Graduate Level intermediate Election Commission Indian Polity Anti-Defection EVM NOTA
Complete notes on Election Commission (Art 324), CEC, Model Code, EVM, NOTA, Delimitation, and Anti-Defection Law for Kerala PSC.
▶ മലയാളത്തിൽ വായിക്കുക
Complete notes on Election Commission (Art 324), CEC, Model Code, EVM, NOTA, Delimitation, and Anti-Defection Law for Kerala PSC.
#Election Commission
#Indian Polity
#Anti-Defection
#EVM
#NOTA
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The Election Commission of India is one of the most important constitutional bodies and a regular feature in Kerala PSC exams. These notes cover Article 324, composition, powers, election processes, and the anti-defection law.
Constitutional Basis — Article 324
Aspect Details Article 324 of the Indian Constitution Part Part XV (Elections) — Articles 324 to 329 Nature Constitutional body (not statutory)Function Superintendence, direction, and control of elections Elections covered President, Vice President, Parliament, State Legislatures NOT covered Panchayat and Municipality elections (handled by State Election Commission under Art 243K)
Composition of Election Commission
Feature Details Originally Single-member body (only CEC) Multi-member since 1 October 1993 (by executive order) Current composition 1 Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) + 2 Election Commissioners (ECs) Appointment By the President (on recommendation of a committee — PM, Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha, and a Union Cabinet Minister, per 2023 Act) Term 6 years or until age 65, whichever is earlier Salary Equivalent to a Judge of the Supreme Court Removal of CEC Same procedure as removal of Supreme Court Judge (impeachment — proved misbehaviour or incapacity, address by both Houses, special majority) Removal of ECs On recommendation of CEC (they do NOT have the same protection as CEC)
Important CECs to Remember
CEC Key Contribution Sukumar Sen First CEC of India (1950–1958); conducted first two general elections T.N. Seshan 10th CEC; enforced Model Code strictly; made EC powerful in practice M.S. Gill Introduced EVMs widely
Powers and Functions of Election Commission
Power Details Determine election schedule Announce dates for all phases Model Code of Conduct Enforce rules from date of announcement till results Recognize political parties Grant national/state party status based on vote share Allot election symbols Assign and adjudicate disputes over symbols Voter registration Prepare and revise electoral rolls Disqualification opinions Advise President/Governor on disqualification of members Postpone/cancel elections If booth capturing, violence, or natural calamity Appoint observers Deploy general and expenditure observers Order re-poll At specific booths if irregularities found
Model Code of Conduct (MCC)
Feature Details Nature Not statutory — it is a set of guidelines, not a lawEnforcement Through moral authority and administrative orders of EC Applies from Date of election announcement until results declared Key rules No new government schemes; no use of government machinery; no communal/caste appeals; no bribing voters For ruling party Cannot use official media/aircraft for campaign; no policy announcements that could influence voters
Electronic Voting Machine (EVM)
Feature Details First used 1982 (Paravur Assembly constituency, Kerala — on experimental basis) Widespread use From 2004 general elections (all constituencies) Manufactured by Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL) and Electronics Corporation of India Limited (ECIL) Components Ballot Unit (BU) + Control Unit (CU) VVPAT added Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail — mandatory since 2019 general elections VVPAT slip visible for 7 seconds Maximum candidates per BU 16 (additional BUs can be linked; max 4 BUs = 64 candidates) Standalone Not connected to internet or any network
NOTA (None of the Above)
Feature Details Introduced 2013 (based on Supreme Court judgment in PUCL v. Union of India) Symbol Ballot paper with a cross mark Effect Even if NOTA gets highest votes, the candidate with highest valid votes wins (NOTA votes are counted but do not lead to rejection of all candidates) First used in 2013 state assembly elections (5 states)
Delimitation
Feature Details Meaning Redrawing boundaries of constituencies based on population Body Delimitation Commission (statutory body under Delimitation Act) Composition Retired SC judge (chairman) + CEC or nominee + State EC concerned Past commissions 1952, 1963, 1973, 2002 (4th Delimitation Commission) Freeze on seats 84th Amendment (2002) froze total seats until 2026 (based on 1971 census) to not penalize states that controlled population Orders Delimitation orders have force of law and cannot be questioned in court
Election Symbols
Feature Details Governed by Election Symbols (Reservation and Allotment) Order, 1968 National parties Get exclusive symbol across India State parties Get exclusive symbol in that state Unrecognized parties Get symbol from “free symbols” list Split disputes EC decides which faction gets the symbol (Para 15 of the Order)
Recognition Criteria
