📋 Table of Contents
- Introduction — Bicameral Legislature
- Structure of Parliament
- Composition of Lok Sabha
- Composition of Rajya Sabha
- Term of the Houses
- Detailed Comparison Table ⭐
- Legislative Powers
- Financial Powers ⭐
- Executive Control
- Special Powers of Rajya Sabha
- Constitutional Amendment Powers
- Importance of Bicameralism
- Criticism of Rajya Sabha
- Comparative Analysis — Global
- Upper House Strength Comparison
- Lessons for India
- UPSC Prelims MCQs (10)
- Mains Answer Framework
- Memory Tricks
- One-Page Revision
- FAQ
Introduction — Why a Bicameral Legislature?
India’s Parliament is bicameral — comprising two Houses. The choice of bicameralism was deliberate, rooted in India’s federal character, linguistic diversity, and the need for multiple layers of legislative scrutiny. The Constituent Assembly debated at length before adopting a two-House system.
House of the People
Represents the people of India directly. Elected through universal adult franchise. More powerful on financial and executive matters. Called the “lower house” by convention, but supreme in money matters and executive accountability.
Council of States
Represents the States and Union Territories of India. Indirectly elected by State Assemblies. Permanent house — never dissolved. Acts as a check on hasty legislation and protects federal balance. Called the “upper house” by convention.
Why Bicameralism?
- Federal representation: India’s states needed a dedicated chamber — Rajya Sabha gives states a voice in central legislation
- Double scrutiny: Two houses reduce hasty, ill-considered legislation — bills must pass both chambers
- Checks and balances: Each house checks the potential excesses of the other, preventing any single chamber’s domination
- Expert participation: Presidential nominations to Rajya Sabha bring expertise (literature, science, art, social service) that direct elections might not produce
- Continuity: Rajya Sabha being permanent ensures legislative continuity even when Lok Sabha is dissolved
Structure of Parliament of India
👤 President of India
Summons & prorogues Parliament. Addresses joint session. Gives assent to Bills. Nominates 12 members to Rajya Sabha.
🟦 Lok Sabha
House of the People. Lower House. Max 552 members. Direct election. 5-year term. Can be dissolved. Art. 81.
🟧 Rajya Sabha
Council of States. Upper House. Max 250 members. Indirect election. Permanent. 6-year term per member. Art. 80.
Composition of Lok Sabha Art. 81
Lok Sabha members are elected through direct elections — every Indian citizen aged 18 years or above can vote (universal adult franchise under Article 326). Seats are allocated to states on the basis of population — more populous states have more Lok Sabha seats.
Key Facts
- Maximum strength: 552 (530 from states + 20 from UTs + 2 nominated Anglo-Indians — but the Anglo-Indian nomination was abolished by the 104th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2019)
- Present strength: 543 elected members
- Constituencies are single-member territorial constituencies — First Past the Post (FPTP) system
- Delimitation Commission periodically redraws constituency boundaries based on census data
- Seats for SC/ST are reserved in proportion to their population in each state
- Minimum age to be a member: 25 years
- Largest state by seats: Uttar Pradesh (80 seats)
Composition of Rajya Sabha Art. 80
Rajya Sabha members from states are elected indirectly — by the elected members of State Legislative Assemblies (Vidhan Sabhas) using the Single Transferable Vote (STV) system with proportional representation. This means the number of seats a party gets in Rajya Sabha from a state roughly reflects its strength in the state assembly.
