Adjournment Motion
  • c) No-Confidence Motion
  • d) Token Cut Motion
Explanation: The Calling Attention Motion requires the minister to make a statement on the matter raised without interrupting the normal business of the House. The Adjournment Motion, by contrast, interrupts normal business. No-Confidence and Cut Motions serve entirely different purposes.
Q9

Which of the following is available in BOTH Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha?

  • a) Adjournment Motion
  • b) No-Confidence Motion
  • c) Cut Motions
  • d) Short Duration Discussion (Rule 193) ✓
Explanation: Short Duration Discussion under Rule 193 is available in both Houses. Adjournment Motion, No-Confidence Motion, and Cut Motions are available only in Lok Sabha. Rajya Sabha has Special Mention as an equivalent to Adjournment Motion.
Q10

Which Article of the Constitution establishes collective responsibility of the Council of Ministers to Lok Sabha?

  • a) Article 74
  • b) Article 75(3) ✓
  • c) Article 79
  • d) Article 85
Explanation: Article 75(3) states that the Council of Ministers shall be collectively responsible to the House of the People (Lok Sabha). This is the constitutional foundation of all parliamentary accountability mechanisms. Article 74 deals with the Council of Ministers as aid and advice to President.
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UPSC Mains Answer Framework

Q1

“Parliamentary devices are essential tools for ensuring executive accountability.” Discuss with reference to constitutional provisions and procedural mechanisms. (15 marks)

Introduction

In India’s parliamentary democracy, the executive derives its authority from the legislature and remains accountable to it through the principle of collective responsibility (Art. 75(3)). Parliamentary devices — Question Hour, Zero Hour, motions, and cut motions — are the practical instruments that make this accountability real and effective.

Body — Key Points
  • Question Hour: Daily information accountability — ministers must answer publicly; supplementary questions probe deeper
  • Zero Hour: Real-time responsiveness — no prior notice needed; democratic safety valve
  • Adjournment Motion: Urgent accountability — interrupts normal business; signals seriousness
  • No-Confidence Motion: Ultimate sanction — tested four governments since 1947
  • Cut Motions: Financial accountability — controls the purse; each cut type serves distinct purpose
  • Calling Attention and Rule 193: Deliberative accountability — discussion without dramatic interruption
  • Limitations: Disruptions, anti-defection, fewer sittings reduce effectiveness
  • Reforms needed: Stronger committees, more sitting days, research support for MPs
Conclusion

Parliamentary devices represent the daily exercise of democratic sovereignty. Their effectiveness depends not just on rules but on political culture — opposition vigilance, Speaker neutrality, and public engagement. Strengthening these mechanisms is essential to the health of Indian democracy.

Q2

Distinguish between No-Confidence Motion and Censure Motion. Also explain the three types of Cut Motions used in Parliament. (10 marks)

Introduction

The Indian Parliament uses motions both to test the government’s majority and to express disapproval of specific policies. While superficially similar, No-Confidence Motion, Censure Motion, and Cut Motions serve distinct constitutional and procedural purposes.

Body — Key Points
  • No-Confidence vs Censure: target (govt vs policy), consequence (resignation vs political embarrassment), reasons (not needed vs must specify)
  • Cut Motions — three types: Policy Cut (₹1 — full policy rejection), Economy Cut (specified amount — financial waste), Token Cut (₹100 — specific grievance)
  • All three cut motions only in Lok Sabha, only during Demands for Grants
  • If a Cut Motion passes = equivalent to No-Confidence for that demand
  • Party whip usually prevents Cut Motions from succeeding in practice
Conclusion

Together, these motions form a layered accountability architecture — from targeted policy criticism (Censure, Token Cut) to financial scrutiny (Economy Cut) to regime change (No-Confidence, Policy Cut). Their strategic deployment reflects both constitutional design and political realities.

Q3

Examine the effectiveness of Question Hour and Zero Hour as instruments of parliamentary accountability. What reforms are needed? (15 marks)

Introduction

Question Hour and Zero Hour represent Parliament’s two modes of accountability questioning — one procedurally rigorous and pre-planned, the other informal and spontaneous. Both are critical, yet both face serious challenges in contemporary Indian parliamentary practice.

Body — Key Points
  • Question Hour — strengths: Forces ministerial preparation; creates permanent public record; supplementary questions allow drilling down; starred vs unstarred caters to different needs
  • Question Hour — weaknesses: Suspension during COVID-19 sessions; disruptions eating into time; friendly questions from ruling party MPs; ministers giving evasive answers
  • Zero Hour — strengths: Flexibility; real-time relevance; media attention; democratic safety valve
  • Zero Hour — weaknesses: Chaotic; no obligation on minister to respond; no follow-up mechanism; often degenerates into slogan-shouting
  • Reforms: Protect Question Hour constitutionally; formalise Zero Hour with rules; strengthen research support; televise key debates; strengthen PAC scrutiny of non-answers
Conclusion

Restoring the sanctity of Question Hour and structuring Zero Hour is essential. The 2020 suspension of Question Hour should never recur. These are not procedural niceties — they are daily expressions of the people’s right to govern themselves through their elected representatives.

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Memory Tricks for Aspirants 🧠

⚡ Quick Recall Techniques

QAZA Rule Question Hour → Adjournment Motion → Zero Hour → Attention Motion. The four main daily accountability tools in order of formality (most formal to least formal and back).
₹1 / ₹Spec / ₹100 Cut Motions: Policy Cut = ₹1 (whole policy gone), Economy Cut = Specified ₹ (economy in spending), Token Cut = ₹100 (token gesture, a grievance). Think “1 → Specified → 100” in ascending specificity of purpose.
NC = Resign | C = Respond No-Confidence → government must RESIGN. Censure → government must RESPOND (but not resign). This is the most commonly confused distinction in UPSC Prelims.
Only LS = NCAP Devices available ONLY in Lok Sabha: No-Confidence Motion, Cut Motions, Adjournment Motion, Policy/Economy/Token Cuts. Both Houses have: Calling Attention, Short Duration Discussion, Privilege Motion, Question Hour.
Zero = No Rules Zero Hour = ZERO rules. Not in Constitution, not in Rules of Procedure. Pure convention since 1962. Unlike every other device, Zero Hour has no procedural framework — that’s its charm and its weakness.
Star = Speak | Plain = Paper Starred Question → Spoken answer (Oral) — the star shines in speech. Unstarred Question → Paper answer (Written) — plain, no spotlight. Supplementary questions only follow the spoken (starred) ones.
1962 Zero / Indian Calling Zero Hour started in 1962 (after 1962 Sino-Indian War, MPs felt urgency to raise issues faster). Calling Attention is India’s gift to Commonwealth parliaments — remember “Calling Attention = Call from India.”
50 Members = No-Conf No-Confidence Motion needs minimum 50 members to support its admission. Remember: “50 friends to fire the PM.” Once admitted, the vote is by simple majority of members present and voting.
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One-Page Revision Summary 📄

⚡ Last-Day Revision — Parliamentary Accountability

Question Hour

First hour. Rule 32. Starred (oral + supplementary), Unstarred (written), Short Notice (<10 days). Both Houses.

Zero Hour

After 12 noon. No rules, no notice. Convention since 1962. Not in Constitution or Rules. Both Houses (informally).

Adjournment Motion

Rule 56. Interrupts normal business. Definite + Urgent + Govt responsibility. Lok Sabha ONLY. Rarely admitted.

Calling Attention

Rule 197. Minister gives statement. No business interruption. Indian innovation. Both Houses. Minister must respond.

No-Confidence Motion

Art. 75(3). 50 members needed. Lok Sabha only. If passed → govt resigns. 1979 (Desai), 1999 (Vajpayee by 1 vote).

Censure Motion

Criticises specific policy/minister. Govt need NOT resign. Must state reasons. Only Lok Sabha. Political embarrassment.

Short Duration Discussion

Rule 193. No motion, no voting. Both Houses. Minister replies at end. Good for broader public issues.

Half-Hour Discussion

Rule 55. Last 30 mins of sitting. Clarification on Question Hour answer. Max 3 members. Mon/Wed/Fri.

Privilege Motion

When minister misleads House. Refer to Privilege Committee. Both Houses. Censure/reprimand outcome.

Policy Cut Motion

Demand → ₹1. Full policy rejection. Lok Sabha only. During Demands for Grants. If passed = No-Confidence equivalent.

Economy Cut Motion

Demand → reduced by specified amount. Wasteful spending. Lok Sabha only. Member must specify exact reduction.

Token Cut Motion

Demand − ₹100. Specific grievance ventilation. Not about full policy or economy. Member must name the grievance.

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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Why is Question Hour considered the most important accountability mechanism?

Question Hour is described as the “lifeblood of parliamentary democracy” because it provides a daily, systematic, structured opportunity for elected representatives to demand accountability from the executive. Unlike motions (which are infrequent and dramatic), Question Hour operates every single sitting day. The ability of a Starred Question to be followed by supplementary questions means that evasive answers can be probed further on the spot. The entire proceeding is public, on record, and covered by media — multiplying the accountability effect many times over.

What is the difference between a Censure Motion and a No-Confidence Motion?

No-Confidence Motion: Tests overall confidence in the entire Council of Ministers. Cannot state reasons for disapproval. If passed, the entire government must resign. The most dramatic accountability tool.

Censure Motion: Targets a specific policy, decision, or individual minister. Must state the reasons for censure. Even if passed, the government does NOT have to resign — though it is politically weakened. A government with a majority typically survives Censure Motions but faces political consequences. Think of No-Confidence as a “vote to fire the government” and Censure as a “formal complaint.”

Why is Zero Hour not in the Constitution or Rules of Procedure?

Zero Hour emerged as an organic parliamentary convention in 1962 — driven by the need of MPs to raise urgent issues faster than the 10-15 day notice period for Question Hour allowed. It was never formally codified because its strength lies precisely in its informality and flexibility. If rules were imposed, it would lose the ability to respond instantly to breaking news and crises. However, this informality is also its weakness — the Speaker has no obligation to allow it, ministers have no obligation to respond, and it can become chaotic. Several parliamentary reform committees have recommended partial formalisation of Zero Hour to improve its effectiveness.

Can the Rajya Sabha move a No-Confidence Motion or Adjournment Motion?

No. Both the No-Confidence Motion and the Adjournment Motion are exclusive to Lok Sabha. The rationale: the Council of Ministers is collectively responsible to the Lok Sabha (Art. 75(3)), not to Rajya Sabha. Since only Lok Sabha can remove the government, it alone holds these powerful accountability tools. Rajya Sabha has substitute mechanisms: it uses Special Mention as equivalent to Adjournment Motion for raising urgent matters, and its members participate in other discussions. Cut Motions are also Lok Sabha-exclusive (Money Bills originate in Lok Sabha).

How do Cut Motions differ from each other, and when are they used?

All three Cut Motions are moved during the discussion of Demands for Grants in Lok Sabha during the Budget session. They differ in intent and mechanism:

Policy Cut: Demand reduced to ₹1 — signals complete rejection of the policy. The mover must state an alternative policy. It’s a political statement, not just financial.

Economy Cut: Demand reduced by a specific amount — signals financial profligacy. The mover must specify the exact amount. Purely about spending efficiency.

Token Cut: Demand reduced by ₹100 — used to ventilate a specific grievance unrelated to the full policy or budget amount. The mover must name the specific complaint.

In practice, the government’s majority and party whip make it almost impossible for Cut Motions to succeed. But the debate they generate is valuable accountability in itself.

What was the significance of the Vajpayee government losing in 1999 by one vote?

The 1999 No-Confidence Motion against the Atal Bihari Vajpayee-led NDA government stands as one of the most dramatic moments in Indian parliamentary history. The government lost by 269-270 votes — a margin of just one vote. The AIADMK’s withdrawal of support was the decisive factor. Following this, Vajpayee resigned and the Lok Sabha was dissolved, leading to fresh elections in which NDA returned with a stronger mandate. The episode illustrates how the constitutional accountability mechanism — even when functioning on a single-vote margin — can fundamentally transform Indian democracy, leading to fresh elections and renewed public mandate.

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