Status Criteria (simplified) National Party Secures 6% votes in 4+ states AND wins 4 Lok Sabha seats; OR wins 2% of total Lok Sabha seats from 3+ states State Party Secures 6% votes in state AND wins 2 Assembly seats; OR wins 3% of Assembly seats; OR wins 1 Lok Sabha seat per 25 allotted to state
Anti-Defection Law — 52nd Amendment (1985)
Feature Details Added Tenth Schedule to the Constitution Amendment 52nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1985 Came into force 1 March 1985 Modified by 91st Amendment Act, 2003
Grounds for Disqualification
Situation Disqualified? Member voluntarily gives up party membership Yes Member votes against party whip (or abstains) without permission Yes Nominated member joins a party after 6 months of taking seat Yes Independent member joins any party after election Yes
Exceptions (When defection is NOT penalized)
Exception Details Merger At least 2/3 of members of a party in the legislature merge with another party — not treated as defection (91st Amendment, 2003) Speaker election Presiding officer can leave party and rejoin — not defection
Key Points — 91st Amendment, 2003
Removed the earlier exemption for “splits” (earlier, 1/3 members splitting was exempt)
Now only merger of 2/3 is an exception
Barred defectors from holding ministerial positions until re-elected or until term expires
Reduced size of Council of Ministers to 15% of House strength
Decision Authority
House Who decides? Lok Sabha / State Assembly Speaker of the HouseRajya Sabha / State Legislative Council Chairman of the HouseJudicial review SC held in Kihoto Hollohan case (1992) that Speaker’s decision is subject to judicial review
Important Articles Related to Elections
Article Subject 324 Election Commission — superintendence and control 325 No person ineligible for electoral roll on basis of religion, race, caste, sex 326 Adult suffrage (18 years — 61st Amendment, 1989) 327 Parliament may make laws regarding elections 328 State legislature may make laws for state elections 329 Courts shall not interfere in electoral matters (bar on jurisdiction)
Voting Age and Milestones
Milestone Year Original voting age 21 years (1950) Reduced to 18 years 61st Amendment Act, 1988 (effective 1989) First election under 18-year age 1989 General Election Largest electorate ever 2024 General Election (~97 crore eligible voters)
PSC Expected Questions
Article for Election Commission — 324
First CEC — Sukumar Sen
EVM first used — 1982, Paravur, Kerala
NOTA introduced — 2013 (PUCL v. Union of India)
Anti-Defection Law — 52nd Amendment, 1985, Tenth Schedule
Merger exception — 2/3 members (91st Amendment, 2003)
Voting age reduced to 18 — 61st Amendment, 1988
Model Code of Conduct — Not statutory , enforced by EC
Delimitation seats frozen until — 2026 (84th Amendment)
CEC removal — Same as Supreme Court Judge (impeachment)
Hub: Indian Polity — Complete Guide for Kerala PSC
More on Constitutional and Statutory Bodies:
The Election Commission of India is one of the most important constitutional bodies and a regular feature in Kerala PSC exams. These notes cover Article 324, composition, powers, election processes, and the anti-defection law.
Constitutional Basis — Article 324
Aspect Details Article 324 of the Indian Constitution Part Part XV (Elections) — Articles 324 to 329 Nature Constitutional body (not statutory)Function Superintendence, direction, and control of elections Elections covered President, Vice President, Parliament, State Legislatures NOT covered Panchayat and Municipality elections (handled by State Election Commission under Art 243K)
Composition of Election Commission
Feature Details Originally Single-member body (only CEC) Multi-member since 1 October 1993 (by executive order) Current composition 1 Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) + 2 Election Commissioners (ECs) Appointment By the President (on recommendation of a committee — PM, Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha, and a Union Cabinet Minister, per 2023 Act) Term 6 years or until age 65, whichever is earlier Salary Equivalent to a Judge of the Supreme Court Removal of CEC Same procedure as removal of Supreme Court Judge (impeachment — proved misbehaviour or incapacity, address by both Houses, special majority) Removal of ECs On recommendation of CEC (they do NOT have the same protection as CEC)
Important CECs to Remember
CEC Key Contribution Sukumar Sen First CEC of India (1950–1958); conducted first two general elections T.N. Seshan 10th CEC; enforced Model Code strictly; made EC powerful in practice M.S. Gill Introduced EVMs widely
Powers and Functions of Election Commission
Power Details Determine election schedule Announce dates for all phases Model Code of Conduct Enforce rules from date of announcement till results Recognize political parties Grant national/state party status based on vote share Allot election symbols Assign and adjudicate disputes over symbols Voter registration Prepare and revise electoral rolls Disqualification opinions Advise President/Governor on disqualification of members Postpone/cancel elections If booth capturing, violence, or natural calamity Appoint observers Deploy general and expenditure observers Order re-poll At specific booths if irregularities found
Model Code of Conduct (MCC)