Presidential Nominations (12 members)
The President nominates 12 members to Rajya Sabha from persons who have distinguished themselves in the fields of:
- Literature and arts
- Science and technology
- Social service
- Cooperative movements
Term of the Houses
5-Year Term
- Normal term: 5 years from the date of its first sitting
- Can be dissolved earlier by the President on PM’s advice
- Term can be extended during National Emergency (Art. 352) — 1 year at a time
- Example: The 1976 Lok Sabha extended during Emergency
- Members elected afresh after dissolution
- Speaker holds office for the duration of the House
Permanent House
- Never dissolved — continues permanently
- Each member has a 6-year term
- 1/3 members retire every 2 years
- Ensures continuity when Lok Sabha is dissolved
- Elections held biennially (every 2 years)
- Chairman = Vice President of India
Detailed Comparison: Lok Sabha vs Rajya Sabha ⭐
| Feature | Lok Sabha | Rajya Sabha |
|---|---|---|
| Article | Art. 81 | Art. 80 |
| Official Name | House of the People | Council of States |
| Nature | Lower House (by convention) | Upper House (by convention) |
| Representation | People of India directly | States and UTs of India |
| Election Method | Direct — Universal Adult Franchise (FPTP) | Indirect — State Assemblies via STV |
| Maximum Strength | 552 (530 States + 20 UTs + 2 nominated) | 250 (238 States/UTs + 12 nominated) |
| Present Strength | 543 | 245 |
| Nominated Members | 2 (Anglo-Indian — abolished 2020) | 12 (by President — Art, Science, Service) |
| Term of House | 5 years (extendable during Emergency) | Permanent — never dissolved |
| Term of Member | 5 years (same as house) | 6 years |
| Dissolution | Can be dissolved by President | Cannot be dissolved — permanent |
| Minimum Age | 25 years | 30 years |
| Presiding Officer | Speaker (Deputy Speaker) | Chairman = Vice President (Deputy Chairman) |
| Money Bills | Introduced only here; decisive | Cannot introduce; only suggest amendments; 14-day limit |
| No-Confidence Motion | Yes — decisive; govt falls if passed | No — cannot move no-confidence |
| Joint Sitting | Lok Sabha vote usually prevails (larger house) | Rarely can match Lok Sabha in joint sitting |
| Special Powers | Money Bills supremacy; executive accountability | Art. 249 (State List); Art. 312 (All India Services) |
| Quorum | 1/10th of total membership = 55 | 1/10th of total membership = 25 |
Legislative Powers & Joint Sitting Art. 108
For ordinary (non-money) bills, both houses have equal legislative powers. A bill must be passed by both houses in the same form to become law. If there is a disagreement, Article 108 provides for resolution.
Historical Joint Sittings
| Year | Bill | Issue |
|---|---|---|
| 1961 | Dowry Prohibition Bill | First-ever joint sitting in Indian parliamentary history |
| 1978 | Banking Service Commission (Repeal) Bill | Second joint sitting |
| 2002 | Prevention of Terrorism Act (POTA) | Third (most recent) joint sitting — controversial legislation |
Financial Powers ⭐ (Very Important) Art. 110
Financial matters represent the area of greatest asymmetry between Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha. The Constitution gives Lok Sabha near-total supremacy on money matters — reflecting the principle that the elected representatives of the people, not states, should control taxation and expenditure.
| Financial Power | Lok Sabha | Rajya Sabha |
|---|---|---|
| Introduction of Money Bill | ONLY Lok Sabha can introduce | Cannot introduce a Money Bill |
| Amendment of Money Bill | Can accept or reject RS suggestions | Cannot amend; can only suggest |
| Time Limit | No time limit; decisive authority | Must return within 14 days; if not, deemed passed |
| If RS rejects | Deemed passed by both Houses as sent by LS | Rejection has no effect — LS version prevails |
| Joint Sitting | No joint sitting needed for Money Bills | No right to demand joint sitting |
| Certification | Speaker certifies a bill as Money Bill | Cannot challenge Speaker’s certification |
| Annual Budget | Voted and passed by Lok Sabha; decisive | Debated but cannot vote on Demands for Grants |
| Cut Motions | Available to LS members during budget | Not available to RS members |
What is a Money Bill? Art. 110
A Money Bill deals exclusively with: imposition/abolition/remission/alteration of taxes; regulation of borrowing by government; custody/withdrawal from Consolidated Fund; appropriation of money from Consolidated Fund; declaration of any expenditure as charged on the Consolidated Fund; and receipt/custody/issue of Consolidated Fund or Public Account.
Executive Control
The Council of Ministers is collectively responsible to Lok Sabha alone — not to Rajya Sabha (Article 75(3)). This means the government’s survival depends entirely on Lok Sabha’s confidence. Rajya Sabha has no formal power to remove the government.
Can be moved in LS; if passed, govt must resign
SUPREMACY
Cannot be moved in RS; no power to remove govt
Ministers answerable to LS; starred/unstarred questions
HOUSES
Ministers also answerable to RS (if they’re members)
Available during Demands for Grants
ONLY
Not available in Rajya Sabha
PM and most Cabinet ministers are LS members usually
Some Ministers may be RS members; PM can be RS member
Special Powers of Rajya Sabha ⭐
Though Rajya Sabha is weaker than Lok Sabha on financial and executive matters, it has two exclusive special powers that Lok Sabha does not possess — making it indispensable in India’s federal structure.
Parliament on State Subject
If Rajya Sabha passes a resolution by 2/3 majority of members present and voting, it empowers Parliament to legislate on any subject in the State List — normally under state jurisdiction — in the national interest.
- Resolution valid for 1 year (renewable)
- Laws made lapse 6 months after resolution expires
- Lok Sabha cannot do this alone — only RS can trigger this
- Used for national emergencies or inter-state coordination
Create New All India Services
Rajya Sabha can pass a resolution by 2/3 majority declaring that it is necessary in the national interest to create new All India Services (AIS) common to the Union and states.
- Existing AIS: IAS, IPS, IFoS
- New AIS (proposed but not created): IES, IJS etc.
- Only Rajya Sabha can initiate this — not Lok Sabha
- Reflects RS role as guardian of federal services
Constitutional Amendment Powers Art. 368
Constitutional amendments are the one area where both houses are strictly equal. Unlike ordinary bills, constitutional amendments cannot be resolved through a joint sitting — both Houses must separately agree.
| Type of Amendment | Procedure | Joint Sitting? |
|---|---|---|
| Simple majority (Art. 368 excludes these) | Normal legislative process — simple majority | Yes, possible |
| Special majority (most amendments) | 2/3 of members present and voting + more than 50% of total membership — in EACH House separately | NO — not allowed |
| Special majority + State ratification | Above + ratification by at least 50% of State Legislatures — for federal provisions | NO — not allowed |
Importance of Bicameralism in India
- Prevents hasty legislation: Two houses provide double scrutiny — a bill that survives both chambers is more likely to be well-considered and durable
- Protects federalism: Rajya Sabha gives states a voice in central legislation — especially through Art. 249 and Art. 312 — protecting states from legislative overreach by a large-majority Lok Sabha
- Checks majoritarian excess: A party with overwhelming Lok Sabha majority (e.g., 400+ seats) is checked by Rajya Sabha where proportional representation of state assemblies may deny it a majority
- Continuity of Parliament: Rajya Sabha’s permanence means Parliament never completely ceases — ensuring no legislative vacuum
- Expert participation: Presidential nominees bring expertise in arts, science, social service that constituency elections rarely produce
- Regional balance: Rajya Sabha’s composition, though not equal-per-state like the US Senate, still gives voice to smaller states
- Revision chamber: Bills sent from Lok Sabha are reviewed by Rajya Sabha — catching errors, improving drafting, adding provisions
Criticism of Rajya Sabha & Counter-Arguments
Arguments Against Rajya Sabha
- Obstruction: Often used by opposition to block legitimate legislation even when government has a clear Lok Sabha mandate (e.g., GST Bill delayed for years in Rajya Sabha)
- Political nominations: Presidential nominations are often political — leaders of political parties rather than genuine experts in arts/science
- Indirect election weakens accountability: Members are not directly accountable to voters — they answer to state assembly members who elected them
- Duplicates Lok Sabha: On ordinary bills, Rajya Sabha adds a layer of delay without always adding substantive value
- Bypassing RS: Money Bill route is sometimes misused to pass important legislation (like Aadhaar Act) as Money Bills, thereby bypassing Rajya Sabha
In Defence of Rajya Sabha
- Federal guardian: Without RS, states would have no voice in central legislation — a fundamental federal need
- Quality legislation: RS scrutiny has improved many bills — several landmark laws were significantly amended based on RS suggestions
- Checking majoritarian excess: A government with 400 seats in LS could otherwise pass any constitutional amendment unchecked
- Continuity: No legislative vacuum during LS dissolution periods
- Expert voice: Some nominated members (Dr. Sachin Tendulkar, Dr. M.S. Swaminathan, Rekha) brought national prominence; some genuinely contribute
Comparative Analysis — Global Democracies ⭐
| Country | Lower House | Upper House | Election Method | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| India | Lok Sabha (543) | Rajya Sabha (245) | LS: Direct; RS: Indirect via State Assemblies | RS has special federal powers (Art. 249, 312); President nominates 12 to RS |
| USA | House of Representatives (435) | Senate (100) | Both: Direct election | 2 Senators per state regardless of population — equal state representation; Senate very powerful |
| UK | House of Commons (650) | House of Lords (~790) | Commons: Direct; Lords: Mostly appointed/hereditary | Lords can delay but not veto legislation; Commons supremacy via Parliament Acts 1911/1949 |
| Germany | Bundestag (~736) | Bundesrat (69) | Bundestag: Direct; Bundesrat: State govt ministers (not elected separately) | Bundesrat represents state governments directly; can veto federal laws affecting states |
| Australia | House of Representatives (151) | Senate (76) | Both: Direct election | Senate is very powerful — 12 senators per state regardless of population; can reject supply bills |
| France | National Assembly (577) | Senate (348) | Assembly: Direct; Senate: Indirect via local elected officials | Senate less powerful; Assembly can override Senate in final reading; unicameral in practice |
| Canada | House of Commons (338) | Senate (105) | Commons: Direct; Senate: Appointed by Governor-General on PM’s advice | Appointed Senate rarely used; Commons dominates; Senate is most criticised as undemocratic |
Upper House Strength Comparison
🇺🇸 USA — Senate
Ratifies treaties, confirms judges/ministers, equal in legislation, can impeach. Equal power with House of Representatives.
🇦🇺 Australia — Senate
Can reject supply bills; popularly elected; equal state representation. Can bring down government indirectly (1975 crisis).
🇩🇪 Germany — Bundesrat
State governments sit directly. Veto power over laws affecting state administration. Essential for true federalism.
🇮🇳 India — Rajya Sabha
Weaker on financial matters; no power to remove govt. Strong on amendments (no joint sitting) and Art. 249/312 powers.
🇫🇷 France — Senate
National Assembly can override Senate in final reading. Senate is revisory only. Limited federal relevance in unitary France.
🇨🇦 Canada — Senate
Appointed, not elected. Almost never rejects Commons legislation. Most dormant upper house among democracies.
🇬🇧 UK — House of Lords
Can delay bills by 1 year; cannot veto. Commons can override via Parliament Acts. Lords is mostly appointed/hereditary.
Lessons for India from Global Comparisons
- From USA: Equal state representation in the Senate ensures small states have genuine power — India’s Rajya Sabha, where UP gets 31 seats and Sikkim gets 1, is less egalitarian federally. A move towards more equal state representation (like the Senate model) would strengthen federalism but faces political resistance from large states
- From Germany: Having state government ministers directly in the upper house (Bundesrat model) ensures state interests are represented by those actually governing states — more effective than India’s indirectly elected RS members who may not always reflect current state government positions
- From Australia: A directly elected, powerful upper house provides stronger democratic legitimacy to bicameralism — India’s Rajya Sabha loses some credibility from being indirectly elected
- From UK: The Parliament Acts (1911, 1949) provide a clear legal mechanism for the lower house to override the upper house — reducing procedural uncertainty. India’s joint sitting mechanism serves a similar purpose but is used extremely rarely
- For India’s Rajya Sabha: Strengthening its research support, ensuring truly expert nominations, preventing abuse of Money Bill certification, and making DRSC scrutiny mandatory would significantly enhance Rajya Sabha’s contribution to India’s democracy
UPSC Prelims MCQs (10 Questions)
Which house of Parliament has the exclusive power to create new All India Services?
- a) Lok Sabha
- b) Rajya Sabha ✓
- c) Both Houses jointly
- d) President of India
In which of the following situations can a joint sitting of Parliament NOT be convened?
- a) When Rajya Sabha rejects a Bill passed by Lok Sabha
- b) When Rajya Sabha does not pass a Bill within 6 months
- c) When the two Houses disagree on a Constitutional Amendment Bill ✓
- d) When the two Houses disagree on amendments to a Bill
The maximum strength of Rajya Sabha as provided in the Constitution is:
- a) 238
- b) 245
- c) 250 ✓
- d) 252
Under Article 249, Rajya Sabha can empower Parliament to legislate on the State List by passing a resolution with:
- a) Simple majority of total membership
- b) Simple majority of members present and voting
- c) 2/3 majority of members present and voting ✓
- d) 3/4 majority of total membership
Consider: 1. The Chairman of Rajya Sabha is elected by its members. 2. Rajya Sabha members are elected by STV system. 3. The minimum age for Rajya Sabha membership is 30 years. Which of the above is/are CORRECT?
- a) 1 and 2 only
- b) 2 and 3 only ✓
- c) 1 and 3 only
- d) All three
How many joint sittings of Parliament have been held in Indian history till date?
- a) Only 1
- b) Only 2
- c) Only 3 ✓
- d) Only 5
Which of the following statements about a Money Bill is CORRECT?
- a) It can be introduced in either House of Parliament
- b) Rajya Sabha can amend it but not reject it
- c) If Rajya Sabha doesn’t return it within 14 days, it is deemed to be passed by both Houses ✓
- d) A joint sitting is required if Rajya Sabha rejects a Money Bill
In which country do state government ministers directly constitute the upper house?
- a) USA
- b) Australia
- c) Germany ✓
- d) France
The 104th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2019 abolished which nominated category in Lok Sabha?
- a) Nominated members from science and literature
- b) Nominated members from armed forces
- c) Nominated Anglo-Indian members ✓
- d) Nominated members from cooperative movements
Which of the following is TRUE about Rajya Sabha in the context of Constitutional Amendments?
- a) Rajya Sabha can be overridden by Lok Sabha in a joint sitting for constitutional amendments
- b) Rajya Sabha has no role in constitutional amendments
- c) No constitutional amendment can be passed without Rajya Sabha’s approval ✓
- d) Rajya Sabha can pass constitutional amendments by simple majority
UPSC Mains Answer Framework
“Rajya Sabha plays an important role in protecting Indian federalism.” Critically examine with reference to its composition, special powers, and limitations. (15 marks)
Introduction
India’s federal structure requires a legislative institution that gives states a voice in central legislation. The Rajya Sabha, as the Council of States, was designed to fulfil this role. While critics dismiss it as an obstructionist or redundant body, its constitutional design and special powers make it an indispensable pillar of Indian federalism.
Body — Federal Role
- Composition: Members indirectly elected by state assemblies — RS membership reflects party strength in states, giving states proportional representation in central legislature
- Article 249: RS alone can authorize Parliament to legislate on State List subjects — a federal safeguard ensuring this expansion of central power requires state-representative approval
- Article 312: New All India Services (serving both Centre and States) can only be created on RS resolution — recognising RS as the appropriate body to decide on services that affect state governance
- Constitutional amendments (Art. 368): No amendment to federal provisions possible without RS approval by special majority — effective federal veto on constitutional change
- Checking majoritarian LS: In eras of massive LS majority, RS provides the only legislative check — protecting states that may be in opposition
Body — Critical Limitations
- Unequal state representation: UP gets 31, Sikkim gets 1 — unlike US Senate with equal 2 per state
- Members may not reflect current state government positions; RS members are elected by assemblies for 6 years — assemblies may change political colour during this period
- Money Bill bypass: Government can route important legislation as Money Bills to avoid RS scrutiny — weakening its federal role
- Nominations compromise independence: 12 presidential nominees create potential for political bias
Conclusion
Rajya Sabha’s federal role is real but imperfect. Its special powers (Art. 249, 312) and constitutional amendment veto are genuinely important safeguards. However, unequal state representation and the Money Bill bypass erode its effectiveness. Reform — including fairer state representation and restrained use of Money Bill certification — is essential to make Rajya Sabha a stronger federal institution.
Examine the financial powers of Parliament. Why does Lok Sabha have supremacy over Rajya Sabha in financial matters? (10 marks)
Introduction
Parliamentary control over public finance is a cornerstone of democratic governance. The Indian Constitution, however, does not give equal financial powers to both Houses. Lok Sabha enjoys decisive supremacy over Rajya Sabha in all money matters — a deliberate constitutional design reflecting the principle that those directly accountable to the electorate should control taxation and expenditure.
Body — Financial Asymmetry
- Money Bills (Art. 110, 109): Can only be introduced in LS; RS can only suggest amendments which LS may accept or reject; RS has 14-day limit; deemed passed if RS doesn’t return in time
- Budget process: Demands for Grants voted only in LS; RS debates but cannot vote; Cut Motions available only to LS members
- No joint sitting for Money Bills: LS’s version automatically prevails — RS cannot even trigger a joint sitting
- Annual Appropriation: LS alone authorises withdrawals from Consolidated Fund of India
Body — Why This Asymmetry?
- Direct accountability: LS members are directly elected by citizens who pay taxes — they have the most direct democratic mandate to control taxation
- Executive accountability: Government is accountable to LS; it is logical that LS also controls the government’s financial powers
- Avoid federal deadlock: If RS could veto Money Bills, states could block central financial legislation through RS — paralyzing national finance
Conclusion
Lok Sabha’s financial supremacy is constitutionally coherent — directly elected representatives controlling public money is a democratic principle found in most bicameral democracies. However, the increasing use of Money Bill certification to bypass RS on non-financial matters (Aadhaar, Finance Bills) is a misuse that weakens both RS’s federal role and democratic accountability.
Compare the upper houses of India, USA, UK, and Germany. What lessons can India draw for strengthening Rajya Sabha? (15 marks)
Introduction
Upper houses in bicameral legislatures vary enormously in power, composition, and democratic legitimacy. India’s Rajya Sabha occupies a middle position — more powerful than UK’s House of Lords, less powerful than the US Senate. Comparative analysis reveals important lessons for enhancing Rajya Sabha’s effectiveness.
Body — Comparative Analysis
- USA Senate: 2 senators per state regardless of population — strongest upper house; equal legislative powers; ratifies treaties; confirms judges/ministers; no equivalent in India
- UK House of Lords: ~790 members, mostly appointed; can delay but not veto; Parliament Acts 1911/1949 ensure Commons supremacy; weakest among major democracies
- Germany Bundesrat: 69 members — state government ministers themselves; votes as state blocks; veto on laws affecting states; most genuinely federal upper house
- India Rajya Sabha: 245 members; indirectly elected by state assemblies (STV); President nominates 12; moderate powers; special powers Art. 249, 312; veto on amendments
Body — Lessons for India
- From USA: Consider more equal state representation in RS to strengthen federalism
- From Germany: Consider having Chief Ministers or state ministers as RS members — more direct state government voice
- From Australia: Directly elected RS would increase legitimacy and public accountability
- General reform: Prevent Money Bill misuse; make DRSC referral mandatory; longer tenures to build expertise; stronger research support
Conclusion
The ideal upper house balances federal representation, democratic accountability, and legislative effectiveness. India’s Rajya Sabha has constitutional strengths (Art. 249, 312, Art. 368 veto) that global comparisons validate. But unequal state representation, indirect election, and frequent executive bypasses limit its potential. Thoughtful reforms drawing on the best of global practice can make Rajya Sabha a truly powerful federal institution.
Memory Tricks for Aspirants 🧠
⚡ Quick Recall Techniques
One-Page Revision Summary 📄
⚡ Last-Day Revision — Lok Sabha vs Rajya Sabha
Lok Sabha — Basics
Art. 81. Max 552. Present 543. Direct election (FPTP). 5-year term. Dissolved by President. Speaker presides. Min age 25.
Rajya Sabha — Basics
Art. 80. Max 250. Present 245. Indirect (STV). Permanent. 6-yr terms; 1/3 retire every 2 yrs. VP chairs. Min age 30. 12 nominated.
Money Bill Supremacy
Art. 109–110. Only LS introduces. RS returns in 14 days or deemed passed. RS can only suggest. No joint sitting. Speaker certifies.
Joint Sitting (Art. 108)
For ordinary bill deadlock. 3 instances (1961, 1978, 2002). NOT for: Money Bills, Art. 368 amendments, Art. 3 bills. LS prevails (larger).
Art. 249 — RS Exclusive
RS 2/3 majority → Parliament can legislate on State List. Valid 1 year (renewable). RS-only power. For national interest.
Art. 312 — RS Exclusive
RS 2/3 majority → Create new All India Services. Existing: IAS, IPS, IFoS. RS-only power. Federal service creation.
Art. 368 — Equal Powers
Constitutional amendment: Special majority in EACH House separately. No joint sitting. RS has effective veto on amendments.
Executive Control
Council of Ministers responsible ONLY to Lok Sabha (Art. 75(3)). No-confidence only in LS. RS has no power to remove govt.
Global — USA Senate
100 Senators (2 per state). Direct election. Very powerful. Ratifies treaties. Confirms appointments. Equal to House of Representatives.
Global — UK Lords
~790 members mostly appointed. Can delay 1 year. Cannot veto. Parliament Acts 1911/1949. Weakest major upper house.
Global — Germany Bundesrat
69 members = state government ministers directly. State block votes. Veto on federal laws affecting states. Most federal model.
104th Amendment (2020)
Abolished 2 nominated Anglo-Indian seats in Lok Sabha and state assemblies. Extended SC/ST reservations for 10 more years.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Why is Rajya Sabha a permanent house that can never be dissolved?
Rajya Sabha’s permanence is a deliberate constitutional design to ensure legislative continuity. When Lok Sabha is dissolved — whether due to loss of majority, expiry of term, or pre-term dissolution — there is a period when no Lok Sabha exists. If Rajya Sabha were also dissolved, Parliament itself would cease to exist entirely, creating a dangerous constitutional vacuum.
Since Rajya Sabha is permanent, Parliament always exists as an institution even without Lok Sabha. The President can promulgate ordinances during this period under Article 123, and Rajya Sabha can be called upon in genuine national emergencies. Additionally, Rajya Sabha’s permanence reflects its character as the chamber of states — states are permanent entities, unlike the political majority in Lok Sabha which can change.
Why does Lok Sabha dominate financial matters?
Lok Sabha’s financial supremacy rests on the democratic principle that “no taxation without representation” — those who are directly accountable to the taxpayers should control public money. Since Lok Sabha members are directly elected by the people (who pay taxes), they have the most direct democratic mandate to decide on fiscal matters.
Additionally, the executive (Council of Ministers) is accountable only to Lok Sabha — so it is logical that the body which controls the government also controls the government’s finances. If Rajya Sabha had equal financial powers, states could block central financial legislation through RS, potentially paralyzing national fiscal policy. The framers deliberately concentrated financial power in the directly elected chamber to avoid such gridlock.
Is Rajya Sabha weaker than Lok Sabha overall?
The answer is: Weaker in some areas, equal in others, stronger in none — but indispensable in all.
Areas where RS is weaker: Money Bills (no real power), executive accountability (cannot remove government), joint sitting (LS usually prevails due to larger numbers), budget scrutiny (cannot vote on Demands for Grants).
Areas where RS is equal to LS: Ordinary legislation (equal power to pass, amend, reject), constitutional amendments (Art. 368 — no joint sitting; RS veto is absolute), privileges of members.
Areas where RS has exclusive powers: Article 249 (empowering Parliament to legislate on State List), Article 312 (creating new All India Services) — no equivalent LS power exists.
The verdict: RS is generally weaker, but in the specific areas that matter most for federalism and constitutional integrity, it is either equal or uniquely powerful. This makes it indispensable despite being “weaker” overall.
What is the Aadhaar Money Bill controversy and why does it matter?
The Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Act, 2016 was certified by the Lok Sabha Speaker as a Money Bill, allowing it to bypass Rajya Sabha scrutiny. Critics argued that Aadhaar — which creates a national biometric identity system — is far more than a money bill and should have been examined by Rajya Sabha.
The Supreme Court in Puttaswamy vs Union of India (2018) upheld the Aadhaar Act as a whole by majority, but Justice D.Y. Chandrachud’s dissent specifically held that certifying Aadhaar as a Money Bill was constitutionally incorrect and amounted to a “fraud on the Constitution.” This controversy has reignited debate about the misuse of Money Bill certification to bypass Rajya Sabha — effectively undermining bicameralism through a procedural technicality. Since the Speaker’s certification is constitutionally final and not judicially reviewable (except in extreme cases), this loophole remains available to future governments.
Can the Prime Minister be a Rajya Sabha member? What are the implications?
Yes — the Constitution does not require the Prime Minister to be a Lok Sabha member. Under Article 75, the PM is appointed by the President, and the only requirement is that s/he should be a member of either House of Parliament (or become one within 6 months). Dr. Manmohan Singh served as PM from 2004–2014 as a Rajya Sabha member — the most notable example.
Implications: A RS PM creates a constitutional situation where the PM is not directly accountable to the directly elected chamber. The PM cannot participate in Lok Sabha Question Hour or vote in it. However, PM must still command Lok Sabha’s confidence (Art. 75(3)) — if Lok Sabha passes a no-confidence motion, a RS PM must also resign. The arrangement works but is constitutionally awkward and reduces direct democratic accountability.
What is the difference between the First Past the Post (FPTP) system used in Lok Sabha and the STV system used in Rajya Sabha elections?
First Past the Post (FPTP) — Lok Sabha: Each constituency returns one MP. The candidate with the most votes wins, even without a majority. Simple and decisive, but can produce highly disproportionate results — a party with 35% of votes might win 60% of seats. Used because it produces clear majorities and is easy for large electorates to understand.
Single Transferable Vote (STV) — Rajya Sabha: Used when state assemblies elect RS members. Each voter (MLA) ranks candidates in order of preference. A mathematical quota is calculated. If a candidate exceeds the quota, surplus votes transfer to next preferences. If no one reaches quota, the weakest candidate is eliminated and their votes transfer. This produces proportional representation — each party gets RS seats roughly proportional to its assembly strength. Prevents a party with 60% assembly seats from winning all RS seats from that state; smaller parties in the assembly can still win some RS seats.