Feature Details Nature Not statutory — it is a set of guidelines, not a lawEnforcement Through moral authority and administrative orders of EC Applies from Date of election announcement until results declared Key rules No new government schemes; no use of government machinery; no communal/caste appeals; no bribing voters For ruling party Cannot use official media/aircraft for campaign; no policy announcements that could influence voters
Electronic Voting Machine (EVM)
Feature Details First used 1982 (Paravur Assembly constituency, Kerala — on experimental basis) Widespread use From 2004 general elections (all constituencies) Manufactured by Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL) and Electronics Corporation of India Limited (ECIL) Components Ballot Unit (BU) + Control Unit (CU) VVPAT added Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail — mandatory since 2019 general elections VVPAT slip visible for 7 seconds Maximum candidates per BU 16 (additional BUs can be linked; max 4 BUs = 64 candidates) Standalone Not connected to internet or any network
NOTA (None of the Above)
Feature Details Introduced 2013 (based on Supreme Court judgment in PUCL v. Union of India) Symbol Ballot paper with a cross mark Effect Even if NOTA gets highest votes, the candidate with highest valid votes wins (NOTA votes are counted but do not lead to rejection of all candidates) First used in 2013 state assembly elections (5 states)
Delimitation
Feature Details Meaning Redrawing boundaries of constituencies based on population Body Delimitation Commission (statutory body under Delimitation Act) Composition Retired SC judge (chairman) + CEC or nominee + State EC concerned Past commissions 1952, 1963, 1973, 2002 (4th Delimitation Commission) Freeze on seats 84th Amendment (2002) froze total seats until 2026 (based on 1971 census) to not penalize states that controlled population Orders Delimitation orders have force of law and cannot be questioned in court
Election Symbols
Feature Details Governed by Election Symbols (Reservation and Allotment) Order, 1968 National parties Get exclusive symbol across India State parties Get exclusive symbol in that state Unrecognized parties Get symbol from “free symbols” list Split disputes EC decides which faction gets the symbol (Para 15 of the Order)
Recognition Criteria
Status Criteria (simplified) National Party Secures 6% votes in 4+ states AND wins 4 Lok Sabha seats; OR wins 2% of total Lok Sabha seats from 3+ states State Party Secures 6% votes in state AND wins 2 Assembly seats; OR wins 3% of Assembly seats; OR wins 1 Lok Sabha seat per 25 allotted to state
Anti-Defection Law — 52nd Amendment (1985)
Feature Details Added Tenth Schedule to the Constitution Amendment 52nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1985 Came into force 1 March 1985 Modified by 91st Amendment Act, 2003
Grounds for Disqualification
Situation Disqualified? Member voluntarily gives up party membership Yes Member votes against party whip (or abstains) without permission Yes Nominated member joins a party after 6 months of taking seat Yes Independent member joins any party after election Yes
Exceptions (When defection is NOT penalized)
Exception Details Merger At least 2/3 of members of a party in the legislature merge with another party — not treated as defection (91st Amendment, 2003) Speaker election Presiding officer can leave party and rejoin — not defection
Key Points — 91st Amendment, 2003
Removed the earlier exemption for “splits” (earlier, 1/3 members splitting was exempt)
Now only merger of 2/3 is an exception
Barred defectors from holding ministerial positions until re-elected or until term expires
Reduced size of Council of Ministers to 15% of House strength
Decision Authority
House Who decides? Lok Sabha / State Assembly Speaker of the HouseRajya Sabha / State Legislative Council Chairman of the HouseJudicial review SC held in Kihoto Hollohan case (1992) that Speaker’s decision is subject to judicial review
Important Articles Related to Elections
Article Subject 324 Election Commission — superintendence and control 325 No person ineligible for electoral roll on basis of religion, race, caste, sex 326 Adult suffrage (18 years — 61st Amendment, 1989) 327 Parliament may make laws regarding elections 328 State legislature may make laws for state elections 329 Courts shall not interfere in electoral matters (bar on jurisdiction)
Voting Age and Milestones
Milestone Year Original voting age 21 years (1950) Reduced to 18 years 61st Amendment Act, 1988 (effective 1989) First election under 18-year age 1989 General Election Largest electorate ever 2024 General Election (~97 crore eligible voters)
PSC Expected Questions
Article for Election Commission — 324
First CEC — Sukumar Sen
EVM first used — 1982, Paravur, Kerala
NOTA introduced — 2013 (PUCL v. Union of India)
Anti-Defection Law — 52nd Amendment, 1985, Tenth Schedule
Merger exception — 2/3 members (91st Amendment, 2003)
Voting age reduced to 18 — 61st Amendment, 1988
Model Code of Conduct — Not statutory , enforced by EC
Delimitation seats frozen until — 2026 (84th Amendment)
CEC removal — Same as Supreme Court Judge (impeachment)
Hub: Indian Polity — Complete Guide for Kerala PSC
More on Constitutional and Statutory Bodies: