2015.202286.principles of Text
2015.202286.principles of Text
2015.202286.principles of Text
POLITICAL SCIENCE
By
ANUP CHAND KAPUR,
MA , Ph D.
Fifteenth
FIEVISED EDITION
1981
Branches *
Paper used for the printing of this book was made available
by the Government of India at concessional rates.
First Published 1950, New Editions and Reprints 1952, 54, 55, 57, 59, 61, 63
65, 67, 69, 71, 73, 74, 75, 1977, 1979 and
Fifteenth Revised Edition in 1981
Dehra Dun,
AN UP CHANDRAPUR
May 1, 1981.
PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION
There are some admirable text-books on Political Science, yet I have ventured to
bring out another volume on the subject. India having become a Sovereign and
Independent Republic, the study of Political Science has acquired an added
importance for all of us, particularly for students. Our students must be
thoroughly familiar with the complexity of the national and international
problems, and must also cultivate a scientific and unbiased approach to all such
problems. Students of today are the statesmen and administrators of tomorrow
and they will have to use their best talents for making India a great nation
In writing this book I do not claim any originality My aim throughout has
been to give students an easily intelligible exposition of the origin of the State
and forms and types of government, and I have taken special pains to present
impartially the different aspects of every question I have illustrated the text,
India. While doing so I have not been oblivious of the fact that the book is
primarily intended to cater for the needs of the students offenng Political Science
as one of their elective subjects for the degree examination of Indian Universities
The course covered, however, is substantially that prescribed by the Punjab
University from 1950
the various subjects dealt within the book I take this opportunity of acknowledg-
ing my indebtedness to the great masters from whom I have borrowed so
profusely I also express my respectful feelings of gratitude to my teachers.
My wife, as m the case of almost everything which I have ever published, has
helped me in reading the proofs
PARXni
Nature of Political Science, Aristotle tells us a simple truth when he says, “He
who IS unable to live in society, or who has no need because he is sufficient for
himself, either a beast or god ” It means that man is a social animal. He
must be
is born and he lives m society This is obviously for two reasons Man is
in society
a very gregarious animal He is easily affected by sympathy and the desire for
sympathy He prefers company to solitude He admires and imitate*' others, and
he likes to be admired and imitated These social impulses aside, necessity also
compels man to live a social life No man is self-sufficirnt, and nature has not
created one His needs are many and purposes numerous For the satisfaction of
his diverse needs and the fulfilment of his various purposes, he must associate
with his fellows and seek their co-operation Such is the testimony of history
Here and there an individual or a family has subsisted apart from the rest of the
human race, but that is an exception rather than a rule The general rule is that
men and always have lived, in social groups
live,
If man
is serial by nature, he is selfish and quarrelsome too This aspect of
the nature of man, and the instinct of living together and co-operating with one
another require adjustment of behaviour according to some accepted rules These
rules prescribe a course of conduct based upon men’s need for one another The
lirsland the most important rule of social conduct is “To do unto others as you
would have others do unto you ” It means, that I should provide for others the
same conditions of life as I wish for myself If 1 wish to grow and prosper, I owe it
lo others that they, too, should have the same conditions of life as I wish for
myself When I allow others what I wish for myself, I recognise my obligations to
others, while establishing my claims on others Realization of this fact is a way of
regulating human conduct But all conduct in society must conform to certain set
rules of common behaviour The rules governing a society may be few or many
They can lange from a fev\ primitive traditions, handed down orally, from one
generation to another, or to the whole complex set of constitutional and
governmental regulations which we associate with the modern State
neither cohesion nor unity of purposes for which men had organised themselves
and settled down territorially.
The society, thus, organised is called the State, rules which determine social
conduct are the laws of the State and the individuals who enforce the laws and
see that they are equally observed b> all constitute its government. The subject
that deals with man m relation to the State and its government is called Political
Science, Political Science may be defined, in its simplest form, as the study of
man in the process of governing himself
theory, therefore, is the existential fact that members of the human species live
together, whatever may be the elements of instinct, habit, necessity or choice that
induce people to form societies. If man is a social animal, is he then necessarily a
political animal ? Aristotle said he is, and it has remained a generally accepted
truth until recently But opinion now veers round to the belief that man is
exist ”3
obviously a quest for a just and happy life for men assembled together m a
territorially integrated S(x:iety and, as such, the best form of relationship
manifested m their governance that can ensure such a life. This quest has been
incessantly going on for centuries together without reaching agreed conclusions.
Nor is there any likelihood that men will ever do human
so, for civilisations are
for ever changing and so do change their values. What seems true, and even
self-evident for one generation or one civilisation is frequently rejected by the
succeeding generations, “Each generation”, explains Dorothy Pickles, “as it
becomes adult is faced with the responsibility of deciding whether to accept the
It does not, however, mean that all men are equally concerned with the
political life of society towhich they belong. Some people are indifTerent to
politics, others deplore them But quite a many play the game of politics. Even
the ordinary citizen making up his mind whether to vote for A or B, may be
invisibly trying to answer a sort of question which Plato and Aristotle had tried
to answer over 2,000 years ago, namely, what is the best form of government ? He
may not be thinking in terms of vital issues involved in such a question. He may
be simply trying to decide whether A or B is more likely to further his personal or
professional interests. Even so, he is one of thousands of his fellow citizens who is
the best form of government for me ^ And the multitude of different answers
given by him and his fellow citizens go to form the way in which government in a
particular country develops It is the wisdom of generations that goes to make the
political apparatus of a country and its culture
The impact which one individual citizen makes on his own or the succeeding
generations may be very small, but some critics of the existing social order “have
so touched* the minds or hearts of their fellow citizens or citizens of other times or
other countries that they have helped to bring about great changes in the
organisation of government ” Pla^o and Aristotle still exercise profound
influences on the thought of Western Europe and Rousseau and Marx are the
beau ideal of millions of people beyond the frontiers of their own countries
l.^ke’s teachings had a deep impact on the Americans and the French, the
former seeking to justify their struggle for independence and freedom from
foreign rule and the latter seeking to justify man’s right to revolt against the
arbitrary rule, which had plagued these countries for centuries together. Gandhi
dedicated himself to uplift man and society simultaneously He was out to
moralise man and society and in his attempt to realise a better ordering of
society, he devised a new moral strategy, the method of regulating along
non- violent lines group life in its political, economic and international aspects. By
his twin principles of truth and non-violence, Gamdhi revolutionised the course of
politico and the present day world standing on the brink of an abysmal cataclysm
does find solace in the Gandhian outlook and his peaceful techinque Gandhi’s
teachings are more relevant today than they were in his life time and this fact has
been universally admitted
latter in particular, reveal the bias of the thinkers, for example, the metaphysical
(Hegel), the juridical (Austin), the sociological (Maciver), the descriptive
(Garner) and many others with their own distinctive labels. In fact, there are as
he has worked out in advance (as it were) the basic presupposition of his personal
manner of interpreting the complete phenomenon of politics But also including
the ‘purpose’ that the studies involve in terms of the practical ends they
subserve.”**
Some writers restrict the scope of Political Science to the study of the State
alone, for example, Bluntschli. AH such writers exclude the study of government
fmm the scope of Political Science, for the State for them obviously includes the
study of government There are others who hold that Political Science deals only
with government Karl W Deutsch says, “Because Politics is the making of
decisions by public means, it is primarily concerned with government, that is,
itself There must be present in every State some men or body of men competent
to issue orders on its behalf and to see that they are actually obeyed That is the
government This is, however, the conventional field of functions of the
government The modern government has emerged as an active and positive
agent in the direction of affairs of all communities In the older democracies, and
still more in the newer developing States as well as in the Communist countries,
the State life itself cannot be sustained But this is not the only object of the
political life The State comes into existence, as Aristotle said, “originating in the
bare needs of the life of man and continuing in existence for the sake of good life”
„6. “The Expamding Frontier of Political Science”, The Indian Journal of Political Science,
the recent system theory, domestic and international, with all its innovations. So
long as the State remains a matter of reality in practical politics and its citizens
are required to preserve its sovereignty and integrity, and the unquestioned
respect for the symbols of its distinctness, like the national flag and the national
anthem, is instilled in them from their very childhood, an indispensable
it is
combination of both
In the last four decades or so there has been an upheaval, “intellectual
revolution" as it is described, in the thoughts and ideas of American political
scientistsand the innovations lhc> have introduced have greatly influenced the
nature and subject matter of our study The approach to the traditional theory of
Political Science, as they call it, is criticised on grounds of parochialism and
formalism The focus of study in the past, it is explained, tended to be primarily
on institutions and their legal norms, rules and regulations, oi on political ideas
and ideologies rather than on performance, interaction and behaviour The
modern political analysis, guided by sociological, anthropological and psycholo-
gicalmethods and theories, rests upon four basic principles (1) the search for
more comprehensive scope, (2) the search for realism, (3) the search for precision:
and (4) the search for intellectual order The object is to free the discipline of
PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
judgments.
Values are thought to be subjective preferences about which science has nothing
to do. Traditionally, the study of political values —
of what, for example, ought to
be the political structure and what political goals ought to be sought—has been
the field of pohtical philosophers. A main concern of the modern political
philosophers is the study of great thinkers of the past— Plato, Aristotle,
Separated, rather than divorced, from the study of political values is the
study of political institutions For a long period the study essentially centred
around the legislatures, executives and judiciaries, the three institutions for
making, carrying out and interpreting the law As the study developed and
knowledge advanced the area extended to include political parties, bureaucracies,
interest groups and other groups engaged in politics which have a continuous
existence At a later stage, it was further supplemented bv how political
communications work through press, radio, television, discussions or meetings
and how demands emerge and are formulated through interest groups and
political parties and their impact on government’s policies The emphasis is on
procedures and institutions through which authoritative decisions are made and
the outcome of such decision-making in the form of rule-making, rule-application
and rule-adjudication, to use terms broader and more meaningful than the
traditional legislative, executive and judicial functions The keynote is on facts
and as a consequence, political institutions are themselves evaluated to see to
what extent theory and practice diverge, the values of the present and the past in
varying degress
Recently, emphasis has been placed on the study of what is called ‘political
behaviour’ This approach, which is not restricted to declared behavioural ists,
concentrates on thtf behaviour of the individuals and groups within political
vmUVuUoTK.Ihe aim to get behind the formal structure and to study the actual
is
processes of politics m
order to uncover the ‘bnsidc story” and has led to a new or
revived interest m
the impact of social factors in the pohtical life This branch of
political studies owes a great deal to other social sciences,
particularly sociology
It is always the focus of interest”, says Maclvcr,
“that distinguishes one social
setenoe from another Wc
should not think of the social sciences as dividing
between them physical separate areas of reality What distinguishes each from
each is the selective interests.” A student of Political Science must sec the
problems of the State and the processes involved therein ajainst a background of
general knowledge, either existing or to be acquired al a basis for comment and
assessment
TERMINOLOGICAL DISTINCTIONS
It is rather unfortunate that there is no commonly accepted name for the
subject of our study Some call it Politics, others name it Political Theory and
many designate it as Political Philosophy The absence of a commonly accepted
title causes a good deal of confusion in understanding what it concerns the State
and government and the problems related thereto It is, accordingly, necessary to
know precisely what all these terms signify and then give the discipline a proper
name
Politics. Tlie term Politics was first used by Aristotle and he called it “the
master science”. The word Politics is derived from the Greek word polis meaning
a city. To the Greeks the city was the State and the subject that dealt with the
City-State and its problems was designated Politics. In our times, some emi-
nent political scientists, as Harold Laski,^ R H. Solatu^^ ,
Karl Deutsch and
10 Macivei, R M ,
and Page, CH ,
Society, An Introductory Analysts, p V
Frank Thakurdas, ''Ttu Expanding Frontier of Political Science’', The Indian Journal
1 1
many others ^ prefer the term Politics for the subject matter of our study
But ordinary usage equates Politics with party politics and politicians with
party politicians. As a result, it emphasises disagreement, which is so prominent in
party politics. In this context politics of one country differs from the politics of
another country and within the same country politics of one party differs from
the politics of another party, as each party offers its own solution of the problems
which concern the country For example, politics of the Indian National
Congress, though split into two hostile wings, differs from the politics of the
Janata Party or the Communist Party of India, itself divided into two warring
camps
It follows that a politician is a person who interests himself in the politics of
his country and that of a particular party which conforms to his political views
He is not a student of Political Science He is only concerned with the present
problems that confront the country and their solution as his party suggests
Politics IS, accordingly, an art rather than a science But Political Science is a
scientific study of the State —
its nature, conditions, origin and development -and
government, their functions and purposes and the institutions they foster in
order to make the task of “good life” possible A student of Political Science will
know something of society whose political system is involved, its history and
traditions, its physical and human environments in order to assess to what extent
the existing institutions fulfil the aspirations of the people and help in achieving
the goal of “good life” A politician may have nothing to do with all this
But the term Politics has acquired a new meaning in the context of
advancements of late made in the discipline of Political Science It hinges upon
the political activity carried on in human environment, in time and space, and
thus a product of economy, the society, history and geography Political activity
is based on agreement and whenever there is freedom a great deal of politics is
likely to be found This follows because men have diverse views, interest and
characteristics Disagreement, though a necessary condition of politics, is not
enough in itself Order is also required if politics is not to disappiear into chaos or
civil war An organised society is a restraint or disagreement, that is, the
women. Robert Dahl is of the opinion that every human association has a
political aspect and it is in this context that he defines a political system A
It follows then that every society or group requires that some people have
power over other people which is recognised by a sufficiently large number of
people as legitimate, acceptable to them In the primitive society the urge to
dominate was sheer naked force Advancement of civilisation made possible the
gradual transformation of brute force exercised and today there is competition for
power and for influence over the holders of power and it is duly regularised or
institutionalised Politics, as such, is striving to share power, or to influence its
distribution as well as the actual exercise of such power Lasswell and Kaplan,
accordingly, define Politics “as an empirical discipline, (as) the study of the
shaping and sharing of power” and “a political act (as) one performed in
power prospectives” in every phase of the society
But this analysis docs not reveal the whole content and scope of Political
Science It has preference for particular and limited scale of studies of a strictly
empirical character, a zeal for precision and objectivity It is the study of the
political systems in their relation to social structure, which altogether ignores how
the state, the pivotal entity of the discipline, and its institutions did actually
emerge and the process of their development Unless the student of Political
Science knows about the origin of the State, though the term has been discarded
but the only entity still universally recognised both in national and international
politics, and is familiar with its institutional framework and the manner m which
It has worked over the years, his study remains lop-slided. if not barren, and the
search for realism and precision becomes a futile elfort Loss of grasp of internal
coherence and independent influence of political institutions do not render it a
wholesome study and, accordingly, the term Politics docs not explain the real
significance and scope of the discipline
Political Theory. been variously described While some
Political theory has
18 Lasswell, Harald D ,
and Kaplan, Abraham, Power and Society, p. xiv
19 Ibid,
p 240
20 Voegelin, Eric, The New Science of Politics An Introduction, p 1
PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
inseparable from Political Thought Andrew Hacker*^ and S.S. Wolin 23 point
out the necessity of separating it from Political Philosophy and Political Ideology.
David Smith suggests that Political Theory is “the most encompassing of
intellectual activity” and classifies Philosophy, Thought and Ideology as specific
forms of Political Theory 24
Ernest Barker made a succinct distinction, in his article on “Greek Political
Thought and Theory in the Fourth Century BC”, which he reaffirmed m his
fixed, and in this collective participation not only politicians Publicist (the ,
particular mode, contributes to the general fund of this ‘Thought’, which then
’’2^
reflects the spirit of a decade or an ‘age’ Political Thought, as Leo Strauss
explained is time-bound, rooted and conditioned by the historical context It is
commonly said that a thinker is the “Child of his age”, though it may not be
neatly so
24. Smith, David G, “Political Science and Political Theory”, American Political
Science Revtew, September 1957, pp 734-746
25 Barker, Ernest, Ccanbrtdge Ancient Hiskry, Vo! V,
p 505
26 Thakurdas, Frank, “The Expanding Frontier of Political Science” The Indian
Jrnnal of I^hUcai Science, October-Dccember, 1973, pp 412-13
NATURE AND SCOPE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE II
Some writers regard Plato’s Republic as Utopia “of a timeless and spaceless
—
dimension a world of dream which cannot even act as a sedative to troublous
times ” But these writers overlook the intensely realistic concern of Plato. Even
Karl Popper, Plato’s bitterest critic of the twentieth century, concedes that he
was the first social scientist and an ardent reformer
The sharp rise in the ideological thinking between the two World
—
Wars Communism in Russia, Fascism in Italy and Naziism in Germany and —
the aggressive dogmatism with which these ideologies were preached and
practised, brought into focus the need to clearly distinguish Political Ideology
from the Political Theory. The necessity of such a distinction was deemed all the
more important in the light of Karl Marx’s challenge that all thinking is
ideological
Political Ideology means a system of ideas about life, society and government,
which through long and intensive processes of propaganda and usage, tend to
become the characteristic belief or dogma of a particular group, party or
nationality “It is a theory of social “which approaches social
life”, says Roucek,
realities from the point of view of a political ideal and
them consciously interprets
or unconsciously to prove the correctness of the analysis and to justify the
ideal It is intended to justify a particular system of power in scxriety in order
to realise a good and blissful life The ideologist is committed to the ideology he
professes and prcKlaims it vigorously urging others to accept it unquestionably.
He tolerates neither criticism nor opposition and demands from others, too, total
commitment to the ideology and the values it sustains Ideological politics, as
Frank Thakurdas says, is “doctrinaire, didactic, dogmatic, transitory, prescrip-
tive, polemical and propagandist, partisan, combative and destructive, whose
appeal is in the nature of a religious belief, which would not suffer either doubt or
criticism ”28 Ideology, unlike Political Philosophy, is not a search for truth and
for knowledge based on truth The test of a political ideology lies in its
application Preston King writes, “Political Philosophy evokes reflection and
understanding while ideology is more likely to imply commitment and action”.
He further contends that ideology is used “to convey both the notions of intended
’*2^
and actual application Ideology, therefore, must possess a political character,
a guide to direct political action and getting things done in a pre-determined
direction
largelyan attempt to seek the truth as the thinker sees it. A political theorist shall
have no personal interest in the political system of any one country or class or
party “His vision of reality and his image of good, ideally speaking, will not be
clouded, nor his theory will be special pleading.”^
Political theory has three ingredients which have been classified into three
groups The first is, its purely factual and descriptive component in the same as
Science, p 1
27 Roucck, Joseph Introduction to Political
,
accept the analysis of politics which they offer us we shall be led to accept the
practical advice they offer” Taking the example of Madison, the analysis of
American society and goyernment that he offered m his contribution to the
Federalist Papers still eminently merits the detailed and critical scrutiny which
Robert Dahl has given it in his Preface to Democratic Theory, for it represents a
cogent analysis of the nature of limited government in a plural society, and not
merely a piece of special pleading for the adoption of a particular decision in
1787
The two broad vaneties of Political Theory are the classical and the
contemporary The former by tradition refers to the writings of Plato, Aristotle,
Rousseau, Kant, Hegel or even Laski which deal with politics from a broadly
moral point of view. Plato examined a number of points which have continued to
exercise philosophers to the present time what is the nature of the good or
gcxxiness at which man should aim ? How can it be known ^ Given that we know
the gcxxi, what is the political order that embodies it ? What arc the right
relations between the man and the State ^ and, lastly, why ought men to obey the
State ? Plato dealt with these questions via the literary form of the dialogue,
whereas his celebrated pupil Aristotle treated them in much more formal
systematic manner and his Nichomachean Ethics and Politics set the pattern of
political speculation for many centuries The history of Political Theory is the
Dahl, David Easton, Hein? Eulau, Charles Hyncman, Carl Friedrich, and Harold
Lasswell Their analysis of the discipline of Political Science even penetrated the
Oxford University which had till then been recognised the “home” of Political
Theory or Philosophy among the English-speaking countries
The term Political Theory as used in the contemporary sense may mean the
scientific theory, the positivist theory or the behavioural theory It is a quest for
realism, precision, comprehensiveness, and detachment in order to obtain “neat
and tidy” results to explain and generalise political phenomena This search for
actuality has led to reorienting political theoiy to empirical research, strategies
and techniques The contemporary political scientists, accordingly, seek to stress
“direct observation, objective measurement, systematic data collection, the
operationalizing of concepts, quantification, a deliberate search for regulanties
and variations, and systematic comparison across groups and cultures in an effort
to ascertain the limits of generalisations ”3» They believe that a political
scientist, like a physical scientist, should observe his data as a disinterested person
and must not import his own point of view in his observations His approach
should be objective and in terms of the “observed and observable” and,
consequently, value free. They outright reject the assumption that theory is
knowledge, and contend that it is only a tool on the road to knowledge Viewed
in this way, political theory is neither prescriptive nor onented towards action.
“Rather it is explanatory and oriented towards understanding It is, in itself, the
tool of the seeker rather than the doer It does not imply a set of values, nor a set
of facts; but is a process by which sense is made out of facts by relating and
ordering them.”^’
science ”^2 Some of these concepts flow from the disciplines of Sociology and
Anthropology in the study of political phenomenon removing the traditional
barriers in the various sub-fields The importance of interdisciplinary approach,
especially the influence of Psychology, Sociology, Anthropology and Statistics, as
an aid to a complete knowledge of complex phenomenon of man’s organised
political life can hardly be underestimated, though we may not, entirely agree
with the nature of Political Theory as enunciated by contemporary Political
scientists
39 As cited m Handwar Rai, **Polittcal Theory Nfw Viewpoints in Meaning and Method’*,
Ihtd, Octobcr-Dccember 1969, p 353
40 Rathore, R.L, “The Nature of Political Theory” Ibid, Apnl-June, 1976, p 52
41 Easton, David; A System, Analysis of Political Life, p 3
42. Almond, Gabriel A, and Coleman, James S. (eds ),
The Politics of the Developing
Areas, p. 4 .
nature and scope of political science 15
ought to be realised He is a seeker after truth and for knoweldge based on truth
He is not concerned with a particular issue or problems that confront the State
and require immediate solution His quest is for enduring solution of the
complexities of man’s political life and he travels bevond the frontiers of a
particular country or region and may encompass the whole mankind His
recommendations are for all people and for all climes and, consequently, may
command universal signihcance transcending the immediate historical context
which influenced his philosophy
But the philosophy of all great masters is their personal vision of the
i ornplexities of political life and in their search for an ideal society of their way of
thinking, they delve deep into the realm of imagination and create the web of an
ideal model, completely oblivious of the realities of life Contemporzuy political
scientists are now engaged in an intensive quest for the real and they have
adopted scientific methods to arrive at the actuality Their emphasis, as said be-
fore, is to study the phenomena of political life starting with carefully refined
reality of life itself, for the State is ultimately a “fellowship of men” aiming at the
With the interaction of the new forces during recent times necessitating new
approaches to the study of Political Science, it has been suggested that Political
Science should no longer be defined in terms of objects such as the State It
Bodin, Hobbes, Sidgwick, and Bryce, had held the same view. But some earlier
writers denied this claim of Political Science They maintained that there could
be no such thing as a scientific study of the phenomena of the State and
government. They agreed with Burke that there was no science of politics any
more than there was a science of aesthetics, “for the lines of politics are not like
the lines of mathematics. and deep as well as long They admit of
They are broad
exceptions, they demand modifications No lines can be laid down for civil or
” Even
political wisdom. They are a matter incapable of exact definition
Maitland said, “When I see a good set of examination questions headed by the
word ‘Political Science’, I regret not the questions but the title Sir Frederick
Pollock, on the other hand, asserted that “there is a science of politics in the same
sense, and to the same, or about the same extent, as there is a science of
morals
But whether Political Science is really a science or not depends upon what
we regard as the test of a science. ^ Does a science involve merely systematic
44 Catlin, Gcoigc, EG ,
A Study of Principles of Politics,
pp 69, 75, 76
45 Robson, ypi A, The University Teaching of Social Sciences Political Science (Unesco),
p 19
46. Maitland, FW , Collected Papers, Vol III,
p 302
47. Pollock, F An
,
Introduction to the History oj the Science of Politics, p. 2
48. The obstacles in the scientific study of Political Science have been cogently
dwcussed by W G. Runciman in his Social Science and Political Theory
NATURE AND SCOPE OP POLITICAL SCIENC F 17
reasoning, or must the reasoning be exact and the conclusions clearly defined and
subject to no exceptions as in the case of natural or physical sciences ? Moreover,
does the claim of Political Science to be a science involve the power to predict the
political future ^
Political Science is neither an exact science nor can it claim to predict the
future with certainty The results in physical sciences, like Physics and
Chemistry, are definite and remain true under given conditions for all men and in
different climes If there is any variation,
can be tested and explained. But it is
it
not possible to place men in a laboratory as if they were guinea pigs, nor is it
possible to impose precise laboratory conditions on the political sphere in real
life Political Science deals with men and it is a living subject matter which can
will continue in future too and, set, without any definite agreement thereon
Consecjucntly, it is impossible foi Political Science to attain the same degree of
exactness and univeisal application of its law's as in the physical or even
biological sciences “There are two words in medicine'’, a Professor of Medicine
said to his pupils, “that you never use They are ‘Always’ and ‘Never’ ’’—and the
same applies to Political Science
and natural sciences the evidence is objective, usually measured and expressed
quantitatively whereas in Political Science we assess the significance of evidence
and personal judgments are involved Secondly, experiments can be repeated in
tlie physical and the natural sciences, but in politics the problems arc unique.
Then, in politics there are t<X) many uncertainties in the materials and evidence
for prediction, we aim rather at “informed and critical estimates ” Fourthly, in
politics, also, our revised conclusions do not always rest upon fresh evidence but
sometimes upon reinterpretations, new points of view and insight, ‘old’ works are
not necessarily worthless Finally, when we ask political questions we at the same
time begin to shape the answers we shall give, such answers spring from
imagination and insight In general, our methods of enquiry have much in
common with those in the natural sciences the manner which we work out
in
causal explanations and test them owe much to their example. But we cannot
produce a blue-print for action or make statements with the same degree of
accuracy as the natural sciences.
55 Burke observed, “However widcl> and carefully the materials may be gathered,
their character makes it impossible that Politics should even become a Science in the sense
”
m which mechanics or chemistry is a Science
50 Wiseman, H Victor (ed ), Polihcai Science, pp 22-23
18 PRINCIPLES OF political SCIENCE
of human life, first, as the citizens of the State to which men belong and, then, as
members of the common humanity. Peoples of all the States have yet to learn the
art of good life in all its aspects and once this art is mastered, there will really be a
happier and just life And art is not antithesis to science It can be based on
science
METHODOLOGY
Political Science is, thus, an organised
body of knowledge the facts of which
have been and systematically observed, collected and classified, and
scientifically
from these facts are formulated and proved a senes of propositions or principles
which form the basis of the science These principles are used as a groundwork for
further investigation It was not until the nineteenth century that the phenomena
of the State came to be regarded as a proper field for scientific investigation and
since thenmany methods and approaches have been suggested and employed
Auguste Comte suggested three principal methods of investigation, viz observa- ,
dogmatic, the juridical, the method of good sense, and the historical method
56 Bryce, too, emphasiied that observation must be factual and not superficial and
diould be free from objective distortions
NATURE AND SCOPE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Other methods of investigation are coupled with it. It must, however, be noted
that increasing use is now being made of this method, particularly in India.
Physical Sciences can be tried over and over again till the final and required
result IS obtained Experiments in Political Science, on the other hand, can never
be reflated No ingenuity of man can reproduce identical conditions Bryce has
aptly said that “conditions can never be exactly reproduced as Heraclitus says
that one cannot step twice into the same river.”58 Moreover, political institutions
in every country are the logic of its own people and their requirements. We
cannot transplant them in other lands For example, we cannot have a replica of
British institutions in India Even if wt have them, their success cannot be
guaranteed Analysing the causes of success of direct legislation in Switzerland,
James Bryce said the institution is “racy of the soil” There are institutions
“which like plants, flourish only on their hill side and under their own
sunshine ”^9
There is, however, some truth in the oft-quoted saying that man is wiser
after experience We may not experiment in Political Science as we do in a
Phvsical Science, bui practical experiments in political institutions are being
constantly made, consciously or unconsciously Every government makes experi-
ments when It adopts a new policy or enacts a new law Governmental policy
changes and laws are amended or repealed if their public utility is not
abundantly proved All this amounts to experiments for the purpose of testing
and improving Dyarchy, for example, was experimented within the Provinces of
India under the Government ot India Act, 1919, but its working soon disclosed
the inherent defects in the system and it was discarded in the Provinces under the
Ciovernment of India Act, 1933 The Constitution of India is committed to
piohibition and some State Governments arc experimenting with it, total or
judicial functions. The experiment proved a success and the two wings of
government are now separated in almost all the States Munro describes the
British Constitution as the mother of constitutions and Parliament as the mother
of parliaments.” ^ It means that other countries borrowed from Britain
57 Lewis, George C ,
Methods of Observation and Reasoning m Politics, Vol. I, pp. 164-165.
58 Tiryct,} ,
Modem Democracies, Vo\ I,
p 14
59 Ibid., pp 453-54
60 Munro. W
B 7)^^ ,
Governments of Europe, p 1
1
Montesquieu, Savigny, Seeley, Maine, Freeman and Laski are some of the
eminent exponents ol the historical method Karl Marx found it an exclusive
method He explained the origin of the capitalist society in history and gave it the
name of Materialistic Conception of History But Sidgw'ck and other followers of
the Philosophical School give to the historical method a secondary place for two
itiasons First, they maintain, that the historical method serves no useful purpose
in solving our present and future needs as it refers only to the experience of what
the political institutions had been Every age, it is argued, has its own problems
and ever)' problem requires a solution relative to the time in which it occurs
Secondly, history is a mere narration of events and it is not concerned with the
goodness or badness of such events Goodness or badness is only determined by
ethi^l or philosophical standards and, accordingly, the philosophical method
must precede the historical method
Sidgwick’s arguments are quite convincing In the historical method
61 - Laski, Harold J ,
The Danger of Being a Gentleman and Other Essays, p 36
62 Ihtd Refer to what Sir Frederick Pollotk says “'Fhc historical method seeks an
explanation of what institutions are and are lending to be, more in the knowledge of what
they have been and how they came to be what they are, than in the analysis of them as they
stand ” An hlroduclton to the History of the Science of Politics, p, 1
NATURE AND SCOPE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE 23
more susceptible to emotional influences and he very often confuses “the personal
or accidental factors with the general cause at work.” Ernest Barker, too,
criticised the historical method and said, “ the State is . concerned
less with the historical processes than with the fundamental realities—essence,
purposes and value — which transcend the category of time In spite of these
well reasoned objections the utility of the historicalmethod cannot be discount-
ed History has now become much more objective It also justifies goodness and
badness of political actions, provided the investigator proceeds with an impartial
mind free from prejudices and presuppositions, correlating economic, geographi-
cal or other scientific approaches Seeley has rightly said, “We must think, reason,
generalize, define, and distinguish, we must also collect, authenticate, and
investigate If we neglect the first process, we shall accumulate facts to little
purpose, because we shall have no test by which to distinguish facts which are
important from those which are unimportant, and, of course, if we neglect the
second process, our reasoning will be baseless and we shall but weave scholastic
”
cobwefcw
6‘3 Barker, Ernest, The Study of Political Science and its Relation to Cognate Studies,
p 18
64 The University Teaching of Political Science fUnesco)
65 The Study of Comparative Government and Politics, p 15
66. Ibid,
24 PRlNCaPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
ossified rituals,” Merriam correctly said that like all social sciences. Political
Science “can be truly scientific only to the degree in which it contributes to the
creation of a science of man ” It is enormously growing
also necessary to stress the
importance of sociological study to the study of the comparative method One of
the great contributions of contemporary Political Science is “that it is proving
the extent to which cooperation with sociology is possible as well as indispensable
”
to political science in general and especially to comparative studies
As a result of the work of D Easton, G A Almond and D Apter the
discipline of comparative politics has virtually been re-oriented by the influence
of structure-function analysis In an article published in 1957, An Approach to
the Analysis of Political Systems, Easton suggested that a solution to the problem
of comparing governments could be found by examining political life in terms of
a system receiving certain inputs trom the society and converting them into
outputs affecting the society. He said that all governments processed inputs and
transformed them into outputs. General comparisons, therefore, could be made
and they would amount to a detailed examination of the content of both sides of
the operation. Taking Easton’s analysis as a starting point, Gabriel Almond
looked for the functions which could be included among the inputs and outputs
of all political systems. Looking at the conversion process which takes place
within the political system, he showed that six such functions could be separated
First, on the input side, demands are (I) formulated (or articulated) and, (2)
67. Ibid, p. 23
NATURE AND SCOPE OF POLITICAI SCIENCE 25
equation of each political system which will show how much of each function is
fulfilled by a particular structure This Almond describes as the ‘probabilistic
theory of the polity’
74-79.
69. Blondel, J. (cd. ), Comparative Government, p. xii
70 Contemporary Political Science fUnesco), p 593.
26 PRINaPLES OF POUTICAL SCIENCE
ment, and Walter Lipmann's PuKiic Opinion “did much to delineate the held in
terms meaningful to American political science ” Especially following Lip-
mann’s work, public opinion has become a field of specialization in American
Universities. Tlic application of statistical techniques to the analysis of various
types of political and governmental data has been advanced by Stuart Rice,
Louis Bean, Harold F. Gosnell and others H Dewey Anderson and Percy E
Davidson have applied the statistical technique to such widely varied fields as
It IS, however, necessary to exercise great care in the collection and use of the
statistics Lowell has aptly said that “statistics, like real pies are good if you know
the person who made them, and are sure of the ingredients” as “by themselves
they are strangely likelv to mislead, because unless the subject is understood in all
Itsbearings, some element can easily be left out of account which wholly falsifies
the result ” To put it rather bluntly, there are three kinds of lies, the while,
black and and it is the last kind which is so difficult to nail or
statistics,
counteract Statistics are manipulated to suit the party purposes and explained to
distort the facts for electoral gains and political manoeuvring It cannot, however,
be denied that a knowledge of statistical principles and sampling method is often
useful to the political scientists
some abstract original idea about human nature and draws deduction from that
idea as to the nature of the State, its aims, its functions and its future It then
attempts to harmonise its theories with the actual facts of history
72. Lowell, A.L., The Philosophy of Mitics, /merican Political Science Review, Vol IV, p.
10 .
NATURE AND SCOPE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE 27
Locke, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Edmund Burke, Jeremy Bentham, G.W F. Hegel,
Karl Marx, and John Stuart Mill all deal with the perennial questions of justice,
why should a citizen obey the State is man good or evil by
equality, freedom,
nature is the society or the individual prior
and a host of other similar ^
of them Rousseau says that men are equal, and Burke would deny that
jjroposition Hegel asserts that society is more important than the individual, and
Mill replies that the individual is prior to society We read the works of all these
political thinkers because they provide the best starting point for the study of the
moral aspects of political life
Ronald Pennock and David Smith maintain that political scientists often
debate the relative merits of various political values, such as liberty and order,
and in doing so, “they are philosophizing rather than practising ” Accordingly, it
IS asserted, that their field f study should properly be denominated “Govern-
t
ment'’ or “Politics” rather than by the more restiicted term “Political Science ”
As It IS, Pennock and Smith conclude, “we must recognize that we have scientific
political scientists and philosophical political scientists There is an important
place m the profession for those who leave questions of political ethics to others
line! who strive for the greatest possible detachment in judging trends and seeking
lo determine cause and effect in political matters In other words, some
division of labour” is desirable “between those who consider what goals should
be pursued and those who concentrate on discovering the best ways of attaining
particular goals, or who nierelv ir> to chart the course we are following and
predict whither we are bound
According to Talcott Parsons,’6lhe basic functions of every social system are
lour must maintain its own basic patterns, particularly those of its own
It
governing and control, it must adapt itself to changing conditions in both its
physical environment in nature and its human environment in terms of other
systems, it must integrate its different tasks and functions, and if it has specific
goals beyond mere adaptation, integration and the maintenance of its patterns, it
must move to attain its goals From Parson’s approach, Karl W Deutsch
derives a way of looking at “Politics” and the sub-systems of scxriety in the context
of these basic functions Referring to the integrative sub-system of every society,
he says, that it consists mainly in its “culture or cultural sector, including
education, religion, philosophy and art ” Religion and philosophy, like educa-
tion, teach the people “the long-run nature of the universe, the long-run values of
”
mankind, and, perhaps the long-run purpose for which mankind still exists
The Government, or “more generally, the political sector,” according to Deutsch,
IS the typical goal-attaining sub-system “It is the government that organizes the
soc iety lor the pursuit of whatever goals the society may have chosen Pursuing a
goal involves forming an image of it, which we may call an intention, and then
73 Andrew Hacker, The Study of Politic i The Western Traditional and American Origins,
pp 8-9
74 J Ronald Pennock and David G Smith, Political Scieme An Introduction, ^ 22.
Science
’
finding the means to implement the intention, or a course toward the goal
In any where means and ends are involved ought to be
political activity
how we look at the subject of our study
cannot be altogether ruled out, no matter
Ethical considerations, therefore, become imperative and some precepts of
politicalconduct are necessarily to be prescribed Philosophy, then, intervenes, in
the study of Political Science But the pitfall to be avoided in applying the
•
78 p. 133
79. Popper, Karl Conjectures and Rejutatms, pp, 357-63
80. Qabhot t, Michaal, BaiwnaJumjn PoUttes, pp. 184-86.
NATURE AND SCOPE OF POLITICAL SCIENCE 29
the State exists for man and it endeavours to cater to his needs in order to make
happy Man is the central subject of our study and we must go to his
his life
psychology to find out the really correct solution of his problems Hitherto
political thinkers had regarded man as a rational being and accepted this nature
ol man as a dogmatic truth and consequently the starting point of their
investigations Recently, Graham Wallas, in his book Human Nature in Politics,
has revolted against this traditional assumption of human nature Man according
to Graham Wallas, is hardly rational in his behaviour “If, indeed, a man were
followed,” he writes, “through one ordinary day, without his knowing by a it,
cinematographic camera and photographer and and saying were if all his acts
produced before him next day, he would be astonished to find how few of them
were the result of a deliberate search for the means attaining ends Whether
we agree with Graham Wallas or not, the importance of psychology as a clue to
behaviour cannot be denied Nor must the institutions of government be
political
icgarded as eternal or petrified “Institutions are,” as Finer says, “nothing but
useful or useless habits they were acquired foi a purpose, and purpose changes
I’hc world of piolitical reality is not the printed world of books, or of statutes, or of
administrative rules and orders The cut and dried is not political.” *2 Institutions
are really how they are worked and their actual working is subject to the political
behaviour of man, that is, what men really do when faced with situations rather
clearly what elements of its reasonings it has to take from them and what in its
turn it may claim to give them. Political Science is deeply related to all other
social sciences, because knowledge that is gamed about any phase of human
behaviour and attitudes, about the institutions that men build, or the ideas to
which they respond in the mass, cannot fail to be of use in similar fields of
inquiry. Each social science —
sociology, anthropology, history, economics, ethics,
psycholc^y, jurisprudence, geography and political science— supplements and
fortifies the rest If we divide them into different sciences, they are distinctions
within a unity asall aim at the study of man in society All are inter-depent ent
ages and climes Sociology may, thus, be defined as the science of the origin and
development, structure and functions, of social groups, their forms, laws, customs,
institutions, modes of life, thought and action and their contribution to human
culture and civilisation It seeks to discover the general principles underlying all
social phenomena and social relationships and to establish the laws of change and
growth in society
organised control and obedience The Hindu, the Sikh, the Muslim and the
Christian communities by themselves are the subjects of Sociology, being parts of
the Indian society, but when they quarrel among themselves and their quarrel
flares up into communal riots, it not only represents the pathological side of
Indian social life, but also a problem of deep political concern to prevent their
recurrence and to remove the causes of conflict in order to weld them into- a
patriotic nation Likewise, if we study revolutions, we must take into account
their social as well as their political causes as appearing in different environ-
ments The analysis of political parties cannot be divorced from their relationship
to social classes, and the sociology of the electorate —
behaviour of man in the
associated process — solves the difficulties emerging from the basic democratic
mechanism.
In spite of this close affinity between Sociology and Political Science, the
study of both the sciences is distinct and their problems are by no means
the
same Giddings has said that the province of Political Science is not co-extensive
with “the investigations of society but that the lines of demarcation can be
drawn ” ** Sociology deals with man in all his varied social relations and in ail
forms of human associations Its study is not confined to one aspiect of man alone.
Political Science, on the other hand, is a study of the political governance of man
and It IS a specialised branch of Sociology It has a narrower and more restricted
field to cover than Sociology Secondly, the political life of man begins much later
than his social life Sociology is prior to Political Science Thirdly, Sociology
embraces the study of organised and unorganised communities and the conscious
and unconscious activities of man The province of Political Science is the
politically organised society and conscious political activities of man Finally,
Political Science aims at the past, present and future determination of the
political organisation of mankind whereas Sociology is the study of various social
institutions that exist or have hitherto existed It does not and cannot predict
about the future of society and social relationships Its study is empirical and has
no philosophical trend to follow The distinction between Political Science and
Soc iology has been aptly described by Ernest Barker He says, “Political theory
only deals with political associations, united by a constitution and living under a
government; semiology deals with all associations Political theory assumes as a
datum that man is a political being, it does not explain, as sociology seeks to do,
how he came to be a political being
psychological methods and theories There is the social and cultural matrix of
patterns of behaviour arc imposed on man by the conditions of social life itself
and certain psychological traits are brought out by society which in turn
” ** The result a new branch of study Political
determine the social milieu is
of society that does not recognise the political system as a major part
of the
86 Ihd, p 35
87. Sir Ernest Barker, Political Thought in England (1848-1914), p 138.
the other components and the system as a whole are affected. For example, when
the rings of an automobile wear away, the motor car bums oil, the functioning of
the other parts of the machine or system deteriorates, and the power of the
emergence of mass political parties, or
vehicle declines. In the political system the
of media of mass communications, like the press, the radio and the television,
have changed the performance of structures of the system and the general
capabilitic'^ (that is, the way it performs as a unit in its environment) of the
system in its domestic and foreign environments To quote Almond and Powell,
“ . . when one variable in a system changes in magnitude or in quality, others
are subjected to strains and are transformed; the system changes its pattern of
performance, or the unruly component is disciplined by regulatory mechanism
habits, customs, and organisations of primitive man help us to know the real
origin of the State and the development of various political institutions The
political behaviour of man is greatly influenced by his racial origin and the
environments in which he lives Two common sayings illustrate the point there is
something run in the blcxxl of man, and, man is the shuttlecock of his
environments The theory of nationalism as preached by Hitler and his dogma of
superiority of the Aryan race solve many a knotty problem of recent political
thought Finally, race unity is one of the strongest bonds of nationality, and
geographic unity is another important factor which foster the sentiment of
nationality.
We seek the help of Anthropology to prove that early society was communal
m character, that is, its basis was the group rather than the individual, whom we
now accept as the unit of our society. Anthropology also tells us that in early
stages of thedevelopment of society, temporary mllrriage was the rule rather than
the exception. But such a condition of society could not last for long
and the need
for regulating marriage was felt, With the regulation of marriage, civilisation
advanced and people permanently settled down as territorial units paving the
way for the emergence of the state. Thus, Anthropology greatly helps the study of
Political Science Without a good knowledge of early societies, their laws,
customs, manners and modes of government, we cannot understand accurately
the modern institutions and the political behaviour of the people.
“A knowledge of social anthropology,” says Robson, “is essential for the study or
practice of colonial administration, and it is necessary also for several other
special topics of political science, such as area studies, colour and racial conflicts,
international organisations for assisting under-developed countries, immigration
and emigration ” Harold D
Lasswell approvingly cites C Lerner and says D
that the links between students of folk society — the distinctive subject-matter of
social —
anthropology and Political Science have been closer in recent years “as
whirlwind modernization added to the turbulence of politics in Asia, Africa,
South America, and many heretofore-isolated island communities ” ^ He is of
the opinion that in future years, “the data of anthropology will be highly
pertinent to the consideration of various problems that are likely to grow into
large dimensions
94 Lasswell, HD ,
7%<r Future of Political Science, p. 224.
95 Pud, p 225.
96. Robson, W.A., The University Teaching of Social Science; Poliiml Science (Dniico), jii
57
34 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
order to understand them fully one must necessarily know the process of their
evolution, how they have become what they are, and to what extent they have
responded to their original purposes^ All our political institutions have a
historical basis as they depict the wisdom of generations History furnishes
sufficient material for comparison and induction, enabling us to build an ideal
political structure of our aspirations In the absence of historical data, the study
of Political Science is sure to become entirely speculative or a priori. And a priori
Political Science, as Laski observes, “is bound to break down simply because we
never start with the clean slate ” The writings of historians, in brief, form a vast
reservoir of material which a student of Political Science can analyse into
meaningful patterns and guide him in understanding the present and outlining
the futureMoreover, with its chronological treatment, history offers a sense of
growth and development thereby providing a base or an insight into the social
changes
Robson IS of the opinion that some knowledge of History is clearly
indispensable for Political Science and cites the explanation offered by Professor
R Solatu at the Cambridge Conference (from 6 to 10 April, 1952) Professor
Solatu said, “that he had been baffled all through his teaching career, especially
during the 20 years he had spent in the Middle East, about how to teach the
history of political philosophy to students whose historical background is usually
inadequate, and often limited to purely political theory since the French
Revolution ” Where Political Science is not approached through History, he
remarked, the student may easily get a confused outline, in which most historical
allusions are lost on him, “supplemented by a slight acquaintance with a few
classical texts of political philosophy, the background of which he scarcely
understands ” Moreover, a knowledge of History is particularly necessary in the
sphere of Comparative Government
History, in its turn, has much to borrow from Political Science Our
knowledge of history is meaningless, if the political bearings of events and
movements are not adequately evaluated The history of the nineteenth-century
Europe, for example, is an incomplete narration of facts unless full significance of
the movements, like nationalism, imperialism, individualism, socialism, etc , are
brought out Similarly, the history of India’s independence is devoid of all logic, if
we do not sufficiently explain the political result of the rise of the Indian National
Congress, the Muslim demand for separate electorates, the benevolent despotism
of the Government of India Act, 1909, Montagu s August 1917 Declaration, the
Reforms of 1919 and the experiment with Dyarchy, the recommendations of the
Simon Commission, the deliberations of the Round Table Conferences, the
Communal Award, the Government of India Act, 1935, the implications of the
Atlantic Charter, the 1942 Quit India Movement, Cripps Proposal, Simla
Conference, declarations of Lord Wavell and Pethick- Lawrence, the Cabinet
Mission Plan, the June 3, 1947 Announcement, and the Independence Act, 1947
“Political Science,” says Bryce, “stands midway between history and politics,
between the past and the present It has drawn its materials from the one, it has
”
to apply them to the other
It does not, however, mean that Political Science is a beggar at the door of
History Nor does it mean, as Freeman says, that history “is past politics or that
politics IS present history ” Political Science is, undoubtedly, dependent on
History for its material, but it supplies only a part of the material. History is a
chronological narration of events including wars, revolutions, military cam-
paigns, economic upheavals, religious and social movements, and the rest A good
pari ot this material is not required by Political Science The main concern of a
political scientist is to study the evolution of the political institutions and the
facts which bear, directly or indirectly, on the State and government, and its
socio-economic problems Political Science selects facts out of History We are not
so much concerned with the causes of the Revolution of 1688 in Britain as we are
concerned woth the advent of limited monarchy in that country and the
beginning of the responsible lorm ol government Likewise, we are not interested
on the causes World War II and the strategy of the fighting powers Our
of
interest is to stud) and evaluate whether World War II was in reality a war o f
Democracy vs Dic tatorship and whether it fulfilled the purpose for which it was
,
fought We are also interested in the shape of things that came over in the
post-war political structure of the world as a result of this wai
presents to us not only facts, but the causal connection between the facts
Political Science is speculative as well, since it deals with what the State ought to
be This speculative character of the subject necessitates the consideration of
abstract types of political institutions and laws History has hardly anything to
do with this aspect of Political Science Finally, the historian’s task is not to pass
moral judgments, but the political scientist is bound to do so It is here that
Political Science joins hands with Ethics and parts company with Sociology,
History and Economics
The conclusion is obvious Political Science and History are two distinct
disciplines with separate problems, yet they have a common subject in the
phenomena of the State, and, as such, their spheres touch at many points and
overlap at others Leacock succinctly remarks that some of History “is part of
Political Science, the circle of their contents overlapping an area enclosed by
“
each
97 Refer io the Politics of Amtotle, translated by Sir Ernest Barker, especially Books
III and V
36 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
State, orwhat he calls commonwealth, with a revenue sufficient for the public
administration. Without clinching the matter, he summed up that political
economy “proposes ”
to enrich the people and the sovereign
Modem economists do not agree with the older point of view They regard
Economics as a separate discipline, which seeks to inquire how man gets his
income and how he uses it Alfred Marshall, the celebrated economist, considers
It “on the one side the study of the wealth and on the other and more important
side a part of the study of man ” Its scope is the study of human welfare and
includes a discussion on Consumption Productio n. Exchange, and
. Distribu-
tion— the four pillars on which the edifice of Economics is built
But no State can remain content merely to provide conditions of peace and
order The purpose of the State is to create that atmosphere which may be
conducive to the good life of ma n and to give all an equal opportunity for growth
and development The State performs certain functions in order to achieve its
purpose It IS one of the important functions of the Slate to see what its citizens
consume Every State is vitally concerned with the health of its people, as the
people are the health of the State The weak, the infirm, and the destitute cannot
be g(X)d citizens, and a State inhabited by such people is socially, economically,
and politically a cripple It is the duty of the State to see that its nationals get
sufficient and wholesome food to eat It must also see that the people are
adequately provided for, especially during times of crisis and emergency, with the
requisite necessaries of life and that, too, at a reasonable level of prices At the
same time, the State may, for reasons of health of the people, either prohibit or
restrict the use of ceriam commodities like liquor and other intoxicants
It also becomes necessary for the State to see how commodities are produced
and the nature and conditions of their production For example, the Government
of India is now making ceaseless efforts for growing and producing more, as the
existing scale of production does not keep pace with the total demand of the
country with its explosive growth of population and agriculture, the mainstay of
the people, is a gamble in rains It is the duty of the government to maintain
sufficient reserves of food to cope with the vagaries of nature and other natural
calamities When demand exceeds supply, conditions of scarcity are created and
prices rise Rising prices cause distress for the masses and throw out of gear the
orderly conditions of society It is the primary duty of the government to remove
conditions of distress and alleviate the sufferings of the people But no country
produces only for its internal needs Some goods it cannot produce and imports
from other countries Others it produces advantageously and in abundance It is
for the State to determine its import and export policy and such a policy
influences the scale of production.
with them his surplus goods But goods are not exchanged for goods. A system of
barter is highly inconvenient and money economy has taken its place. Money is
now the medium of exchange and the measure of value It is the function of the
State to com money and regulate it The total amount of money in the hands of
the people affects prices Stable prices are the need of every State. The
government carefully watches fluctuations in prices and determines whether
more or less money should circulate Similarly, banks, too, play an important role
in controlling the price level by regulating credit The paper currency of a
modern State is issued by its Central or Reserve Bank The Central Bank may
cither be a State-owned bank or the result ol private enterprise But whatever it is,
a Central Bank must necessarily be the creation of a special Act of the legislature
Moreover, economic prosperity of every country depends upon the soundness of
Its banking organisation It is within the pinsdiction of the State to regulate the
Political and economic conditions, act and react on one another As a matter
of tact, the solution of many
economic problems must come through
of the
political agencies and the major problems of every State are economic in
character World War II was characterised as a war of democracy against
dictatorship But the causes of the War were really economic The rise of
Nazism was also due to the economic crippling of Germany bv the victorious
poweis World War I I’he failure of the League of Nations may be ascribed
after
to the policy of economic aloofness and economic self-sufficiency to which every
member-State steadfastly clung after World War I Britain’s political policy in
India, and her reluctance to giant independence to Indians was more an
economic expediency than a political advantage The burning questions of
present-day politics, viz government control of industries, the relations of the
,
State to industries, its attitude towards labour and capital, and a multitude of
other similar problems, are all economic questions intertwined in the political
issues The cry that economic democracy should precede political democracy has
revolutionised the political structure of every State One may even say that the
whole theory of government administration is largely economic ’in its approach
when seeking to interpret matters concerning the Welfare State, public financial
policies and relationships between government and private enterprise When
government itself undertakes prcxluction, it performs purely an economic
function
ties, by the timely and efficient completion of development projects and by the
judgment of their priorities
More recently, contemporary Political Theory has tilled its affinity towards
Economics rather than Sociology, which had been the practice hitherto The noted
economists, such as, Downs, Buchanan, Tullock, Musgrave, Rothenburg, Olson
and quite a few more, are now defining the basic issues of the new political
analysis in terms of economics and are constructing new concepts, findings and
theories “The New Political Economy”, the name given by William C
Mitchell^, to this analysis has not taken any tangible shape so far, but a
convincing beginning has been made in “Welfare Economics” and in the
development of such tools as “Cost benefit analysis”, “System Theory”,
“Program-budgeting” and “Economic Theory” more generally The tools it
statistical, but “mathematics and deductive
adopts are not descriptive and
”
model-building
Ethics. Ethics deals with morality and formulates rules which should
influence the behaviour of man while living in society It investigates the
rightness or wrongness of man’s conduct and prescribes ideals to which he would
direct his efforts The line of demarcation between Political Science and Ethics is
quite distinct Though both Political Science and Ethics aim at the noble and
righteous life of man, yet the former is primarily concerned with the political
governance of man whereas the latter refers to man’s conduct and morality, that
IS, whereas Political Science deals wuth political order, Ethics deals with moral
order Ethics also judges man's conduct and in the last resort touches on what the
conduct ought to be Political Science has nothing to do with it The laws of the
Slate prescribe only the way of life and are concerned with the external actiorvs of
man Moral laws prescribe* absolute standards of right and wrong, justice and
injustice, but the laws of the State follow standard of expediency What a law
piohibits may not be an immoral act Finally, Political Science s concerned w ith i
man as a citizen Ethics is concerned with man as a man and, as such, it is prior
to Political Science
But a political idea cannot l^e divorced from an ehtical idea Man can only
pursue his moral ends while living in the State Aristotle rightly said that a good
citizen IS possible in a good State and that a bad State makes bad citizens He
further maintained that while the State comes into existence for the sake of life, it
continues to exist for the sake of gixxl Good life is the end of the State and all
life
So close is the relation between Political Science and Ethics that Plato and
Aristotle hardly distinguished between the two The Greek philosophers, in fact,
laid more stress on the moral side of the State Plato’s Republic is as much a
study in Ethics as it is in Political Science Machiavelli was the first to distinguish
between the two and he made Political Science independent of Ethics He also
differentiated between public morality and private morality Hobbes, an English
philosopher, followed Machiavelli in his arguments and reasonings Kant, on the
other hand, said, “True politics cannot take a single step forward unless it has
”
first done homage to morals
which has a Germanic origin^ and has now taken firm roots in the United
States, has created complete dichotomy between Political Science and Ethics. It
IS asserted that introduction of value-judgments in political analysis impedes
scientific objectivity and makes the discipline and any inquiry into its processes
speculative Stuart Rice, in his Quantitative Methods in Politics, blamed social
having set their task as “the creation of a science of moral ends”
scientists lor
R M
Maciver supports Stuart Ricc and says, “Science itself tells us nothing,
just nothing about the way wc should act, and the ends we should seek ”ioi At
Power, rule, authority or political influence, thus, became the central organising
idea of the subject of Political Science and its scope was riveted upon it
But not all the twentieth centur) thinkers subsciibe to this point of view
riiere are some who believe that Scientihr Method can deal with values as
prcTiselv as with tacts Ac'cording to A -red Weber all scientific activity is
“emircdy tied tovalues” I'he French philosopher, Jacques Maritan, calls foi a
reinclusion ot metaphysics in the realm of Political Science Metaphysics, he
maintains, wrongly ousted from science bv the Scientific Method is science in the
ampler sense Likewise, Eric Voegehn, in his book, The New Science of Politics,
scvcrelv retutes that argument that “Science” can cmly apply to Scientific
Method He calls for a "restoration” of Political Science, or for its “retheoriza-
tion” by rc'viving the attempts made by the Greek philasophers and the medieval
Christian scholars to provide an ontological description of the order of values,
"The theoretical orientation ol man in his world, the great instrument for man’s
understanding of his own position in the universe
In a paper submitted to ‘the UNESCO project “Methods in Political
Science”, Thomas I Ccxik observed, “I urge, finally, that the most glaring need of
the social sciences today is to relate ethical concepts, in their general outline long
discovered and scientifically verified, at once to the methods and results of
modern sociological investigation, to determine the proper sphere of the methods;
to winnow and relate in systems, the results. I add here that in political science
this need is specially obvious ” This approach seemed to him the only one which
promised an effectively unified system of Social Sciences, “within which political
science may receive a definable place, fulfil an intelligent role, possess clear scope
isolation, political theory without ethical theory because its study and its
is idle
results depend fundamentally on our scheme of moral values, our conceptions of
right and wrong ’’ Moreover, Political Science is concerned with what the State
ought to be “The great question”, in the words of Lord Acton, “is to discover,
”
not what governments prescribe, but what they ought to prescribe
The affinity between Political Science and Psychology has been greatly
emphasised during recent times Gabriel Tarde, Le Bon, MacDougall, Graham
Wallas, and Baldwin are the prominent writers who have given psychological
explanations of almost all the political problems They ascribe the unity of the
State to psychological factors and the form of government and its laws are in
conformity to the temperamental habits of the peopk Political traditions and
institutions, they assert, are what the human mmd
has made them Bagehot, in
his Physics and Politics, explains the successful working of the constitutional
system of government m
Great Britain in terms of the psychology and the genius
of the people of that country Government to be stable and really popular must
reflectand express the mental ideas and moral sentiments of those who are
subject to Its authority, in short, it must be in harmony with what Le Bon calls
the mental constitution of the race In the democratic processes the part played
by social psychology is, thus, subtle Modern psychologists study men in groups
as well as individual behaviour The study of social psychology often has more
direct relevance for the political scientist than does individual psychology
Political Science is very valuable Political Science has hitherto been much under
the influence of philosophy and, consequently oblivious of the realities of life
Thinkers assumed certain facts about human nature and dogmatically accepted
them as self-evident truths The result was an inaccurate analysis of the political
institutions and the political behaviour of man The advcKates of physhological
approach, therefore say that we need “to reinvigorate our minds from the wells of
direct observation” and the study of Political Science shall be futile unless we
exactlyknow the way in which human beings bcha.e as individuals and
members of scKiety under different influences
It does not, however, mean that all political problems have a psychological
explanation to offer The areas of study in Political Science differ significantly in
the extent which they have thus far been subjected to the behaviourist
to
approach Its is uneven
penetration The area which has been subjected to the
greatest influence is probably that of public opinion, voting and elections,
political parties and pressure groups, international relations and public adminis-
tration It has also been applied to the general concepts, such as ‘power’ and
‘influence’, and of definitions of Political Science, such as that which sees it as a
study of Who Gets, What, When and How '
Foreign and comparative govern-
ment probably stand in the middle while its effect is the least in public law,
jurisprudence, and judicial affairs Moreover, Psychology does not concern itself
with moral values. It does not say anything about what the State and its
institutions ought to be Furthermore, the psychologist seeks to explain life in
the lower ” This does not seem to be the correct evolutionary method The right
prcx'edure is to explain the lower by the higher “Man explains the monkey, and
not monkey the man ” It is not logical to explain civilised life by the conditions of
primitive times li is a bad argument that the thing is final, because it is
primitive
operate in scKiety They do not, however, explain how and why these instincts
Political Science and Jurisprudence, the science of law. The former is the study of
of law If human beings
the ’State and government whereas the latter is the study
existence of the community
are to live a life of togetherness and safeguard the
42 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
itself, they must accept certain rules of conduct. The rules governing society may
be few or many. They can range from a few primitive traditions, handed down
orally from one generation to another, to the whole complex set of constitutional
and governmental regulations which are associated with the modern State The
regulations of the State are called laws and these are formulated, administered
and enforced by the government Every State, no matter what its form of
government, develops its own constitutional law Similarly, every political
philosophy embraces or implies a jurisprudence From a serial point of view, laws
must be influenced by environments As is the structure of scx iety, so is the
their
content of laws In a community of large land-owners the laws will not be the
same as in a country of peasant farmers Similarly, the laws governing private
property and the conditions of labour will be different under a capitalistic
pattern of society and a socialistic one The constitutional law of a democratic
government basically differs from that in a dictatorship
the State that creates and maintains the conditions of law But it is now treated
as a separate study because of the vastness of its scope and its specialised study of
law Moreover, law is concerned with classes of persons and classes of situations in
general, and often hypothetical terms Similarly, law may establish fictions that
are convenient as working formulae, though they may have no bearing on actual
life A lawyer's approach is normative whereas the approach of a student ol
Political Science is both normative and descriptive This is how the political
Scientist relates the subject-matter of his study to the realities of life and thereby
corrects the distortions of legalism
peace and order, the progressive achievement of justice, the instruction of the
young, protection against disease and insecurity, the adjustment and compromise
of conflicting groups —
and interests in short, the attainment of the good life ”
This IS, again, an extreme view Yet, it is incorrect to assert that Political
Science and Public Administration are separate and autonomous structures or
processes “To argue,” as White says, “that they should be separate and
independent is hardly defensible, given the nature of democratic government ”
Even the traditional concept of civil service neutrality is undergoing a radical
change “The concept,” writes S Lall, is “being rapidly transformed, without a
conscious realisation, from a negative doctrine of political sterilization and
neutrality to a positive, non-partisan participation in the management of the
country’s affairs Administration today is no longer just the execution of
policy, It reacts upon policy and actively participates in its making
Geography. It is maintained by certain writers that geographical and
physical conditions greatly influence the character, the national life of the people,
and their political was of the opinion that without
institutions Aristotle
gc'ography neither political noi strategical wisdom can go far Bodin was the first
modern writer who dwelt upon the relationship between Political Science and
Cieography Rousseau tried to establish a relationship between climatic condi-
tions and forms of government He argued that warm climates are conducive to
despotism, cold climates to barbarism and moderate climates to a good polity.
Montesquieu, another French scholar, also emphasised the influence of physical
environments on the forms of government and liberty of the people But Buckie
excels all In his History of Civilisation, he maintained that “the actions of men,
and therefore of societies, are determined by reciprocal interaction between the
mind and external phenomena ” He asserted that the actions of the individuals
and societies are influenced by the physical environments, particularly climate,
food, soil, and the “general aspects of nature ” In short, Buckle repudiates the
generally accepted idea that the free will of man determines the action of the
individual and society
moulding the destiny of every State, and it greatly influences its national and
international policies, and political institutions And to fathom the actual impact
of geographical factors on the political life of a nation, particularly in relation to
Its foreign policy, a new discipline of Geopolitics has
developed Thus, an island
nation may readily become a moral power whereas a nation with rich natural
mutual dependence of the parts, so are the individuals who constitute the State
Spencer also tried to establish that like the three parts of an organism — the
sustaining, the distributary and the regulating systems— the State, too, has three
systems
There are two views on the relationship between Political Science and
Biology Some writers argue that the State is an organism, others maintain that
the State is like an organism One may reject the assertion that the State is an
organism, but it must be admitted that the State in its unity is like an organism,
It has a collective life The analogy, however, should not be extended beyond this,
lest, in the words of Lord .\cton, we may come to grief to which analogies,
therein As Wilson observes, “While a statistical result does not provide an ethic
t)r a norm to be embodied in policy, once the policy has been
supported by
rational conclusions as to what men desire of political society, statistics is
invaluable in attaining the result ’’•J®
Modern governments essentially depend
upon the statistical material and the data it provides in solving very many
political riddles With a Welfare State throwing its full weight on planning,
and its extensive use has become indispensable and every department of
statistics
government keeps its own statistical cell and the administration is centred around
the statistical results
Legislation aimed at public welfare must be guided by
and the various aspects of the welfare of the people, for example,
statistics
SUGGESTED READINGS
Abraham Kaplan Power and Society
Almond, G A
and Coleman, J S (eds )
,
The Pohtui of Devetopir^ Areas Introduction
Almond, and Powell, G B
G A ,
Comparative Politics A Developmental Approach
Andrew Hacker The Study of Politics
Appadorai, A The Substance of Politics, CYmep 1
Arendt, Hannah,, Between Past and Future, Six Lectures in Political Thought
Barker, E The Study of Politual Science and its Relation to Cognate Studies
Bentham, J An Introduction to the Principles of Morals
Bernard E Brown New Directions in Comparative Politics
Blondel, J Comparative Government
E F
Ciarritt, Morals and Politics
Oakshott, M •
Social and Political Doctrme of Contemporary Europe,
Pcnnock, J. R.,
and Smith, D G. Politual Science, An Introduction.
Meaning of the State. The term “State”, which is the central subject aH our
study, has a scientific meaning We do not use it with the same vagueness and
ambiguity as it is used by a man in the street It is often, but erroneously,
used as a synonym for “nation”, “society”, “government”, etc But all these terms
have definite meanings of their own in Political Science and should be clearly
distinguished one from the other The term State is also very commonly used to
express the collective action of the community, through the agency of the
government, as distinguished from individual action For instance, when we talk
about “State management”, “State regulation”, “State aid”, "tc we actually use
,
the word State government Similarly, when we talk about the twenty-two
for
units of the Indian Republic or the fifty states which make the United States of
America, we do not give the word its scientific meaning None of them is really a
State In Political Science the term State has a more specific and definite
meaning which has little in common with most of its various ordinary meanings
As used in Political Science, the term State means an assemblage of people
occupying a definite territory under an organised government and subject to no
outside control One hundred and liftv-tuo manifestations of it are members of
the United Nations There are many more which are not members of this
organization All of them share common charactenstics They are groups of
people living on, and exercising control over, a definite territory They are
divided into government and subjects, the rulers and the ruled Some sort of
system or order is represented by each Rules of law are established and in some
measure maintained, and compulsion is exercised, and the nght to it is
recognized both by the members of the group and by the outside world
collective life, they fulfil the meaning of Aristotle’s famous phrase, “Man is a
social animal”, and when they live a settled life on a definite territory to realize
the purpose of collective living, they fulfil the meaning of Aristotle’s second
famous phrase, “Man is a political animal” But man is not so good as we want to
believe that he is There are all kinds of men and even good men exhibit selfish
behaviour because they live in society Pride, ambition, avarice, revenge, lust,
hyproensy and other traits of disorderly appetites race with the goodness of man
and people are usually concerned with their own welfare first and foremost This
IS the evidence of history “Society”, Burke says, “requires not only that the
passions of individuals should be subjected, but that even in the mass and body,^
as well as in the individuals, the inclinations of men should frequently be
47
48 PWNCIPLES OF POLITICAL SOENCE
thwarted, their will controlled, and their passions brought into subjection.’^' The
best that can be done is to control the worst manifestations of human perversity
by means of political authority The people are bound by rules of common
behaviour and their violation is accompanied by punishment That is the State.
Society meets man’s companionship, the State solves the problems created by
such companionship. The State is, thus, some form of association with some
special characteristics, particularly that of its territorial connection and of its use
of force. It is charged with the duty to maintain those conditions of life for which
the State came into existence and for which it continues to exist
and continuing in existence for the sake of good life ” Man needs the State to
satisfy his diverse needs and to be what he desires to be. Without the State he
cannot rise to the full stature of his personality In fact, in the absence of such a
controlling and regulating authority, society cannot be held together and there
will be disorder and chaos What food means to the human body the State means
to man Both are indispensable for his existence and development The State is,
accordingly, a universal institution It has existed whenever and wherever man has
lived in an organised society, although the term State is the product of the
sixteenth century and Machiavelli was the first to give it a scientific meaning He
observed, “all the powers which have had and have authority over man are states
” ^ The structure of the state
(state) and are either monarchies or republics had
been subject to a great evolution The general process was from the similar and
simple mechanism of the past to a highly dissimilar and complex mechanism of
today
institution, no two writers agree on its definition There have been many different
views about the nature of the State and hence its incompatible definitions It may
well seem curious, says R M MacIver, that so great and obvious a fact as the
State should be the object of quite conflicting definitions “Some writers define
the State as essentially a class structure others regard it as the one organisation
that transcends class and stands for the whole community Some interpret it as a
power system, others as a welfare system .Some view it entirely as a legal
construction, either in the old Austinian sense which made it a relationship of
govemore and governed, or, in the language of modern jurisprudence, as a
community ‘organised for action under legal rules Some identify it with the ’
someday, while to others it is ‘the world the spirit has made for itself Some class
the State as one m the order of ‘corporations’ and others think of it as
indistinguishable from society itself” Gabriel Almond prefers to use the term
“Political System” for the State, as the latter is limited by Icga' and institutional
meanings.^ This disagreement is primarily due to the fact that every writer has
defined it from his own point of view If the author is a sociologist, like
Harold Laski defines the State as “a territorial socieiv divided into Government
and subjects claiming, within its allotted physical area, a supremacy over all
other institutions ” Gabriel Almond says that the Political System, the term he
uses for the State, “is that system of interactions to be found in all independent
which perform the functions of integration and adaptation ^ (both
societies
and vis-a-vis other societies) by means of the employment, or threat of
internally'
ascribing to the State the three elements people, territory and government.
Disagreement again becomes prominent in respect of the fourth element of
sovereignty Those who deny to the State the element of sovereignty, attribute a
special quality to government It is habitually obeyed, says Sidgwick, it is
superior to individual wishes, says Esmien, it claims unlimited authority, says
1 Population,
2. Territory,
3 Government,
4 Sovereignty
and nature of the state (1) that the State is a human institution, the product of
man’s gregarious nature and the result of necessitites of human life, and (2)
population and land are the starting point of an> study of man in his organised
groups It IS the people who make the State, without them there can be none Bui
population must be large enough to make a State and sustain it The rnembeis of
one single family do not make a State, there should be a series of families No
limit, however, can be placed on the number of the people constituting the State
Differences in population, other things remaining the same, do not make any
difference m
the nature of the State, although opinions as to its size have varied
from time to time
Plato and Aritotle put definite limitations on the population of the State
Their ideal was the Greek City-State, like Athens and Sparta Plato fixed the
number at 5,040 citizens Aristotle held that neither ten nor a hundred thousand
could make a good State, both these numbers were extremes He laid down the
general principle that the number should be neither too large nor too small. It
should be large enough to be self-sufficing and small enough to be well governed.
Rousseau, the high priest of direct democracy, determined 10,000 to be an ideal
number for a State
The modern tendency is in favour of States with huge population It is
believed thatmanpower of the State must swell as population is the sinews of war
and power. Hitler’s and Mussolini’s governments gave bounties to couples
producing children above a given minimum. Issueless and unmarried persons
were taxed. Russia, too, has encouraged the growth of her population The 1936
But the size of the population is no criterion of the State Monaco and
USSR are entities with equal status of statehood, although the disparity in the
population of both these states is significantly marked Similarly, increase or loss
in population makes no difference in its Though no limit, either
Statehood
theoretical or practical, can be placed on the population of a State, yet the
population must be sufficienct to maintain a State organisation, and it should not
be more than what the territorial resources of the State are capable of supporting
But behind all these quantitative factors he qualitative elements in evaluating
the problem of the population of a State Population cannot be reckoned in
mathematical terms, the kind of people they are matters no less than their
numbers Aristotle rightly said that a good citizen makes a good State and a bad
citizen a bad State A good citizen must be intelligent, disciplined, and healthy
Healthy citizens are the health of the State, for disease diminishes intelligence,
capacity for work, energy and vitality, it makes for poor production, laziness and
lethargy Similarly, good citizens will not allow religious or political differences to
destroy the State’s unity and security The people of India have yet to learn the
requisites of good citizenship, though in numbers they stand in the front row
which the differentiation between rulers and ruled exists and in which, for that
very reason, a public power exists Duguit is chiefly interested in the
difterentiation between rulers and ruled which takes place “in almost all human
societies, large or small, primitive or civilised,” and then, he tersely says that
“terntory is not an indispensable element in the formation of a State ” Sir John
Seeley, too, does not regard territory as an essential attribute of the State. ” If a
society IS held together, he maintains, by the principle of government, it
constitutes a state, and Political Science should not concern itself only with the so
called civilised scKiety Why should we not say that States are found in deserts of
Arabia and in other regions where the soil is unfruitful and discourages fixed
settlement and agriculture^ WW Willoughby says, “The State itself then is
neither the people, the Government, the Magistracy, nor the Constitution Nor is
It indeed the terntory over which its authority extends It is the given community
”
of given individuals, viewed in a certain aspect, namely, as a political unity
But such views are rarely encountered now They have been on
rejected, not
“Motherland” and they all invoke his or her blessings and vow' to safeguaid its
permanent existence
Moreover, the conduct of international relations would be seriously impeded
without the requirement of a defined territory All authorities on International
Law are now agreed that a fixed territory must be a condition of Statehood
People and government are not enough The occupation of a fixed territory is also
essential, otherwise the State could not be readily identified and held to account
if one attempts to conquer or violate the integrity of another
Land, water and airspace within the defined territorial area comprise the
territory of the State embraces the geographical limits of the State, its rivers
It
and lakes the natural resources it has, and the air space above GeneialK, the
territorial limits of a State extend to a distance of three miles (4 4 Kilometres^ of
the sea from the coast, though in practice the maritime jurisdiction is sought to
be extended further by the States As a result of the extensive developments in
There arc at present one hundred and fifty-two States which are the
members of the United Nations and some new are in the piocess of seeking its
membership gaming independence fn)ni the alien rulers Along side of suc'h
after
giants as China, USSR
and USA, then* am such pigmies as San Maiino and
Monaco, and Luxemburg ‘5 as independent States Vatican city, in Rome, has
something like 1,000 people and yet it is a State No limit, like population, an be c
put on the territoi) of the State, although opinion has differed on the political
utility of a small and a big State Plato diew a c lose analogy between the stature
of a well-formed man and the size of a norma! State Aristotle was also
favourably inclined toward the State of a moderate size Rousseau took his cue
from Plato’s analogy and set definite limits to the size of a well-governed State
He maintained that m general “a small Stale ls proportionately stronger than a
large one.” Montesquieu said that there is a necessary relation between the size of
the State and the form of goyernment best adapted to it
Popular government, it is claimed, can be applied onl> to a small Stale In a
small Stale the population is limited and the poeople have the best opportunity
to assemble together and express then opinions They tan exercise vigilance,
which IS the price of demcxracy, far more effectively when the State is small De
Tocqueville said, “The history of the world offers nr instance of a gieat nation
retaining the form of a republican government for a long senes of years It may be
advanced with confidence that the existence of a great republic will always be
exposed to far greater dangers than that of a small one All the passions which
are most fatal to republican institutions spread with an increasing territory, while
the virtues which maintain their dignity do not augment in the same
proportion ” Direct democracy can only flourish in a small State and
Switzerland is cited as a living example A small State, it is further argued,
evinces more unity and greater patriotism It is a compact class of people who live
a corporate life Each stands for all and all stand for each, concentrating their
energies collectively in promoting common welfare
Small States, on the other hand, are relatively less secure They fall an easy
prey to bigger States which are usually aggressive, and history is full of examples
of many a naked aggression Hitler in no time trampled Poland and other
Central European countries Japan did the same in the Far East Recent opinion,
IS invariably in favour of bigger States Tnetschke, the German philosopher, in
his work on “Politics” (Politik), published a little before World War I, declared
that “the State is power,” and it is a sin for the State to be small He said that
even the idea of a small State “is rediculous on account of its weakness, which in
itself is reprehensible because it masquerades as strength.”
Economic resources cannot be left out of account while evaluating the utility
of small States The modem tendency is towards planning and self-sufficiency,
and It can only be realised when the territory ol the State is large enough to
abound in a variety of natural resources The scale of production determines the
mode of production Large-.scale production is always accompanied by rationali-
zation of industrv in order to advantageously compete m the international
market, besides commanding an extensive and stable domestic market After all,
the economic conditions of a State determine the political stature of its people. In
this c'ompetmg world a large number of small States endanger international
peace
The improved political devices run down the argument that small States are
best suited for demcK:racy The representative system, growing familiar to Europe
from the twelfth and thirteenth centuries and now taking roots in Asia and
Africa, has vastly extended the scope of democratic institutions Federalism has
also proved its value Federalism has reconciled IcKal autonomy with national
unity, diversity with uniformity, and it has enabled local communities to retain
much of their individual character and yet they co-operate for certain purposes in
a single State
Big States, according to Tnetschke, “are more adapted than small ones to
promote the development of intellectual culture ” The resources which a big
State possesses, the talentcan command, and the greater genius it can produce
it
narrow the horizon of their views, and to dwarf in some degree the proportion of
their ideas Public opinion cannot maintain its liberty and purity in small
dimensions, and the currents that come from large communities sweep over a
contracted territory These States, like the minuter communities of the Middle
Ages, serve a purpose, by constituting partitions and securities of self-government
in the larger States; but they are impediments to the progress of society, which
depends on the mixture of races under the same government
16 Dc Tocqucville, A ,
Democracy in America ^translated by Reeves), Vol I, p. 170
17 Acton, Lord, History of Freedom and Other Essays, p 295
54 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Every State, therefore, must have its population, a definite territory, a duly
established government, and sovereignty Absence of any of these elements denies
to It the status of Statehood Accordingly, the term ‘\State” generally used for the
twenty-two units of the Indian Republic, or for any one of the fifty States, which
make the United States of America, is a misnomer None of them is sovereign
They possess the elements of population, territory and government and are
autonomous in their own spheres of jurisdiction But autonomy is not sovereignty
and lack of sovereignty does not entitle them to be ranked as States
jg See Chapter VI
—
State and Government. In everyday language the tv^o terms, the State and
Government, are often used interchangeably as if there is no difference between
them The Stuarts in England did not differentiate between the two with a view
to justifying their absolute authority Louis XIV of France used to say, “I am the
State Some Hobbes, used the terms State and
Political philosophers, too, like
government as if they were identical in meaning But the State and government
are by no means the same thing They are not synonymous, for it is perfectly
possible to conceive of communities —
piimitive, nomadic tribes, for example,
which are not “States” in the sense in which India, Pakistan, Britain, and the
United States of America are, but which have governments in the sense of
accepted rules of conduct, by which law and order are maintained Indeed, it
could be argued, says Maclver, that “where the family exists and it exists —
—
everywhere in human society government already exists ” If this is so, govern-
ment can exist independently of the State But no State can exist without
government Without a government the “population would be an incoherent,
unorganized, anarchic mass with no means of collective action
persons, institutionsand agencies by which the will and policy of the State is
expressed and carried out It is a misnomer to equate government, as in current
speech we sometimes do, with its controlling element, as, for instance, a Ministry
in Great Britain and India, and the President and his cabinet in the United
States When we refer to ‘a change of government’ m any of these countries, it
really means change in the controlling elements of the government and not a
change in the government itself It is true that a change in the controlling
element of government m a State has an important impact on the government,
but ministers or a President do not make the whole government Even emperors
and kings abdicate, as did Edward VIII of Britain and King Farouk of Egypt, but
with these changes the whole political and administrative structure is not altered
Government includes “the whole network of local institutions, elected bodies and
appointed officials, the wffiole civil service in all its ramifications, down to the
”
lowest official charged with the carrying out of policy
“The State”, declared the United States Supreme Court “itself is an ideal
person, intangible, invisible, immutable Government is an agent, within the
sphere of its agency of perfect representative, but outside of that it is a lav^'lcss
usurpation ” Elaborating the point Wexxirow Wilson remarked that the State “is
junstically wholly organized in its government and can only speak through the
govcrnmenl ” Fwo results flow from it Gcnernmcnt is the organization of the
State, Its working machinery The State has authority inherent in itself whereas
m Ciarnt r,
J W ,
Political Science and Government, p 101
20 Roger, H Soltau, An Introduction to Politics, p 107
56 PmNClPLES OF POUnCAL SCIENCE
citizens. When we think of this whole structure we think of the State.” It is, then,
clear that being an agent of the State the government has only a lease of
authority, revocable by the sovereign. The State, in brief, is the principal, the
master, to which authority the government must ultimately bow The master in
possession of original and plenary authority can take back the powers it has
delegated to its agent, dimmish them or even expand them at will
remains the State With the disappearance of sovereignty, it loses its character of
Statehood States come to an end, usually by forceful annexation, but rarely by
the voluntary union of one another 21 The State also loses its identity when them
is a total extinction of its population But ‘governments’ can and do change,
without the permanency of the State being disturbed France had many forms of
government between 1789 and today 22 and every change brought in more or less
an entirely new set-up in the political organization of the State, but France
remained France Italy remained Italy when it moved from constitutional to
fascist monarchy and then on to a republic So did Russia of the Tsars after the
revolution of 1917 There is no change in the Statehood of Pakistan with the
secession of East Bengal, now Bangladesh, except for a sizeable diminution in its
territory
Despite these obvious differences, the State and government are identified, as
if they are one The State is an abstraction whereas government is emphatically
concrete It is the working machinery of the State and it wields on its behalf that
legal authority which is the inherent power ol tlu Siak* In daiK hit . it is not so
much with the abstract State as with the government that an ordinary man
comes into contact “For those who seek concreteness rather than abstraction,” says
Croce, “The State is nothing but government, and assumes complete reality only
in tht goNcimncni (orrai when he sa\s that loi ihe puiposes of
l.aski is
a given time and in a given territoi7, the government tends to incarnate the
State
as Its sole agent and representative, and power is its monopoly Moreover,
it is the
type of government in power that gives any State its distinctive politic’al
form
Rome was first a republic, then an empire France from 1814
to 1870 was in turn
a monarchy, a republic, an empire, and again a republic Britain is now a
constitutional monarchy, which she was not until 1688 Pakistan
was an Islamic
Republic till October 8 1958 when the Constitution was abrogated and Martial
21 For instance, the merging of Scotland into Great Britain by the Act of Union of
1707
22 The form of Government m France changed in 1790, 1792, 1795, 1799, 1804 1814
1815 (twice), 1830, 1848, 1852, 1870, 1940, 1944 and 1958
23 Harold ^ Grammar of Politics, p 131
l.aski,
Law imposed It twice became a military dictatorship in between 1958 and 1972
and once again in 1977 All this means that tbe governments of these States are,
or were, of that particular form Government and State, thus, become practically
identical
But the difference between the two still remains distinct. The characteristics
of temtonality and all-inclusiveness point to the basic distinguishing characterise
tic of the State The State is both a sociological and a legal entity. 1 am an
Indian, because I belong to the State of India and when I pledge allegiance to the
national flag, the State is the entity for which the symbol stands. I do not pledge
allegiance to the government whose controlling element, Ministry, is subject to
periodical change. Nor do I pledge allegiance to the unorganised mass of people.
My only pledge is to this political entity, the State, whose sovereignty and
integrity ail Indians are pledged to maintain, no matter at what sacrifice. The
State is a people organised for law within a definite territory. Government is its
organization to which is delegated the power to enforce its will on its members by
resort, if necessary, to physical sanctions The Constitution of the State provides
for the organization of government and it prescribes what it should and what it
Society is the product of man’s instinctive desire for association which finds
expression in the aggregation of people having common interests and united
together by what may be called “consciousn«s of the kind ” The people who live
together think alike, associate with one another, and make common efforts for a
institutions, the creation of man’s will and reason It is organised in a special way
to secure certain results It emerges and exists within society, but “is not”, as
Maclver says, “even the form of society.” The geographical areas of the State and
58 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
society may be the same and their membership may also be identical, but they
are distinct in origins, aims and functions The State exists for one single purpose
and Its functions arc relative to that purpose. Society exists for a number of
purposes, “some great and some small, but all in their aggregate deep as well as
broad The organisation of the State “is not all social organisation,” as
Maclver puts it, “the ends for whicn the State stands are not all the ends
which humanity seeks, and quite obviously the ways in which the State pursues
its object are only some of the ways in which within society, men strive for the
Since society is natural and instinctive and the State is the creation of will
and reason, society is prior to the State and it embraces all communities,
organised and unorganised Organisation is not the essential characteristic of
society. But the State must necessarily be organised The Pathans of the Tribal
Area, on the North-West Frontier of Pakistan, do not form a State, though every
tribe is a distinct social unit Similarly, certain groups of Eskimos have no
recognisable political organisation
but certainly does not create, and social motives, like friendship or jealousy,
which establish relationships too intimate and personal to be controlled by the
great engine of the State ”^6
but they are not imperatives They are simply rules of conduct, which the
members of society are desired to observe It has no authority to force obedience
Nor can it physically punish those who disobey its rules Society ensures the
observance of us rules by persuasion, and appeal to the good will of its
members Barker rightly says, “the area of society is voluntary co-operation, its
energy good will and its method is elasticity, while the area of the State
is is
”
mechanical action, its energ>' is force and its method is rigidity
While the State is not identical with society, yet it provides the frame-work
of the social order According to Laski, the State is a way of regulating human
conduct, “Any analysis of its character reveals it as a method of imposing
men must regulate their lives ”27 Xhe conditions
principles of behaviour by which
in which we are bom, grow up, are educated, work, enjoy our leisure, own
property, many, have children and die, arc all laid down by the State, and the
government can compel us to comply with them All births must be registered,
25 Barker, E ,
PrincipUs of Social and Political Theory, p 42
26 Maclver, R M ,
The Modern State,
p 5
27 Laski, H ,
An Introduction to Pohtus,
p 15
THE NATURE OF THE STATE 59
send their children to school for a certain number of years. They are obliged to
notify the authorities if they suffer from certain infectious diseases Citizens must
pay taxesto the State, whether they approve of the use to which the money is put
or notThey must clothe themselves decently, behave with propriety in the streets,
avoid making themselves a nuisance to their neighbours, and they must respect
the persons and property of other people There is, in fact, hardly a single human
activity which is not in some way regulated by the State All conduct in society
must conform to the way of life presenbed by the laws of the State, as the State
makes and maintains its laws not for the sake of laws, but for what they do to
individual lives The State, thus, represents the highest form of social organisa-
tionand It exists to regulate and cement social relations. It binds people together
and enjoins upon them to observe certain uniform rules of behaviour, without
which we cannot think of a well-ordered social life
may, however, again be emphasised that “the State is a structure not
It
co-eval and co-extensive with society, but built within it as a determinate order
”
for the attainment of a specihc end 2 s The end of the State is to provide those
conditions of togetherness without which the happiness of man cannot be
secured But the State can serve its purpose best when it performs it own
functions efficiently and refrains from trespassing into others. If it does, then, the
State stands equated with society embracing the whole life of man This will
make the State omnicompetent and ommcompetcnce really means incompetence
It may mean even something more The happiness of the individual may be
sacrificed in the name of the glory and prosperity of the State In this way, all
social activities which constitute the social order, will ultimately be at the mercy
of the government, for “the State is”, as Laski says, “for the purpose of practical
administration, the government ” The government may prescribe anything
which It may like and as it likes But this is neither the way of the State nor that of
the government The State is the creation and agent of society and, therefore, its
subordinate Both society and the State strive to achieve the common objective,
the free development of man’s personality, his happiness This is possible only
when the distmition and collaboration between the two is properly recognised.
associations contained within society, the creation of man’s will and reason to
maintain and cement the various aspects of social life Two results, then, follow
(
i)
society IS both prior to and wider than the State, and
(ii) society IS a complex of all such associations as economic, educational,
religious, political and cultural
“Society precedes the State just as it precedes the family, the church, the
corporation, the political party It unites all these as a tree unites its branches.
The State is one of these associations, and it has become the most prominent of
all because it controls and coordinates the various aspects of social life.
2 The purposes of society arc many and diverse whereas the purpose of the
28 Maciver, R M ,
The Modem Slate, p 40
60 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
3. The State is definitely territorial, society is not. Loyalty to the State does
not exhaust all the social obligations of man.
actions arc mechanical, its methods arc rigid and its power is force
prescribed by the laws of the State But the State must not trespass into the
sphere not assigned to its jurisdiction
such as, social, religious, cultural, economic, educational, recreational, and many
others and develop the sociability of man In the
All these groups express
beginning man’s social wants were few and the groups were limited in number
But in the complex life of our times social wants have multiplied enormously and
today society is a vertiable network of such associations Barker says, “We see
society less as a number of individuals leading a common life, we see it more as an
association of individuals already united in various groups, each with its common
"
life, in a further and higher group for a further and higher common purpose
crowd A crowd has no method of doing things and achieving its purpose, as there
IS no common bond of cohesion between them And there must be some man or
body of men to see that the rules of the association are duly obeyed to realise its
purpose Every association necessarily has its constitution, a code ot rules and a
way of setting up its ‘government’, churches, political parties, and trade unions,
for example
The State, too, is a group of human beings It comes into existence, like other
groups, to satisfy human needs through concerted action While each group has its
distinctive character and problems, yet all pursue their activities to secure a
happy and good life. In spite of this close resemblance between the State and
Other associations, there are some fundamental differences which distinguish the
State from any other association
1 The
State is a terntonally integrated association and its territory is most
distinctly demarcated The jurisdiction of each State lapses beyond its territorial
limits But voluntary associations are not restricted to a definite territory. Many
of them are international in scope, spread all the world over, and include in their
membership citizens of many States, as the Rotary Club, the Lions Club, the Red
Cross Society', and the Boy Scouts and Girl Guides 7he membership of each
Slate IS distinct 1 am a citizen of India while John is a citizen of, say, United
States of America
government
4 Each association is promoted for a specific object or objects and its
activities are limited to the pursuit of those interests In other words, the sphere of
activity of every voluntary' association is well defined The province of the State,
on the other hand, is much wider and its activities are manifold It is charged
with the care of general rather than particular interests Maciver says that the
State “is essentially an order-creating organisation It exists to establish order,
not, of course, merely for the sake of order, but for the sake of all the potentialities
of the life which require that basis of order.”
5 The State is sovereign and it possesses the power to enforce its decisions
Voluntary associations do not possess the legal power of coercion If the members
of an association disobey its rules and regulations, thev cannot be physically
punished It has no means to command and enforce obedience. It can only
morally condemn the wrong-doer, though it may be admitted that in some cases
moral condemnation is worse than physical punishment
6 The State possesses the power to control the activities of all voluntary
activities, though the ban was lifted afterwards Emergency declared in June
^
1975 again banned it The Pakistan Government, during Ayub Khan’s military
dictatorship, prohibited the organisation of private military formations and then
liquidated the political parties. General Zia-Ul-Haq repeated it in 1977 after his
military coup and the ban on political parties still continues
7. Finally, the State can create many associations and prescribe their
functions The universities in every country are established by the laws of the
State and their functions are clearly defined therein Similarly, it may create
corporations or other kinds of asscxiations for certain specific purposes
A community may, thus, be a part of the wider community, and, in fact, “all
community is a question of degree ” The whole world makes a community and it
is the largest of all Family is a community of blood and it is the smallest of all
32 Maclver, R M ,
Community, p 22
33 /W,pp 22-23
34 Ilyas Ahmed, The First Principles of Politics, p 21
1
of an association, the State The people who comprise them may come and go as
time passes, but the institutions once established, endure, though they may be
moulded and shaped by the people who comprise them according to the
changing needs of the time Monarchy in Britain is an institution, but it is not
the same tcxiay as it was during the times of the Tudors or Stuarts or even during
the Victorian era Similarly, British Parliament is an institution and it took
eight centuries to transform it into its present position and stature The leaders of
a political party will rise or fall over a penod of years, but the party continues as
Moreover, the common aim that an institution pursues can be a very general
one The members of a legislative body, for example, will not always agree on
billswhich should be passed or in what form Nor will the judges of a judicial
tribunal always hand down unanimous decisions. But they do agree on when
to
meet, on how to handle their business, and on what it is they are supposed to be
doing I'hus, all members of Parliament in India know that they
assemble in New
Delhi on appointed dates to pass laws, all Justices of the Supreme Court know
that it IS their job to decide cases The President of India
knows his job and
performs his functions in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution An
institution, thus, consists of individuals, general goals, and rules for reaching
those goals
There can be a one man institution as the Presidency in India, America and
France or Monarchy in England It may consist of a score of them as the cabinet,
or hundreds of them as Parliament or a Congress, or it may be a multimillion-
member institution as a political party Some institutions have limited goals
whereas others have more comprehensive. In some the members of an institution
are strong in their loyalty to its aim while in others they are apathetic or even
obstructive Parliament in India and various Assemblies ot her State legislatures
stand as a clear testimony of obstruction. To sum up, “politics cannot function
without institutions, and an understanding of politics requires an awareness of
how they operate
’
dies .The Organic Theory is a biological conception which describes the State in
terms of “natural science, views the individuals which compose it as analogous to
the cells of a plant or animal, and postulates a relation of interdependence
between them and society such as exists between the organs and parts of a
biological organism and the whole structure ” In other words, as the animal body
IS composed of cells, so is the Stale composed of several individuals, and as is the
“relation of the hand to the body, or the leaf to the tree, so is the relation of man
to society He exists in it and it in him ” The State is an organic unity “a —
”
living spiritual being
reached in the writings of Bluntschli The State, he asserted, is the very “image of
human organism ” As “an oil painting,” he said, “is something more than a mere
aggregation of drops of oil, as a statue is something more than a combination of
marble particles, as a man is something more than a mere quantity of cells and
blexxi corpuscles, so the nation is something more than a mere aggregation of
39 Leacock, S ,
Elements of Political Science, p 75
40 Garner, J W ,
Political Science and Government, p 212
66 PRINaPLES OF POLmCAL SCIENCE
process of development The animal and social bodies, Spencer affirmed, begin as
germs, all and simple m structure. As they grow and develop, they
similar
become unlike and complex in structure Their process of development is the
same; both moving from similarity and simplicity to dissimilarity and complexi-
ty. “As the lowest type of animal is all stomach, respiratory surface or limb, so
primitive society is all warrior, all hunter, all builder, or all tool-maker As society
grows in complexity, division of labour follows, i e ,
new organs with different
functions appear, corresponding to the differentiation of functions m the animal,
”
m which fundamental trait they become entirely alike
There is so much dependence of one on the other that the distress of one paralyses
the rest of the society “If the iron worker in the social organism stops work, or the
miner or the food producer, or the distributor fails to discharge his natural
functions in the economy of the society, the whole suffers injury just as the animal
”
organism suffers from the failure of its members to perform their functions
Society and organism, it is further pointed out, are both subject to wear and tear
and then replacement Just as cell tissues and blood corpuscles in the animal
organism wear out and are replaced by new ones, in the same manner, old,
infirm, and diseased persons die, giving place to newly bom persons
Spencer, then, gives some structural analogies between society and organism
He says, society, too, has three systems corresponding to the sustaining system,
the distributary system and the regulating system in an organism The sustaining
system in an oi^anism consists of mouth, gullet, stomach and intestines It is by
means of this system that food is disgested and the whole organic machine is
sustained Society has its own sustaining system and it is the productive system
comprising the manufacturing districts and agricultural areas. The distributary
system in an organism consists of the blood vessels, heart, artenes and veins and
they carry blood to all parts of the body Means of communication and transport
m the social structure correspond to the distributary system in an organism
What the artenes and veins mean to the human body roads, railways, post and
telegraph services mean to society.'** Finally, the regulating system is the
nerve-motor mechanism which regulates the whole body Government in the
body politic, regulates and controls the activities of the individuals, and it is
distinct, or, to quote Spencer,, the units of the social body are free and “more or
”
less widely dispersed
Spencer also points out another difference between an organism and a
social body This difference, he admits, is very important because it “greatly
affects our notion of the ends to be achieved by social organisation ” He says that
there is no “nerve sensorium** in the social body. That is to say, there is no single
centre of consciousness in society as is an organism,
found in the living body. In
consciousness is concentrated in one definite part of the whole, the cerebrum or
brain In soceity, it is diffused or spread over the whole Every individual member
in a society has his own conscience and he acts for himself independently of others
Albert Schaffie, the Austrian publicist, who emphasised at great length the
anatomical, physiological, biological and psychological resemblances between
scKiety and the animal body He asserted that society is an organism “whose
protoplasm or unit is man, the State or government in the one corresponding to
the brain in the other ” Among others who have emphatically defended the
organic theory are the French writers, notably, August Comte, Fouille and Rene
Worms Comte desenbed human society as the highest stage in organic evolution,
“embodying the completes! development of that natural harmony or organisa-
tion and action Rene Worms says that “the anatomy, physiology, and
pathology of society possess striking similarities to the structure, function and
pathology of living beings ” But the attempts to draw “literal” analogies between
society and living organisms have now been abandoned Today, the organic
conception of the State “has survived (with insignificant exceptions) only in the
older Hegelian form, the State an end in itself, its evolution controlled by its own
laws, Its functionally different parts, interdependent and inseparable, all existing
”
for and dependent upon a vigorous life of the corporate national life
, Evaluation of the Theory. There are two points of view about the organic
nature of the State Barker says, “The State is not an organism, but it is like an
organism
” ^ The organic analogy has a useful purpose to serve as it emphasLses
the unity of the State "Ehe State is not a mere aggregation of people It is a social
unity Man cannot lead a life of isolation Dependence is his very psychology and
individuals depend on one another and on the State as a whole The welfare of
each is involved in the welfare of all He cannot be separated from society, just as
a hand or a leg, without losing its utility, cannot be separated from the body. The
State has a collective life like an organism The attainment of the common
purpose depends upon the proper performance by every individual of his
functions or duties Every citizen has social obligations to himself, to his family,
to his neighbours, and to the society of which he is a unit Hobhouse lightly sums
42 Coker, F W ,
Recent Political Thought,
p 410.
43 Ihtd.'pWl
44 Ernest Barker, Political Thought in England ( 1848-1914), p. 91.
68 PRINaPLES OF POLFTICAL SaENCE
up, “....tht life of society and the life of an individual do resemble one another in
certain respects, and the term ‘organic’ is as justly applicable to the one as to the
other, for an organism is a whole, consisting of inter-dcpendent parts Each part
lives and functions and grows by subserving the life of the whole It sustains the
rest and is sustained by them and through their mutual support comes a common
”
development
So far we agree and accept the proposition that the State is like an organism.
But the farther these analc^ies arc carried, the more misleading they become
The user of analogy tends to forget that the resemblances he notices hold good
only within the limits where they overlap The objects compared are plainly not
identical, as to compare identicals is useless, but possess, besides their common
features, other traits that distinguish them.
and the individuals who compose society The cells have no independent life of
their own. They are mechanical pieces matter Each is fixed in its place,
having no power of thought or will, and existing solely to support and perpetuate
the life of the whole The individuals, on the other hand, are
independent, intellectual and moral human beings They do not act like a
machine. Each individual has a physical life independent of the whole and each
strives to make his own destiny It is true that man cannot be the best of himself
independently of society, but he can live, if he so wishes, an independent life of
his owm This is not possible in an organism If parts are cut off from their parent
body, they die Chop off a branch from a tree, a limb from a human bodv, and
both pensh
It IS, again, true that the State has grown from similarity and simplicity to
dissimilarity and complexity But even common reason docs not believe that it is
subbed Vo the same process of birth, growth and decay as an organism An animal
OTganvsm comes mto existence by the \m\ou oK two orgamsms This is not the
method of the hirth of the State The process of its growth is a\so not similar
Organisms grow from within and through interna! adaptation They grow
“unconsciously independent of volition, entirely dependent on its environment
”
and the natural laws of the biological world ^The machinery of the State and
its on the other hand, change to adjust themselves to the altered needs and
laws,
requirements of the people. And all this change is brought about as a result of
volition and conscious efforts of its members “Its growth, if such it may be called,
IS largely the result of the conscious action of its individual members and is to a
great extent self-directed ”^^Then, an organism dies. The State is not liable to
death It is p>ermanent, it endures. To sum up, in the words of Jcllmck, “Growth,
decline and death are not necessary processes of State life though they are
inseparable from the life of the organism. The State docs not originate or renew
Itself as a plant or as an animal does.”
The Organic Theory docs not help us in answering the baffling, but practical
question of what the State should do. In fact, the Organic Theory has been used
to support views on the province of the State ranging from Individualism to
Socialism. Herbert Spencer uses it as a basis for the theory of laissez fairc and
means, the world witnessed in Hitler’s Germany and Mussolini’s Italy Commun-
ist countries, like Soviet Russia and China, also amplify it Jellinek has rightly
said, “We had better reject the theory in toto lest the danger from the larger
amount of falsity in the analogy should outweigh the good in the little truth it
”
contains
Juristic Theory, The Juristic Theory of the State embodies the point of view
of the jurists who seek to explain the nature of the State in terms of legal
concepts They endow the State with a fictitious legal personality as they look
upon the State as a legal “person” possessing, like a natural physical person, an
individuality, scif-consciousness and a will of its- own They view the State as an
organ lor the creation, interpretation and enforcement of law, and for the
protection of all legal rights
Not agree amongst themselves There are some who regard the
all jurists
State as the sole and exclusive creator of law while others reject this opinion and
maintain that a large body of law in the past was never enacted or created by the
State It customs and usages which no
essentially, the latter claim, consisted of
legal sovereign could afford to ignore A jurist
Duguit would go to the length
like
of asserting that law may exist anterior to the creation of the State, and therefore
is independent of its will, and that the State is bound by this law and has no right
But German jurists, like FJ Stahl, Lorenz Von Stem, Otto Gierke, and H.G
Trietschke, vest the State with a real, as opposed to a fictitious, personality
having a legal will of its own distinct from the sum of the wills of the individuals
composing the State, and a capacity forexpressing its will in words and acts, and
as the creator and possessor of rights
Thus, jurists themselves look differently on the nature of the State As long
as the conception of the State being a person means “nothing more than that it is
person, as the law regards all
a sovereign corporation, that is, an ‘artificial’
le^al capacity, and power of
corporations, and as such possesses a collective will, a
collective action, apart from the will, the capacity
and the power of action of the
individuals who compose it, just as a private corporation
has a
numerous
which are distinct from
continued existence and possesses rights and obligations
70 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
those of the shareholders,” the juristic analysis is good and useful and may be
accepted. But the conception of the real personality of the State, as asserted by
some eminent German jurists, is pregnant with pernicious results One may
accept the proposition that the State, like other corporations, has a legal
personality and it can sue and be sued It may own property, and States do, direct
and undertake economic enterprises and perform other functions as the custodian
of the interests of the present and future generations. Citizens of the State suffer
from telescopic defects they discount the future and put premium on the present
Moreover, individual interests change and shift The State is a permanent legal
entity and it suffers from no telescopic defects It endures and represents the
collective will and collective interests of ail the citizens rather than individual
interests represented by individual will But to say that the State has a real
personality apart from that of the citizens is to vest that entity with absolute
powers which may prove antagonistic to the interests of a citizen and may dwarf
his individuality, if not altogether suppress it The Juristic Theory of the State is,
The Marxist theory rejects the very basis of the State, namely, that it is a
natural and necessary institution The State is an artificial vehicle of coercion,
State, Frederick Engels wrote, “has not existed eternity There have been from all
societies that did without it, that had no conception of the state and state power
At a certain stage of economic development, which was necessarily bound up
with the cleavage of society into classes, the state became a necessity owing to
cleavage.”^ The State has, therefore, no moral and useful purpose
stature to
serve, It is an organ of “an organ for the oppression of one class by
class rule,
another, it creates ‘order’ which legalises and perpetuates this oppression by
moderating the collision between the classes ” The ancient and the feudal
States were organs for the exploitation of the slaves and the serfs and “the
contemporary representative state is an instrument of exploitation of wage-labour
by capital.” The revolution of the past was that of the slaves and serfs against
51 Ibid, p. 148
THE NATURE OF THE STATE 71
feudalism and ii found its expression in the French Revolution. The one in the
future,Marx predicted, will be the revolution of the wage-eamers against the
boui^eoisic in their bid to establish the Socialist Commonwealth.
When the revolution comes, the capitalist class will disappear and a classless
society headed by the Dictatorship of the Prolctanat takes its place ‘In order
to break down the resistance of the bourgeois,” says Marx, “the workers invest the
State with a revolutionary spirit ” A few remaining elements of capitalism must
be swept away and the minds of men purged of the remnants of capitalist
mentality with which they were infected The Dictatorship of the Prolctanat
will continue with the State, but it will be a revolutionary State invested with
oppressive and autocratic powers The proletarian dictatorship takes up the work
of both construction and destruction, construction of Socialism and complete
destruction of Capitalism Once the bourgeoisie has been completely suppressed
and the remnants of the Capitalist system are removed, the necessity of the State
will cease to exist The State will “wither away” and the emerging society will be
c lasslcss and Stateless
Will the use of force come to an end when the State ‘withers away’? Secondly,
will the State at all wither awav ^ There is as yet no trace of cither in Soviet
Russia or in other Communist States Both arc very much there as before
SUGGESTED READINGS
Barker, E PoliUcal Thought tn England Spencer to Present Day, pp 175—183
Barker E Principles of Social and Political Theory, pp 42-77
Follet, M P The New StaU, Chaps MV
Gamer, J W Introduction to Politual Scierice, ChBcpa IIMV
Garner, J W Political Science and Goitemment, Chaps IV-VII
Gcttcl, R G .
Introduction to Political Scunce, Chap II.
72 PHINCIPUSS OF POUTICAI SCIENCE
Karl, W. Deutsch: Foltltcs and Government How People Decide Their Fate, Cliap 1
Introductory. While introducing the State, in the first Chapter, we said that it
originated in the bare needs of life and continues in existence for the good life of
man But it is shrouded in mystery when and how the State came into existence.
The recent researches in the sciences of Anthropology, Ethnology, and Compara-
tive Philology throw some light on the subject, but all this is not sufficient to offer
a matter of fact explanation of the origin of the State Speculation is, then, the
only alternative and we examine a number of theones that have been advanced
from time to time, varying with the credulity of the age The most important of
these theones are
the origin of the State They form part of the accepted Historical or Evolutionary
Theory, although we have treated them separately for clarity and proper under-
standing The theories of Divine Ongin, Force and Social Contract arc
speculative and stand rejected. But it does not mean that they have no practical
utility Each one ol thesi thc'oiies contains some element of truth and. aids
us in penetrating the realm ot the past and helps to find out hou and whv the
State came into existence To examine and reject a speculative theory is a means
of arriving at the truth It is only by groping in the dark that we hope to reach the
light Leacock has rightly said that the “rejection of what is false in the
speculative theories ol the past will aid in establishing more valid conclusions on
the residual basis of what is true ” What exists is never new It is a monument of
human effort, the result ol prolonged activity We cannot understand anv
contemporary institution without some knowledge of its genetic background
Speculative theories exhibit the spirit of the time which they flourished and
in
arc, consequently, the index of the people, their thoughts, and their environments
and describe the forces that moulded and shaped the practices of the State.
73
74 PRINCIPLES cn' POLITICAL SCIENCE
enunciated from time to time and it paved the way for further developments in
political thinking The Social Contract theory replaced the theory of Divine
Origin and the former was replaced by the Historical for Evolutionary theory
The theory of the Divine Origin of the State is as old as Political Science
Itself There is sufficient evidence to prove now on
that early States were based
this conception and all was connected with certain unseen
political authority
powers The earliest ruler was a combination of priest and king or the magic
man and king The authority and reverence which a ruler commanded depended
upon his position as a priest or a magic man Religion and politics were so
inextricably mixed up in the primitive scxiety that not a hazy line of demarcation
could be drawn between the two
Even today, the State of Pakistan does not seem to draw a distinction
between religion and politics Sir Mohammad Zafarullah Khan, the then
Pakistan Foreign Minister, while speaking on the Objective Resolution in the
Pakistan Constituent Assembly in 1949, said “Those who sought to draw a
distinction between the spheres of religion and politics as being mutually
”
exclusive put too narrow a construction upon the functions of religion The '
finds unequivocal support in the scriptures of almost all religions in the world In
the Mahabharata^ it is recounted that the people approached God and requested
him to grant them a ruler who should save them from the anarchy and chaos
prevailing in the state of nature “Without a Chief, O Lord”, they prayed, “we
arc perishing Give us a Chief whom we shall worship in concert and who will
protect us ’’^The Islamic State, too, was theocratic The theory of Divine Origin,
however, received a new impetus with the advent of Chnstianity. “Render unto
Caesar the things that arc Caesar’s,” said Jesus Christ, and Paul amplified this in
his Epistle to the Romans, which has been quoted by writers time and again in
1. The Statisman, Northern India Edition, New Delhi, Match 14, 1949.
2- Refer to U Ghoshal’s A Hutmy of Jndtan PoUtual Theones, p 1 75.
ORIGIN OF THE STATE 75
support of the theory of Divine Origin. We are, thus, tjld, “Let every soul be
subject unto the higher powers. For there is no power but of God. the powers that
be arc ordained of God Whosoever, therefore, resisteth the power, resisteth the
ordinance of God' and they that resist shall receive themselves damnation....” ^
duthoritv
3 Even today the Queen of Great Britain is a Queen “by the Grace of
(iod"
The England found refuge in the doctrine of the Divine Right of
Stuarts in
Kings and its was James 1 Sir Robert Filmer was its
leading exponent
enthusiastic supporter Bousset advocated it in France and supported the
despotism of Louis XIV It was claimed that Kings ruled by divine right and the
subjects had no recourse against them “Kings”, wrote James I, “are breathing
images of God upon earth” and disobedience to their commands was disobe-
dience to God “As It IS atheism and blasphemy to dispute what God can do, so it
IS pre^sumption and high contempt in a subject to dispute what a King can do, or
people was submission to the authoritv of the King oi complete anarchy The
King could not be held answerable for his actions to human judgment He was
responsible to God alone “A bad King will be judged by God but he must not be
judged bv his subjects oi bv any human agency for enforcing the law, such as the
estates or the courts ” The law' resided ultimately “in the breast of the King
The mam points in the doctrine of the Divine Right of Kings may, thus, be
summed up ~
1 . Monarchy is divinely ordained and the King draws his authority from God;
The theory of the Divine Right of Kings, originally used in the Middle Ages
bulwark against the claims of the Church Fathers, was later used by
to serv'e as a
Kings and their supporters to defend their existence against the political
consciousness of the people—-when the people claimed that ultimately power and
sovereign authority rested with them.
Evaluation of the Theory. That the State is divinely created docs not find
any place in The State is essentially a human
the present political thought
institution, and it comes into existence when a number of people occupying a
definite territory organise themselves politically for achieving common ends The
laws of the State are made by men and enforced by them The State, therefore,
originated in the bare needs of the life of man and continues in existence for the
satisfaction of those needs and aspirations for a good life To accept it as the
creation of God is to defy nature itself and to exalt the State to a position above
criticism and change The Divine Origin theory is dangerous as it justifies the
examples of bad and vicious Kings God personifies v irtue grace and benevolent
and so should be His deputy It is, accordingK bad logic to accept the dogma of
James I that “Kings are breathing images of God ujion earth ” Even m the
senptures the theorv does not hnd unequivocal suppoit The Bible tells us
“Render unto Caesar the things that are Gaesar's and unto Ciod the things that
*’
are God's I'his saying of Christ does not justify the Divine Origin of the State
Finally, the theory' does not consider anv other form of government txcept
mtinarchy and that, too, absolute monarchy Such a form of government is
antagonistic to the demcxTatic ideal which accepts consent as the basis of the
State
was, thus, a great combining factor which welded the people in the pursuit of
common ends. “It taught men to obey” when they were “not yet ready to govern
themselves.”^ Finally, the theory of Divine Origin adds a moral tone to the
functions of the State “To regard the Slate as the work of God is to give it a high
moral status, to make it something which the citizen may revere and support,
something which he may regard as the perfection of human life.”' The Divine
Origin Theory and with that the Divine Right of Kings was discredited in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in the West and was replaced by the Social
Contract Theory and Rousseau’s concept of Popular Sovereignty. Thus, the
‘Voice of God’ gave place to ‘the voice of the people.’
than the rest captured and enslaved the weak He collected in this way a band of
followers, fought with others, and subjugated the weak Having increased the
number of his followers, over whom he exercised undisputed authority, he
became a tribal chief A clan fought against a clan and a tribe against a tribe.
The powerful conquered the weak and this process of conquest and domination
continued till the victorious tribe secured control over a definite territory of a
considerable size under the sway of its tribal chief, who proclaimed himself the
King LeaccKk Theory when he
gives a matter-of-fact explanation of the Force
says that “historically it means that government is the outcome of human
aggression, that the beginnings of the State are to be sought m the capture and
enslavement of man by man, in the conquest and subjugation of feebler tribes,
and generally speaking in the self-seeking domination acquired by supenor
physical force The progressive growth from tnbe to kingdom, and from kingdom
to empire is but a continaation of the same pr(x:ess The theor>% in fine, tells us
that the State is pnmanly the result of forcible subjugation through long
continued warfare among primitive groups and “historically speaking,” as Jenks
says, “there is not the slightest difficulty in proving that all political communities
”
of the modem type owe their existence to successful warfare
'
Once the State had been established. Force, which had hitherto been utilised
for subpigaling others \sas used as an instrument tor maintaining internal order
and making it secure from ans kind of external aggression But this alone was not
sufficient Force was used as the smews of war and power and in a bid for
superiority, one State fought against another, eliminating the weaker and only
those survived which either could not be conquered, or no venture was made to
conquer them as they were comparatively powerful. The theory of Force,
ihereXorc, traces the ongin and development of the State to conquest and
“justifies Its authonty by the proposition that might is right The theory has,
thus, four implications First, force is not only a historical factor, but is the
present essential feature of the State; secondly, that the States were born of force
only, thirdly, that power is their justification and raison d’etre; and, finally, that
the maintenance and extension of power within and without is the sole aim of the
Stale
Theory' used in support of diverse purposes. The theory of Force has been
6 Leacock, E ,
EUments of Politual p 32
Science,
7 Jenks, F. ,
A Short History of Politics, p 71
8 Gettell, R G ,
Introduction to Political Semee, p, 79
78 PIUNCIPLES OF POUTICAL SCIENCE
advanced by different thinkers and wntcrs for advocating their own point of
view It was first used by the Church Fathers m the medieval period to discredit
the State, and to establish the supremacy of the Church They claimed that the
Church was divinely created whereas the State was the outcome of brute force
Gregory VII wrote in 1080 “Which of us is ignorant that kings and lords have
had who, ignorant of God, by arrogance, rapine, perfidy,
their origin in those
slaughter,by every crime which the devil agitating as the prince of the world,
have continued to rule over their fellow-men with blind cupidity and intolerable
”
presumption
In modem times the Individualists owned the theory to protect individual
liberty against government encroachment They characterised the State as a
necessary evil and argued that the State should leave the individual alone and
should not interfere in what he does, except for the maintenance of intenal peace
and external security The Individualists base their arguments on the principle of
survival of the fittest and try to prove that it is only the strong who survive and
the weak go to the wall The Socialists, on the other hand, hold that the State is
the outcome of the process of aggressive exploitation on the weaker by the
stronger, the latter constituting the propertied class who had ever manned
administration and directed the machiner>' of the government to their own
benefit The existing system of industrial organisation, it is maintained, hinges
upon force because “a part of the community has succeeded in defrauding their
fellows of the just reward of their labour” They further argue that force is the
origin of civil society and government represents merely the coercive organisa-
tion which tends to curb and exploit the working class in order to maintain the
privileged position of the propertied ( lass The theory of Socialism is a revolt
against the State, as it is the product of force and power is its justification and
raison d’etre. Karl Marx, according!), concluded that the State must ultimately
‘wither away’
During recent times the theory of Force was a favourite theme of political
philosophy with German wntcrs Imbued with the desire to make their country a
Greater Germany, they lavished praise on force and considered its indiscnminate
use as the most important factor for the solidanty of the nation Treitschke said
that “the State is power of offence and defence, the
the public first task of which
is the making war and the administration of justice ” War, he said,
consolidates a people, reveals to each individual his relative unimportance, causes
and intensifies patrioism and national idealism
factional hostilities to disappear,
“The grandeur of history,” he further maintained, “lies in the perpetual conflict
”
of nations” and “the appeal to arms will be valid until the end of history
General Von Bemhardi held might as “the supreme right, and the dispute as to
what is right is decided by the arbitrament of war War gives a biologically just
decisicHi, since the decision rests on the very nature of things ” Nietzsche preached
the doctrmc of the will to power and the superman The individual who can
command the highest admiration, according to this doctrine, is the strong man
who compels other men to act in fulfilment of his will Nietzsche, while glorifying
the “masterly” virtues of man, says that a truly moral person “has no place for
the vulgar and slavish virtue of humility, self-sacrifice, pity, gentleness ’’Hitler
and Mussolini put into real practice the doctrines of these writers. They regarded
normal means for maintaining a nation’s prestige, cultural influence,
force as the
commercial supremacy in the worid, and for holding the allegiance of citizens at
home. This general doctrine of political authoritananism, both with Hitler and
Mussolini, became “a creed of dominance by intimidation— militancy in
ORIGIN OF THE STATE 79
Criticism of the Theory. Force, indeed, has played an important part in the
origin and development of the State Some of the greatest empires of today have
been established through ‘blood and iron’ We may see even more of this ‘blood
and iron’ in the days to come Force is an essential element of the State.
Internally, the State requires force to ensure obedience to its commands.
Externally, it is necessary to repel aggression and to preserve the integrity of the
State Without force no State can exist and sovereignty of the State always rests
ultimately on force Kant said, “Even a population of devils would find it to their
advantage to establish a coercive State by general consent ”
But, all this docs not sufficiently explain the origin of the State Force is, no
doubt, one of the factors which contributed to the evolution of the State. It is,
however, not the only one, nor the most important factor, and the theory of force
“errs in magnifying what has been only one factor in the evolution of society into
”>*'
the sole controlling force Force is, also, not the only basis of the State.
Something other than force is necessary in binding the people together It is will,
not force, which is the real basis of the State Sheer force can hold nothing
together because “force always disrupts— unless it is made subservient to
common will Force we do need in maintaining the State, but its indiscrimin-
ate use cannot be permitted It must be used as a medicine and not a daily diet as
force is the entenon of the State and not its essence If it becomes the essence of
the State, the State will last so long as force can last Indiscnminate use of force
has always been the forerunner of revolutions, overthrowing governments which
rest on force. Since the State is a permanent institution, only moral force can be
the permanent foundation of the State T H Green has aptly said that “it
IS not coercive piower as such but coercive power exercised according to law,
9 Ckikcr, F W ,
Recent Political Thought, p 439
10 Leacock, S EUments of Political Scumt, p 33
1 1. MacIver, R M
The Modem State, p 222
,
80 PMNCIPLES OF POLITICAL SaENCE
murder, glorifies brute force, suppressing the moral forces. This is the mean self of
man and not his real self. Is this the end for which the State exists?
those who lived in the state of nature were ultimately compelled, for one reason
or another, to abandon it and substitute the state of nature by a civil society or a
body politic where each man led a life of union u tih his other fellowmen The
law of nature, which regulated the conduct of the individuals who lived in the
state of nature, was replaced by man-made laws
Thus emerged civil society and it was the result ol a mutual cwisent or
contract; man taking upon himself the duty of observing and obeying all those
laws which assured the safety and protection of all other members of the newly
organised community or body politic Tlicsc laws were prescribed by the
mutually agreed authority Human law was substituted for the natural law and
in return for natural rights every man found “himself clothed with social rights”.
These rights were maintained and guaranteed by the mutually established
authority
uncertainty for all as none felt secure both in his person and property. No man
could endure such conditions of life and ultimately decided to quit the
for ever
state of nature. This he did by common consent or agreement or contract or
covenant with his leliowmen who lived with him m the state of nature This is
the second element in the Theory of Social Contract. The third is that as a result
of common consent or contract or covenant a civil society was established where
laws of the State and civil rights prevailed in place of natural law and natural
rights The final element is the process by which one way of life was given up for
another way of life
,
c hosen
In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the supporters of the Social
Contract Theory multiplied and there was more or less universal acceptance of
the doctrine Hooker was the fir^t scientific writer who gave a logical exposition of
the I though he used it
hc’orv of Social C’onlract, to defend the Established
Church against the enemies The theory also received impetus from
attacks of its
the wTitings of Hugo Grotuis, the Dutch jurist But it found real support at the
hands of Hobbes, Lcx'ke and Rousseau In our discussions of the theory of Social
Contract we are primarily concerned with the political philosophy of these three
writers, collectively known as the ‘contractualists’
book, the Leviathan, in 1651 In this book, he gave a striking exposition of the
theon' of Social Contract Hobbes had no mind to give the theory of the origin of
When men in the state of nature were hungry wolves, each ready to devour
like
”
the other, their lives were “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short
The Contract. These conditions \sere really intolerable and could not be left
to coninuc indefinitelv Men vearned for peace and security of life and properts
and in a bid to escape from the miscr\ and horrors of their natural condition,
they covenanted among themselves to form a civil society or “Commonwealth”,
which would give to each individual person security of life and properly They,
accordingly, agreed to surrender their natural rights into the hands of a common
superior and to obey his commands The covenant was of each with all and of
all with each Each man said to every man
“I authorise and give up my right of governing myself to this man, or to this
assembly of men, on this condition, that thou give up thy right to him, and
authorise all his actions in like manner This is the generation of that great
Leviathan, or rather (to speak more reverently) of that Mortal God, to which we
”
owe under the immortal God, our peace and defence
In this way, individuals surrendered their natural rights to some particular
man or assembly of men The person or assembly of persons to whom they
surrendered their natural rights became sovereign and the covenanting indivi-
duals who agreed to submit to the authonty of the sovereign became his subjects.
The sovereign was not a party to the contract Others had made a covenant to
obey him, he had made no covenant to obey them Consequently, the sovereign
did not subject himself to conditions Hobbes maintained that only a compact
another to give up their natural rights of doing anything that pleased them, and
to possess anything that they could take and hold to, a common authority, and
this common authority became by that fact their supenor
2 As the sovereign is not a party to the contract, he did not subject himself
toany conditions, his authority is absolute and unlimited All his subjects must
obey him, otherwise there would be conflict, war, and a return to the
wretchedness of the state of nature “The only way,” Hobbes said, “to erect such
a common power is to confer all their power and strength upon one man or
upon one assembly of men, that may reduce all their wills by plurality of voice,
”
unto one will
perfjctual social bond, tor the individuals keep no rights to themselves, except the
right to self-preservation It the sovereign lost his power and conquered by
another and he submitted to his authoiity, the subjects become the subjects of the
conqueror “But, if he be held prisoner or have not the liberty of his body, he is
not understood to have given away the right of sovereignty, and therefore his
subjects are obliged to yield obedience to the magistrates formerly placed,
”
goyernmg not in their own name, but in his
4 Hobbes denied to the people the right to revolt against the authority of
the sovereign There can happen no breach to the covenant, even if his authority
becomes arbitrary and despotic In fact, the sovereign can never be wrong and his
actions cannot be unjust He cannot be justly accused bv the subjects and
”
“Whatsoever the sovereign doth is unpunishable by the subject
5 Law is command of the sovereign and he is the sole source of law “Civil
law is to every subject those rules which the commonwealth hath commanded
him b\ word, writing or other sufficient sign of the will to make use for the
distinction of right and wrong ” The laws of the sovereign tan never be unjust or
imnioial, “tor the lavs i> all the light reason we have, and is the infallible rule of
”
moral goodness
6 Liberty is the gift of the sovereign in whom the will of the whole
community is unified. The sovereign has “the whole power of prestnbing the
rules, whereby every man may know, what goods he may enjoy, and what actions
he may do, without being molested by any of his fellow-subjects ” In short, the
liberty of the subjects can properly be thought of only in relation to the laws of
the commonwealth Liberty, according to Hobbes, consisted in
(ii) what could not, by the nature of the original pact, be given up, that is, the
right of self-preservation, whichcannot be surrendered “Without
injustice, therefore, the individual may, in disobedience to the sovereign’s
command, refuse to kill himself, resist assault, refuse to accuse himself of an
offence that would jeopardise his life, and with certain qualifications refuse
to serve in the army ^
The liberty of the subjects, thus, consisted in (i) what the sovereign
permitted, (ii) right of self-preservation which is retained by the people
form As a man, the king will be selfish like all men, but the self-indulgence ot
one IS cheaper, he claimed, than the self-indulgence of many ‘in a monarchy the
pri\ate interest was the same with the public “
A king cannot be rich, glorious
or secure, if comtemptible or weak Since he had got at the
his people are poor,
top, all his ambition lay m strengthening the Stale whereas members of a
democratic or aristocratic assembly are liable to be swased bv ambition to
intrigue against the State in the hope of seizing power Fheir designs aie a source
of great danger to the community Hobbes' conclusion was that, “other
governments were compacted bv the artifice of men out of the ashes of monarc hv
”
after it had been ruined by seditions
Nothing like the state of nature ever existed and there is absolutely no
evidence in history to show the State to have emerged by mutual and deliberate
agreement The Social Contract is impossible, for the history of pnmitive
has shown conclusively that men move from status to contract Hobbes’
societies
claim is just the other way, namely, that men move from contract to status Nor is
man so inherently selfish, self-seeking and aggressive as Hobbes has described
him. Man is a rational and social being, though his irrationality cannot be
ignored altogether Hobbes’ dogma that man is by nature unsocial and an
“enemy of his kind” is diametrically opposed to the Anstotclian dogma, that man
IS a social animal. Society exists by nature and necessity and it has existed since
prcscrvatioii
19. Rousseau writes, “That men arc actually wicked, a sad and continued expencncc
ofthem proves beyond doubt But all the same, 1 think, I have shown that man is naturally
good.” Jean Jacques Rousseau, 4 Discourse on the Origin of Inequality, in the Social Contract and
n Kv n n H Golek d, 222.
ORIGIN OF THE STATE 85
man made his first this planet As man is social; he cannot lead an
appearance on
isolated life and makes him a rational being, co-operative and
his sociability
sympathetic towards his fellow-men, Hobbes’ ethical and political philosophy is
based wholly on egoism and hedonism
Hobbes described the state of nature as pre-social and pre-political. At the
same time, he said that man enjoyed m the state of nature natural rights Rights
always arise in a society If there is no society, as Hobbes’ state ot nature was, how
could there exist any Every right has a corresponding obligation But
rights’*
human reason Hobbes also fails to distinguish between the State and
.ippcals to
government He confounds the legal absolutism of the State with governmental
absolutism, and he docs not see that changes m the forms of government do not
imply the dissolution of the State
But when all this is said, Hobbes’ Leviathan is of the very greatest
importance It is, m
the words of Professor Oakeshott, “the greatest, perhaps the
sole, masterpiece of political philosophy written in the English language ” This is
an exaggeration, yet, in spite of the fury erf his critics, Hobbes continues to be
widely read and makes a powerful appeal The L^eviathan is the first statement of
complete sovereignty in the history of political thought Hobbes contradicted the
old concept of justice and maintained that justice is created by law and that law
is not the reflection of justice Hobbes
an Individualist in the sense that for
is also
him the world is and must always be made up of individuals He does not believe
in the j^eople, common will or general will or common good
20 ‘in { ase anarchy does actually come upon a society, and the sovereign no longer
possesses the power to give the subjects that protection which is for the sole end of the social
William, and make good his title irt the consent of the people ” Mark the words
Sn the cfHisent of the people’ for this forms the key-note of Locke’s theory. Civil
power, according to Locke, is based upon consent.
The State of Nature. Locke, too, started with the state of nature But his
state of nature was pre-political and not pre-social and, as such, it did not
present to him such a dismal state of affairs as it had done to Hobbes Locke’s
man in the State of nature was neither selfish, nor self-seeking, nor aggressive He
was social and sympathetic towards others, because the law of nature, which was
the law of reason, directed him to be so Under the law of nature, as Dunning
says, “ofwhich reason is the interpreter, equality is the fundamental fact in men’s
relations to one another” But equality, for Locke, was not what it was for
Hobbes In Dx-ke's state of nature men were equal and free to act as they
thought fit, but “within the bounds of the law of nature ” And the “bounds of the
law of nature” enjoined upon them not to harm another in his life, health,
libcrt). or possessions Locke's stale ot nature \^as “a state ol peace, goexJ will,
mutual assistance and preservation," as he himself put it, in contrast to “a stale
of enmitv. malice, violence and mutual destruction,” as he described Hobbes'
stale of nature
obligations as well, because rights had “a law to govern which obliges escivone,
and reason v>hich is that law teaches all mankind who will but consult it tliat
being all equal and independent, no one ought to harm anothei in his life health
libertN and possessions " 1 hat is eversone m the state of nature, while \ alum g his
own life, liberty and propcits must also \aliif and mspeet the life libcris and
property of others as a matter of duty Such a state of nature in which men
enjoved rights and acknowledged their duties was both moral and social
degenerate men ” This “ill condition,” L(x.kt said was due to three important
wants which remained unsatisfied in the state of nature (1) the want of an
established, settled, known law, (2) the want of a known and indifferent judge,
and (3) the want of an executing power to enforce just decisions Such an “ill
condition,” Locke asserted, was “full of fears and continual dangers”, and in
order to escape from all this and to gain certainty and security men made a
contract to enter into civil scxriety or the State This contract was of all with all
and Locke named it a social contract The scxial contract put an end to the state
of nature and substituted it by a civil scxriety or the Slate Each individual
contracted with each to give up some of the rights he pos.scsscd in the state of
nature All he agreed to was to “give up everyone his single power of punishing to
be exercised by such (authority) alone as shall be appointed to it amongst them,
and by such nilc*s as the community, oi those authorised by them, to that purpose
shall agree on ” The scxial ccmtract w'as, accordingly, no more than a transfer of
certain rights and powers so that man’s remaining rights would be protected and
preserved Secondly, the contract was for limited and specific purposes, and what
was given up was transferred to the community as a whole and not to a man or to
ORIGIN OF THE STATE 87
a assembly of men, as Hobbes had held In this way, Locke recognised and
established the sovereignty of the people, and that the State existed for the people
who formed it, they did not exist for it
Two Contracts. If men were objects for which the social contract was
necessitated, that is, to create positive law, establish a known judge, and to create
an authority to enforce just decisions, the society in its corporate capacity
established the government and authorised it to make positive laws consistent
with the law of nature, appoint impartial judges to decide disputes, and to
enforce their decisions There were, thus, two contracts according to Locke,
though he did not say so explicitly The first was a Social Contract which brought
into being the civil society or the State The second was a governmental contract
when society in its corporate capacity established a government and selected a
ruler to remove the inconveniences or “ill condition” which necessitated the
formation of the civil society or the State The second contract oi governmental
contract was subordinate to the first inasmuch as government was “only a
fiduciary power” to act for certain ends, and its authority was confined to
securing those ends It was limited, moreover, to the condition that it was to be
used in the exercise of “established known laws ” If the government failed to
secure the ends for which it was created and to which it had agreed, or did not
exercise its authority according to the “established known laws,” the community
might dismiss it and appoint another government in its place Here Locke
establishes the inherent right of the people to revolt against the authority of the
monarch, if he ever abused the terms of the contract to which he is a party, and
ruled arbitrarily, ignoring the “established known laws” made by the representa-
tive's of the people
It should be limited and constitutional in its authority If it is not for the good of
thi pcoplt, il It docs not depend upon their inscnt li it is not constitutional and
exceeds the authority vested in it, the government can be legitimately overth-
rown Locke, thus, justified the Revolution of 1688, and the deposition of James
II, and the accession of William and Mary to the throne of England
Locke recognised the existence of three powers in the civil society or the
State There is first of all the legislative, which he called “the supreme power of
the commonwealth ” LegLslature, he held, was the instrument through which the
will of the community was expressed Since the expression of that will preceded
and determined its execution, that department of government which carried out
the laws must be subordinate to the department that made them Although, for
Lotke, the legislature was unquestionably the superior power, yet it was not
scninign he idea ol absolute, unlimited, and inalienable soveicign power
1
Behind the “supreme” legislature stand the people, the final embodiment of
power “The community”, said Locke, “perpetually retains a supreme power of
saving themselves from the attempts and designs of anybody, even of their
legislators, whenever they shall be so foolish or so wicked as to lay and carry on
”
designs against the liberties and properties of the subject
Secondly, there was the executive which, according to Locke, included the
judicial power. The legislature need not always be in session, but the executive
PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
must be. Hence, he concluded, they “come often to be separated.” There should
be separation between the legislature and the executive, “because it may be too
great a temptation to human frailty, apt to grasp at power, for the same persons
who have the power of making laws to have also in their hands the power to
execute them.” This is how Locke enunciates the doctrine of the Separation of
Powers which is enshrined in the American Constitution, though he is Montes-
quieu, not Locke, who is the author of the famous classification of powers into
executive, legislative and judicial
The power that Locke recognised was that he called the federati-
third
ve— the power tnat made treaties Locke has not more to tell us about the
federative power, except that it is much less capable of being directed by positive
laws and so must necessarily be left to the prudence and wisdom of those who are
entrusted to manage it for public good
To sum up, the following important points may be noted in Locke’s doctrine
of the Social Contract —
1 Locke's state of nature is pre-political rather than pre-social.
within the bounds of the law of nature I'he law of nature is the law of leason and
the law of reason established certain natural rights and recognised certain duties
This state of nature in which men ha\e rights and acknowledged duties is moral
and social in character
7 Law IS not the command of the sovereign as Hobbes had said According
to Lcxke, law must be the expression of the will of the people and it should be
consistent with the law of reason
9 Locke concedes to the people the right to revolution and, thus, the ruler
could be deprived of his authority, if ever he failed to fulfil the terms of his
contract
ORIGIN OP THE StXtE 89
The main defect in LcKke’s theory is that he altogether ignores the concept of
legal sovereignty words of Gilchnst, “To use our terminology, Hobbes
In the
gives a theory of legal sovereignty without recognising the existence and power of
political sovereignty, Locke recognises the force of political sovereignty, but does
not give adequate recognition to legal sovereignty”'^ Nor is he sure where
sovereignty really resides He speaks of the supreme power of the people at one
time and at another he talks of the supreme power of the legislative assembly
Similarly, his views on the state of nature, and that the people inhabiting it made
two contracts are incr(*dible Lix'ke’s contribution to the theory of natural rights
has also been subjected to severe criticism For example, Bentham remarks that
the concept of natural rights prevailing in the state of nature, “is simple nonsense,
rhetorical nonsense and nonsense on stilts ” All the same, Locke is considered the
ideological father of the American Revolution
Jean Jacques Rousseau, the great French writer of the eighteenth century,
elaborated his theory in his famous work. The Social Contract, published in
1762 Rousseau, unlike his English predecessors, Hobbes and Locke, had no
purpose to serve, and no definite cause to uphold, although his teachings inspired
the French Revolution of 1789 His object was “to find a form of association
which will defend and protect with the whole common force the person and
goods of each associate, and in which each, while uniting himself with all, may
stillobey himself alone, and remain free as before ” Rousseau wanted to offer a
logical explanation of the nature of civil society, though his logic is lost in the
epigram and paradox in which he indulges too frequently This was natural,
because Rousseau was a man with abnormally intense feelings and emotions, a
vivid imagination, and warm sympathies He stated many of his ideas abstractly
The State of Nature. The starting point in Rousseau’s theory was the
traditional state of nature. What the state of nature actually meant to him,
Rousseau himself was neither clear nor consistent about it. He had thought and
talked about it “because all world was thinking and talking about it,’'^^and
Rousseau used it practically in all the various senses that had been attached to it.
But “throughout the fluctuations of his usage, one idea alone appeared
unmistakable, namely, that the natural state of man was vastly preferable to the
social or civil state, and must furnish the norm by which to test and correct
It Back to nature was his call. He had a romantic belief in the excellence of
primitive and denounced the artificiality of “so-called civilised
simplicity
existence.” He
maintained that the progress of science and the arts had tended to
degrade the morals of man Return to natural simplicity, he held, was the only
cure against all the corruption and degradation rampant in civil society But it
did not mean that Rousseau wanted to destroy civil society What he precisely
meant by “return to nature” was that “nature must be the rule for men in
society It would deliver mankind from the corrupt and artificial existence and
that could be accomplished only by the creation of natural social conditions
Rousseau’s man in the state of nature, was a “noble savage” who led a life of
primitive simplicity and idyllic happiness He was independent, contented,
and “without need of his fellows or desire to harm
self-sufficient, healthy, fearless
them ”was only the primitive instinct and sympathy which united him with
It
others He knew neither right nor wrong and was away from all notions of virtue
and voice It was, thus, a pure, simple and innocent life of perfect freedom and
equality w'hich Rousseau’s men enjoyed in the state of nature They were as yet
free from the spintless influence of civilisation and they sought their own
happiness untrammelled by social laws and institutions
But these conditions could not last for long Two things emerged to corrupt
this perfect scene One was increase in population and the other was dawn of
reason. With the increase in population, economic progress moved apace The
primitive life of simplicity and idyllic happiness disappeared Fixed homes
established the family, and the institution of property followed, sounding the
knell ofhuman equality Man began to think in terms of mine and thine. “By
nature man scarcely thinks,” held Rousseau, “and, the man who reflects is a
corrupt creature When man began to think in terms of mine and thine, there
emerged the institution of private property “The first man who, after enclosing a
piece of ground, bethought himself to say ‘this is mine,’ and found people simple
enough to-believe him, was the real founder of civil society ” The whole process of
development may best be described in the words of Dunning “I’he arts of
agnculture and metallurg)' were discovered, and in the application of them men
had need of one another’s aid Cooperation revealed and emphasized the
diversity of men’s talents and prepared thus the inevitable result i he stronger
man did the greater amount of work, the craftier got more of the product Thus
24 Mork‘>’s Vol I,
p
25 Dunning, W A ,
History of Political Themes Jrom Rousseau to Spencer, pp 12-13
26 /hid,
p 13
27 Rousseau said, “Original man had not the least notion of mine and thine, no true
idea of justice no vice, no virtues unless wc use these terms in the sense of qualities
’’
conducive to his own conservation
2B If Rousseau’s arguments are to be summarised, it means “intelligence is
appeared the difference of rich and poor—the prolific source of all other sources
of inequality
Emergence of Civil Society. The equality and happiness of the early
state was lost. Mankind went rapidly into a state of war resembling Hobbes’
state of nature War, murder, wretchedness, and horror that had been unknown
in the savage state became universal The rich and the poor were ranged against
each other in unrelenting hostility That was a disquieting state of affairs and
every individual became anxious to get rid of it The escape was found in the
formation of a civil society Natural freedom gave place to civil freedom by a
social contract of each with all and all with each As a result of this contract a
multitude of individuals became a collective unity— a society The contract
placed^very individual in complete dependence on others— complete though
mutual and equal The individual, in Rousseau’s political system, “puts his
person and all his power in common under the supreme direction of the general
will and in our corporate capacity we receive each member as an indivisible part
”
of the whole
General Will, There was only one contract according to Rousseau, which
was at once social and political The individual surrendered himself completely
and unconditionally to the will of the body of which he became a member The
body so created was a moral and collective body and Rousseau called it the
General Will. The unique feature of the General Will was that it represented
collective gcxid as distinguished from the private interests of its members It was
the will of all the citizens when they were willing not their own private but the
general good, was the voice of all for the gocxl of all Rousseau went further and
it
said that my will which willed the best interests of the State was my best will and
It was, indeed, more real than my will which willed my private interests All
actions were the result of the will, but my will for the good of the State was
morally superior to any other will, private or assoc lational, which might, from
time to time, determine my conduct The General Will being the compound of
the best wills of all citizens willing the best interests of the community and its
lasting welfare, it must be sovereign Since it was my will, my own real will, I
ought always to follow it If I did not, because some private and 'elfish interests
induced me not to follow it, then the General Will could legitimately compel me
to obey it Indeed, it was the only authority that could legitimately coerce me, for
It was my own will coming back to me even though I did not always recognise it
as such And in following it, I was fulfilling myself and was, thus, finding true
freedom Whoever refused to obey the General Will would be compelled to do so
by the whole body “This means nothing less than that he will be forced to be
free, for this is the condition which secures him against all personal dependence.”
The General Will, though by definition it could only deal with matters of
public not private interest, was alone the judge of what constituted public or
private interest The General Will, moreover, could not allow anything to stand
between it and the complete loyalty of its citizens It was better, Rousseau
believed, that other associations than the State should not exist, but if they did,
they must always be subordinate, and if any conflict of loyalties should ever
occur, citizens must always obey the State, because it was infallible and the
custodian of the real interests of all
”
The General will must also, Rousseau said, “be inalienable and indivisible
Hence it could not be represented in parliamentary institutions. “As soon as a
29 Dunning, W A ,
History oj Political Theories from Rousseau to Spencer, p. 10.
92 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Two conscquencess lollow from this First, that the power of government can
be limited, modified or taken away by the people, the master, whenever they
choose so Secondly, as government is subordinate to the sovereign, the actual
form of government is a matter of secondary importance to Rousseau So long as
General Will is sovereign it matters not what form of government it may be,
though he was convinced that the States should be small so that, when necessary,
all citizens could get together and make laws “The larger the State the less the
liberty” By Rousseau obviously means not freedom from political
“liberty”
control but freedom for political control, freedom to determine the course of
legislation Such a direct democracy is the only legitimate form of government,
because only in such a constitution does each man “obey himself alone and
remain as free as before ” Rousseau regarded representative government as a
specious form of slavery
For Rousseau, law is not the will of a class, but the will of the whole nation
“This will,” he said, “is to be discovered simply by asking the nation to meet
together and declare it Only when I actively assist in legislation am I really a
citizen and genuinely free, and, since the fewer the citizens are the more weight
my voice has amongst them ” Rousseau believed in direct government by
citizens,who should themselves, in public meetings, make the laws, without
being betrayed by elected representatives His choice of direct democracy among
the forms of government was largely based upon the Swiss Cantons, which he
knew, and the ancient City-States, of which he had read
Law IS, accordingly, an expression of the General Will, which is the will of
the society for the common good It, therefore, demands my respect But the
common good is also my good, and so, finally, in obeying the law I am pursuing
my own best interests and achieving what I really will “It is to law alone that
men owe justice and liberty It is the celestial voice which dictates to each
citizen the precepts of public reason, and teaches him to act according to the rules
of his own judgment, and not to behave inconsistently with himself.”
Another important result of the contract is that life and liberty of each
member of the community is secured and founded on the General Will of the
society as a whole Equality and liberty, Rousseau said, arc ensured, because each
individual makes a complete surrender of himself and all his rights to the
ORIGIN OF THE STATE 93
community While doing he receives his person and nghts back again as
so,
indivisible part of the sovereign community. Rousseau said, “Since each gives
himself up to all, he gives himself up to none, and as there is acquired over every
associate the same right that is given up by himself, there is gained the equivalent
of what IS lost, with greater power to preserve what is left ” Each individual, thus,
has a dual capacity He is both a member
of the sovereign body, and a
subject^" He is sovereign, as he himself
an integral unit of the community. He
is
IS subject, because he must obey the General Will and the General Will stands for
public interest
No individual can, therefore, justifiably disobey the General Will The
General Will, adds Rousseau, always right and conducive to the
is infallible, it is
public advantage Moreover, by obeying the General Will the individual simpfy
obeys himself as he himself is the creator of the General Will Nor can the
individual complain of any coercion Real coercion, Rousseau says, never occurs
in society Even a criminal wills his own punishment “In order then that the
socialcompact may not be an empty formula, it tacitly includes the underta-
king that whoever refuses to obey the general will shall be compelled to do so by
the whole body This means nothing less than that he will be forced to be
free This alone legitimises civil undertakings, which, without it, would be
absurd, tyrannical, and liable to the most frightful abuses No act of the ’’
sovereign can, thus, be coercive And how can it be coercive when the General
Will IS and welfare of all An individual can act
the repository of the interests
capriciously when he wants something different from what the interests of the
community demand He does not, then, rightly know his own good or his own
desires Only the General Will can know it Therefore, Rousseau repeatedly said
that the General Will is always right It cannot be wrong, because the General
Will stands for the social good, which is itself the standard of right “What is not
right IS merely no" the General Will ” In this way, Rousseau brought about a
thorough submergence of the individual in the State His emphasis throughout is
that the real interest of the whole community must always be the real interest of
each of us, even though it may not be our interest as we ourselves see
it This is
what Rousseau means by complete surrender and he tried to prove, though not
very successfully, that in making this complete surrender each of us is securing for
himself the only true liberty The State, to Rousseau, is a collective person, and “I
obey It because only in so doing am I really myself, am I truly free “ Freedom, in
brief, IS obedience to self-imposed laws The law of the General Will is the highest
law
Wenow know a good deal about the General Will It is the result of all men
willing their best wills for the good of the State It is sovereigrt, inalienable,
indivisible, unlimited and one which cannot err Yet we do not know how it is to
be found and Rousseau himself can never tell us how we can be sure of finding
the General Will At times, he seems to suggest that the General Will is to be
sought only when all unanimously agree, though he holds that the will of All is
something very diffcient from the General Will The “will of all,” he says, “is a
mere total of selfish and casually coincident wills.” At times, he implies that it is
the majority will, though at other places he tells us that this can
only be so “if all
under a double relation, namely, as a member of the sovereign towards the individuals, and
”
as a member of the State towards the sovereign
94 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
appears that the residue left after cancelling out the differences expressed by all
the citizens is to be regarded as the General Will Rousseau is, thus, very vague in
what he tells us about the General Will “So much vagueness about something as
important as the finding of the General Will,” observes Wayper, “is to be
regretted Rousseau, who has told us so much about the General Will, has still
Rousseau compared with Hobbes and Locke. Rousseau had drawn someth-
mg from Hobbes and something from Locke in fact, he began with the method
of Locke and ended with those of Hobbes Both Rousseau and Locke agreed that
man in the state of nature was free and happy The need for a civil society was
felt with emergence of certain disquieting affairs in the state of nature For Locke
these were the inconveniences as a result of uncertainty in the application of the
law of reason, absence of a common judge to decide disputes arising therefrom,
and absence of a common authority to enforce the decision With Rousseau,
increase in population and dawn of reason upon man were responsible lor
conflict of interests and strife in the state of nature Formation of a civil
society by means of a contract was deemed the only way out Both Locke and
Rousseau agreed that the fundamental social compact ought to have for its end
and object the better preservation of the person and goods of every individual,
that IS, life, liberty, and property Rousseau was also near Locke when he said
that individuals surrendered their rights to be community, making people
ultimately sovereign and a source of political authority Both Locke and
Rousseau made the distinction between the State and government, though
Rousseau maintained that the institution of government was not the result of
contract Both believed that the contract did not remove the supreme power from
the people
”
Rousseau’s “voice is Hobbes
the voice of Locke, but the hands are those of
The influence of Hobbes upon Rousseau marked and singular With
is, indeed,
Rousseau, as with Hobbes, the natural man in the state of nature was absolutely
mdependent of others The only difference between the two was that with
Rousseau he was not at war with others, although eventually, when equality and
happiness of the early state of nature was lost, Rousseau’s mankind, too, went
into a state of ceaseless warfare Again, that there was only one contract by which
each individual surrendered all his rights, and the authority of the sovereign to
whom rights had been surrendered were strongly reminiscent of Hobbes For
Rousseau, it was the General Will whicfi was sovereign, for Hobbes it was the
King But once Rousseau established the sovereign power in the General Will, he
endowed it with as much absolute, unlimited, all-embracing, inalienable and
indivisible powers as Hobbes had given to his sovereign monarch Similarly,
General Will, according to Rousseau, could neither be wrong nor un)ust It could
even force the individual will toits own point of view Are these conclusions not
similar to those ofHobbes^ The only difference is that in the case of Hobbes these
are the attributes of a King, whereas with Rousseau they belong to the General
Will and what this General Will precisely is, Rousseau remained throughout
vague and mdehniie about it In any case, both Hobbes and Rousseau make man
the plaything of the sovereign, no matter who the sovereign is, a King or the
General Will.
Evaluation of Rousseau’s Theory. Rousseau was the apostle of popular
sovereignty and the secret of his political philosophy is found in the substitution
ORIGIN OF THE STATE 95
that It on three very simple pnnciples “(1) That men are by nature free and
rests
equal, (2) that the rights of government must be based on some compact freely
entered into by these equal and independent individuals, and (3) that the only
compact at once just to the individuals becomes an indivisible part of a body that
retains an inalienable right of determining its own internal constitution and
legislation~a sovereign people Rousseau bnngs into prominence the idea of
consent and establishes once for all that will, not force, is the basis of the State.
He also champions the cause of direct democracy by vesting the legislative power
in the people Rousseau’s political teachings had a profound appeal for the
fathers of the Constitutions of the United States of Amenca and France To
quote Dunning, Rousseau’s spint and “dogmas, however disguised and trans-
formed, are seen every^where both in the speculative system and in the
governmental organisations of the stirring era that followed his death Rous-
seau died in 1778
But the main defect in Rousseau’s philosophy is in his explanation of the
General Will He places no limit on the absolute
the whole over its power of
members Rousseau, no option to the individual will against the
indeed, gives
C^neral Will, which can neither be wrong nor unjust Similarly, individuals
cannot protest against the authority of the General Will Law, according to
Rousseau, is the expression of the General Will If the individual sulfers from
punishment, say the death penalty, he own
is really a consenting party to his
and there is a vein of mysticism running through his doctrine He wrapped up the
lesson he was trying to teach in a language that paved the way for totalitarian-
31 Maclvcr, R M ,
The Modem State,
p 442
32 Sidgwick, H ,
The Development of European Polity, p 390
33 Dunning, W A., Hutory of Political Theories from Rousseau lo Spencer,
p 39
96 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
adieu to the original contract, and I leave it to those to amuse themselves with
the rattle who could think they need it.” Bluntschli characterised it “in the
highest degree dangerous, since it makes the State and its institutions the product
of individual caprice ” Sir Henry Maine maintained that nothing could be “more
worthless” than such an account of the origin of society and government as given
by Hobbes
As an explanation of the origin of the State the theory is now entirely
that man can live only if he lives in society, and that he can live in society only if
document which declared “We do, by these presents, solemnly and mutually,
in the presence of God and one another, covenant and combine ourselves together
into a civil body politic, for our better ordering and preservation ” But this is not
a correct example, nor can any other similar example be cited to hold a parallel
to the formation of the State by men living in the State of nature The Puritans
emigrating to new lands were not ignorant of political institutions They were
bom and had lived in the State and when they went out of it they were fully
familiar with the nature of their political governance, and the rights and duties of
a citizen in a politically organised society What the Mayflower compact really
meant was “merely the transplanting to new lands of political institutions by
men already subjected to political authority.” And the covenant they concluded
did not mark the origin of a new State They remained
subjects of England even
after setting up body politic When the United States of Americh came into
their
being by virtue of a solemn compact (the Articles of Confederation), the State
had been familiar to them both as an idea as well as a fact
The theory of Social Contract is, indeed, remote from actualities and
completely oblivious of facts Nothing like the State of nature had ever existed
and even Hobbes himself, after discussing the state of nature, admitted that “it
was never generally so ” The most primitive peoples that the Anthropologists
have described, lived under a regulative system of some sort and conformed to
rigid customary modes of behaviour It is quite unhistorical to suppose that such
men would resort to a contract The very idea of a contract belongs to a later
stage of social development than the hypothesis demands Primitive man did not
possess that maturity of outlook which the making of a social contract
presupposes. Moreover, the conditions of a contract also presuppose a system of
law to support it.
ORIGIN OF THE STATE 97
the p.Tmitive society, then, the natural inference is that inequality, rather than
equality, existed in the state of nature Nor can we accept human nature as it has
been portrayed by the exponents of the Contract theory The life of man may
justly be described as a life lived in groups And while living with others he is
neither as had as Hobbes thinks, nor is he so good as Rousseau considers him to
be Both Hobbes and Rousseau have allowed their intellect to be carried away by
their imaginations
the state ol nature Law is the condition of .iberty Without restraint liberty is
nothing short of licence and a condition of licence is anarchy, pure and simple
The state of nature being pre-political and even pre-social, it was subject to no
civil law Rights, too, arise in a society and every right is accompanied by a
34 (rt ttdl, R CJ ,
Introduction to Political Science, p 8b
L) Maine, Henry, Ancient Law, pp 108-10
3() Appadorai A ,
The SubUance of Politico, p 36
37 Green, T H ,
Lectures on hinciples of Political Obligation, with an Introduction by A
D Lindsay, p 48, “Natuial right, as right in a State of nature which is not a State of society,
of which they allow the exercise, nor any claim to such recognition, and without
this recognition or claim to recognition there can be no nght,’*'^
Value of the Theory. We reject, therefore, the doctrine that the State
originated in a contract At the same time, we cannot discount the practical value
of the theory It has the advantage of giving us perhaps the only sound
assumption on which to build and maintain any system of political relationships
It insistsupon the fundamental truth that no stable State can exist without the
consent of its members, that it is they, and they alone, who make the State It
further emphasises that there is no State either before or without the people and
that the State has no authority except that given to it 'by the people The
relationship of government to the governed is essentially one of contract or
bargain as obedience is conditional on the government fulfillingits own part and
The Contract Theory has also helped in the development of the modern
concept of sovereignty. Hobbes paved the way for Austin, the exponent of legal
sovereignty, Locke was the champion of political sovereignty; and Rousseau was
the high pnest of popular sovereignty. Rousseau also brought into prominence
38 Ibid, p 48
ORIGIN OF THE STATE 99
SUGGESTED READINGS
Barker, E Social Contract
among themselves on the essential question whether the primary' unit in the
pre-historic times was the family or the tribe, and from whom descent was traced
The Patriarchal Theory. The foremost among such theories is the Patriar-
chal I’heory which seeks to explain that the State is an enlargement of the family
Originally, the family consisted of a man, his wife and children The father was
the head of the family and his control and authority was complete in all respects
over all its members When his children married there was expansion in the
original familyand it led to the establishment of new families But the authority
of the father and head of the original family remained unabated as before, and it
was duly acknowledged by all his descendants This constituted a patriarchal
family In due course of time the patriarchal family expanded and developed into
a clan The members of a clan were bound to one another by ties of blood
relationship, and all lived and functioned under the recognised authority of the
senior living male member of the original family A clan by its own expansion
grew into a tribe With the lapse of time many members withdrew from the
parent tribe and settled in new lands in search of their living This resulted, by
virtue of the same process of development, in the founding of many new tribes
The tribes united by ties of blood relationship acted together for common
100
ORIGIN OF THE STATE 101
Aristotle believed that the State took form as a natural expansion of the
family A society of many families, he observes, “is called a village, and a village
IS most naturally composed of the descendants of one family, the children and the
children’s children, for which reason States were originally governed by kings, as
the barbarian States are, which are composed of those who had before
now
submitted to kingly government, for every family is governed by the elder, as are
the branches thereof, on account of their relation thereunto And when many
villages so entirely join themselves together as in every respect to form but one
society, that society is a State, and contains, in itself, if I may so speak, the end
Sir Henry Maine’s Patriarchal Theory. The chief exponent of the Patriar-
chal Theory is Sir Henry Maine, at one time Law member of the Governor-
General’s Executive Council in India He elaborated his theory in his Ancient
Law The Early History of Institutions (1874) Maine went deep into
(1861) and
history and derived his evidence regarding “the rudiments of the social State”
from three sources— from “accounts by contemporary observers of civilisations
less advanced than their own,” from “the records which particular races have
Maine maintained that society in primitive times was “in fact, and in the
view of the men
composed it an aggregation of families,” and not a
that
collection of individuals The unit was the family and the ancient law was so
framed as to recognise the patriarchal or family groups as perpetual and
inextinguishable entities^ The eldest male parent the eldest ascendant was — —
absolutely supreme in his household and his domination extended “to life and
death, and is as unqualified over his children and their houses as over his
slaves ”'’Ovcr them he possessed despotic authority He was not only absolute
owner of property, including even what his children had acquired, but he could
chastise and even kill, could sell or transfer by adoption, could marry or divorce
any of his children at will ’With the breaking up of the single families more
families emerged, but all were held together under the authority of the head of
the first family This was the beginning of the tribe Many members of a tribe
withdrew and settled in new places Such withdrawals led to the growth of new
tribes These tribes, still united by kinship, acted together for common purposes
and ultimately formed a State Maine, thus, outlines this process of development
“The elementary group is the family, connected by common subjection to the
highest male ascendant The aggregation of families forms the Gens or Houses
2 l>eacock, S ,
Elements of Political Science, p 38
Politics, 1-2
]
pp
4 Ancient Law, p 120
5 Ibid
6 Ibid,
pp 123-24
7 Ibid, p 138
102 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
The aggregation of Houses makes the tribe. The aggregation of tribes constitutes
the commonwealth
The following important points may be noted in Maine’s theory —
1. was the chief fact
In the patriarchal family the element of paternity
2 Descent was traced only through males and from the same ancestor None of
the descendants of a female was included in the primitive notion of family
relationship Kinship was, accordingly, purely agnatic
3 Permanent marriage was the rule, whether monogamy or polygamy
4. The head of the family was the basis of all authority, and his power was
unqualified over his children and their houses and other relations of all
descendants, howsoever numerous
5 He controlled not only the business affairs of the group which he headed, but
also Its religion and its conduct
The family was the primal unit of political society, “the seedbed of all larger
growths of government,” as Woodrow Wilson calls it Over the family the
patriarch ruled with autocratic power By virtue of the patria potestas, the flocks
and herds of his sons belonged to him, and his domination extended to life and
death, being as unqualified over his children and their dependents as over his
slavesBut with the birth of new generations, a change occurred The family shell
was broken, because there was no longer any living male ancestor, a grandfather
or great-grandfather, who could claim patriarchal authority over the whole group
and maintain family cohesion The single family had developed into several
families, yet all of them were fully conscious of their ultimate kinship Bound
together by ties of common blood, and worship of the common ancestors, they
associated in a wider common fellowship group, the gens, owing allegiance to
some elected elder— perhaps the oldest living ascendant or the most capable
Similarly, the gens broadened into the tribe The pastoral pursuits gave way to
agriculture and settled life on a definite land became a matter of necessity, tribes
united to form the State
In support of his statement, Sir Henry Maine cited the Patriarchs of the Old
Testament, “families” and “brotherhoods” of Athens, the patria potestas in
Rome, and the Hindu joint-family system in India To this may be added
particularly the tribal system of the North-West Frontier of Pakistan The
Patriarchal Theory, thus, adopting the family as the unit and supposing “the
headship bequeathed from one chief to another, by easy stages transforms the
father into the chief or the king, and the family into a civil community ” The
Patriarchal Theor)^ has during recent times received the unequivocal support pf
Duguit, another jurist, but a French national Duguit maintains that the father
“is the natural chief, the governor of the little state of which the members of the
family are the governed The ancient city was merely a union of families in which
”
political power belonged to the father
Criticism of the Theory. In the decade that followed the publication of Sir
Henry Maine’s Ancient Law, the Patnarchal Theory was subjected to severe
attacks McLennan and others denied Maine’s claim that the patriarchal family
was the earliest and original unit There was no group in the primitive past, they
urged, with a male at its head The Matnarchal system was prior to the
8 I hid p 128
9 I hid, pp 145-8
10 The State, p 15
ORIGIN OF THE STATE 103
patriarchal systemand tnbe rather than family was the 'arliest unit of society
There was no permanent institution of marriage, they argued. A woman married
more than one husband and because of the uncertainty of male parentage kinship
was reckoned through women, that is, from mother to daughters The patriarchal
family developed in the later phase of human civilisation
The early forms of social organisation, it has been maintained, were not so
simple as the Patriarchal Theory tries to establish Sir J. G. Frazer, in his classic
work The Golden Bough, warns that “he who investigates the history of
institutions should constantly bear in mind the extreme complexity of the causes
which have built up the human
society, and should be on his guard
fabric of
against a subtle danger incidental to science— the tendency to simplify unduly
all
the infinite variety of the phenomena by fixing our attention on a few of them to
”
the exclusion of the rest
It is, also, suggested that the theory does not offer an adequate explanation
of the origin of the State It is, in fact, just a speculation into the beginnings of the
early society, particularly the family Gilchnst says, “The patriarchal theory is
one of the simplest explanations of the origin of the State, but one of its chief
”
weaknesses is this very simplicity
The Matriarchal Theory. McLennan, Morgan and Jenks are the notable
exponents of the Matriarchal Theory They reject outright the proposition that
the patriarchal family was the earliest form of society Their thesis is that in
primitive society there was no common male
head Kinship could only be traced
through mother, matriarch, and the way of life was a horde or totem group.
The advocates
of the Matriarchal Theory maintain that patriarchal family is
possiblewhere either the monogamous or the polygamous institution of marriage
exists Such an institution of marriage did not exist in the beginning of society
The earliest form of marriage was polyandry, one wife having several husbands
Wherever such an institution of marnage is present, the usual relations of
husband and wife do not exist Instead of a family composed of a man, his wife,
and children there is a large and loosely connected group called a “horde” or
“pack” organised for matrimonial purposes In such a condition of society
promiscuity of sexual relations prevails and kinship is traced through females and
not males McLennan shares with Moigan “the credit of having discovered the
clan, a maternally organised, hereditary and unilateral unit, unilateral because
children under this system belonged to the clan of their mother, without regard to
the clan of thq father The father belonged to a clan different from his wife’s,
owing to the existence of the custom of exogamy — the practice of marrying only
outside one’s own clan or tribe Jenks illustrated his proposition from the
conditions existing among the natives of Australia and the Malaya Archipelago.
He says, “It is the custom to speak of Australian and other savages as living in
tribes. It would really be better to call it the ‘pack’ for it more resembles a
hunting than a social organisation All its members are entitled to share in the
proceeds of the day’s chase, and, quite naturally, they camp and live together ...
but the real social unit of the Australians is not the ‘tribe’ but the toiem
group The totem group is primarily a body of persons distinguished by the sign
of some natural object, such as an animal or a tree, who may not intermarry with
one another ‘Snake may not marry snake. Emu may not marry Emu ’
This is the
first rule of savage social organisation ...The other side of the rule is equally
1 1 Memam, C E ,
and Barnes, H E (Eds ), A History of Political Theories, Recent
Times, p 435
104 PRINCIPLES OF -POLITICAL SCIENCE
Startling.
2 The savage may not marry within his totem, but he must marry into
another totem specially fixed for him. More than this, he not only marnes into
the specified totem, but he marries the whole of the women of that totem his m
own generation....”
origin of the Matriarchal Theory, held that in primitive society not only descent
was traced through mother and property passed in the female line, but women
also “played a conspicuous, in fact, dominant role in body politic His first
stage of social evolution was one of chaos and sexual promiscuity, then followed
the matnarchate, women having grown weary of lawlessness and with the help of
religious superstition, having imposed their rule, but in time men found the
matriarchal authority unendurable and, asserting their superior physical
strength, introduced the patriarchate Jenks contradicted Sir Henry Maine’s
statement that family expanded into houses and houses into a tribe He affirmed
that the process of development was just the other way The Matriarchal Theory,
thus, “derives the smaller from the larger group, not the larger from the
smaller ” The tollowing is the prtKess of development of matriarchal society —
1 First there is a tribe and it is the oldest and primary social group
2 In time a tribe breaks into clans
3 Clans in their turn give place to households
4 At last, comes the modern family
12 p 434
Ibid,
prevalent in the districts of Kangra, Lahaul, Spiti, Kinnaur and Renuka tehsils m Sirmui
distnct in Himachal Pradesh, m Tehn-Garhwal and Uttar Kashi districts in Uttar Pradesh
ORIGIN OF THE STATE 105
nor the creation of resolution or convention, nor a mere expansion of the family.”
It IS an institution of natural growth which originated in the bare needs of the life
of man and continues in existence for the sake of gcxid life The theory which
explains, and is now accepted as the true origin of the State, is the Historical or
environment and geographical conditions, there arc five important factors which
made men to aggregate at different places and separated one group from another,
thereby paving the way for the rise and growth of the State These important
factors are*
1 Kinship,
2 Religion,
3 Property and defence,
4. Force,
5 Political consciousness
With the expansion of the family arose new families and the multiplication
of families led to the formation of clans and tribes Throughout the process of this
evolution sanction of kinship was the only factor which bound the people
together Persons unconnected by ties of blcxid, unless admitted into the tribe by
adoption, were deemed strangers and treated as enemies The name of the
common ancestor was the symbol of kinship The “magic of names,” as Maciver
sums up, “reinforced the sense 6f kinship, as the course of generations enlarged
the group The blood bond of sonship changed imperceptibly into the social bond
of the wider brotherhood The authority of the father passed into the power of the
chief Once more under the aegis of kinship new forms arose which transcended
It Kinship created society and society at length created the State ”'7 The origin
oneness, its sanctity, its obligation When the bonds of kinship steadily
17 Matlver, R M ,
The Modern Slate,
p 35
18 Woodrow Wilson, The Slate,
p 15
ORIGIN OF THE STATE 107
weakened with the expansion of the family into the gens, the clans and the tribes,
a common form of worship reinforced the sense of unity and respect for authority.
The primitive religion evolved from animism to ancestor-worship. The early
man was surrounded by natural phenomena which he could not understaJhd. He
looked towards natural forces, such as storms, thunder and lightning, clouds and
wind, the sun, moon and stars with awe and reverence The changing seasons and
the birth and death of vegetation made him stand aghast. To his innocent mind
and uncultivated intellect the mystery of death and other psychological
problems, like sleep, dreams and insanity, were insoluble He interpreted all such
phenomena as manifestation ofsome supernatural power What he could not
understand, he began to worship He “saw God in clouds and heard him in the
wind ” Under such conditions emeiged two forms of religion, worship of nature,
and worship of ancestors The hallowed ceremonies of ancestor worship were
conducted at the family altar There the living came into the presence of their
great dead, the spirits of the departed, who exercised power to evil as well as to
good and who must be appeased by the inetu ulous performance of sacred rites In
this way, came to be established a family of deities around which abundant
emerged the magician, “a resolute and ambitious man, a clever and unscrupulous
man, who pretended to extraordinary powers of divination and sorcery. The
108 PRINCIPLES OP POLITICAL SQENCE
fertility of the soil, rain or drought, the success or failure of crops seemed to
depend more upon his incantations and rituals than upon human effort His
influence, especially among an agricultural people, assumed enormous propor-
”
tions. The magician eventually made himself pnest-king
Briefly, the value of religion in the evolution of the State can hardly be
denied In primitive society religion and politics were inextricably mixed up
Religion not only helped the unification of political communities, but it was
which was responsible for subordinating barbaric anarchy and for
religion alone
teaching reverence and obedience The importance of religion, as a force in the
evolution of the State, was not limited to the earliest States alone In Afghanistan
religion has, even now much to do with politics Islamic law is a force behind
Pakistan, the Islamic Republic Twenty-three Muslim theologists of Pakistan
jointlypronounced a verdict (fatwa) against the election of a won^^n as the
President or Khilifa of an Islamic State, when Miss Fatima Jinnah declared
her intention to oppose President Ayub Khan in the Presidential election
Although a secular State, yet in India, too, religion still plays an important part
in the political life of the country India’s political life is demarcated more on
religion than on political issues The legacy of religion in the political life of the
country is found even in Britain as in the religious coronation of Kings or Queens
and “the still-half-consciously lingenng view of law and of State commands as
something sacred ” The tradition of the divine origin of political power dies hard
3 Property and Defence. In order to understand the origin of the State
and government we must observe how the kinship group earned its living “The
basic factor in any given scKiet)," savs Laski, “is the wa\ it earns its living
all social relations are built upon provision for those primary material appe-
tites without satisfying which life cannot endure And an analysis of sotietv
will always reveal the close connection between its institutions and culture and
the methods of satisfying material appetites As these methods change, so also
will the institutions and culture of the society change Changes in the methods
of economic production appear to be the most vital factor in the making of
changes in all other social patterns we know For changes in those methods
determine the changes of social relationships, and these, in their turn, are subtly
interwoven with all the cultural habits of men ”^* l’he key to social behaviour
must, therefore, be sought in the economic system
Among primitive peoples there were successive economic stages that
marked
the growing importance of property and that brought about corresponding
changes in social organisation The three economic stages are the huntsman stage,
the herdsman or pastoral stage and the husbandman or agricultural stage They
are universal stages in the sense that groups generally passed from the one to the
other, from lower to higher
The huntsman led a miserable existence,moving about in quest of game and
of wild berries or roots He had no property except the crude weapons and tools
It was a condition of primeval savagery and escape came through the
domestication of wild animalsThe domestic animals, originally kept as pets,
proved a good way to provide against future periods of scarcity Still later, it
became apparent that the animals were useful for other purposes besides
The territorial State did not appear until population began to press upon
subsistence The herdsman needed much more land than the husbandman. As
numbers and
the pastoral tribe grew in flocks and herds multiplied, one of the
two courses became imminent to follow either new land might be acquired by
migration or the old land put to more productive use Fertile pastures, when
brought under cultivation, could support a bigger population, and the tribesmen
had long been experimenting with agnculture, with as crude methods as their
tools. Rather than leave the region to which they had becopie attached, they
Along with the new system of production, that is, agnculture, came great
social changes The first was, sharpening of class distinctions with the unequal
distribution of wealth The rise of social classes occurred in pastoral society and
they were perpetuated in agncultural society. Besides nobles and commoners,
there were slaves When
one tribe attacked the other, the captives were no longer
killed and perhaps eaten The
pastoralist had plenty to eat, but felt the need of
supplementing the labour resources of the family to care for the expanding herd
and to protect it from beasts of prey and human marauders. He invented slavery
as a substitute for cannibalism Itwas a beneficent invention and in the
agricultural society systematic resort was made to slavery
4 Force. The new system also placed a great emphasis upon military life,
first for defence, then for conquest It is often contended that the State began in
conquest when the herdsmen conquered the husbandmen or pessants The
conquest theory is Oppenheimer, the
favourably received by the Sociologists
most prominent advocate of this theory, maintains that “the cause of the genesis
of all States is the contact between peasants and herdsmen, between labourers
and robbers, between bottom lands and prairies ”^4
The conquest theory does not
explain the opgin of the State But the part played by warfare in moulding
political institutions at any stage of human development cannot be discounted,
more so in a primitive society Private property, in the form of flocks and herds,
afforded a strong incentive to looting, which in turn had to be checked by
systematic defence and punitive expeditions against hostile tribes Concerted
action for common defence and chastisement of the warring tribes created
the dire need for military leadership which was an important factor in creating
the chieftainship and strengthening its powers The became
office of the chieftain
hereditary and consequently it led to the establishment of the monarchy Yet, the
emergence of the State, as Maciver says, and he is supported by the weight
of evidence, “is not due to force, although in the process of expansion force
undoubtedly played a part ”^5
5 Pdlitical Consciousness. The last is political consciousness ansing from
the fundamental needs of life for protection and order. When the people settle
23 Oppenheimer, R ,
The State, p 37
24 Ibtd,p 45
25 The Modem
State, p 222. Similarly, Sir John Seeley considers conquest as the
means, not of originating the State, but producing a new and abnormal type of State, which
he calls “inorganic ” —
Introduction to Poiiticai Science, pp 73-75
ORIGIN OF THE STATE 111
law and there was a religious sanction behind every custom and the magicians
who controlled religious sanctions were more powerful than any agent of political
authority When human wants, economic, social and political, increased through
the combination of diverse circumstances and conditions, the State, l^rntonajfy
established and forming a distinct group of people independent of others, became
more complex in form, “more universal in Its range of activities, more
indispensable to the needs of mankind ” The distinction we now make so
carefully between the State and society is of comparatively recent origin In fact,
a double process had been at work through all these centuries one by which the
State takes over powers hitherto enjoyed by siKiety, and the other by which it
SUGGESTED READINGS
Barker, E '
The Study of Political Science and its Relations to the Cognate Sciences
112
THE EVOLUTION OP THE STATE 113
The earliest States were essentially power and property States, built on
wealth and military force. They attracted the jealousy of the nomadic tribes
beyond or of each other, and had the conqueror being conquered
little stability,
in his turn Sometimes, the break-up came from within through the revolt of
some subordinate official, who either made his province into an independent
State or actually overthrew and replaced his sovereign lord. “Expansion by
annexation, then disruption and reconstitution, either from within or by conquest
from the outside,” remarks Solatu, “were the normal process that marked those
” *
early empires
must not, of course, be assumed that those States were primitive and
It
barbarous Most people know about the scientific knowledge of the Babylonians
and Egyptians, their division of time, and their mathematical calculations. The
code of Hammurabi regulated every aspect of life and revealed the existence of a
highly organised, prosperous society, with a carefully worked out hierarchy of
functions The Sumerians arc said to have established the systems of rotation of
office, annual appointments and election by The Aryans weresecret ballot
famililiar with the institutions of constitutional monarchy, bicameralism, the
office of the speaker and various other devices necessary for a representative form
of government
Greek City-State. The next type of State development was the Greek
City-State arising in Greece after 1000 BC In fact, the study of Political Science
may be said to begin with the Greek City-States The Greek City-States were the
first communities to have given conscious thought to “politics” Although the
Greek political institutions were probably not unique, yet they presented the
most fully developed instance of a way of life and government of which records
have come to us
When the Greeks settled in Europe, they were divided into local communi-
ties organised on the primitive model according to clans and tribes Each clan
and tribe occupied distinct valleys and islands into which Greece was broken up
by sea 2md hills These valleys and islands, over the lapse of time, became centres
of political life sharply different from the Oriental Empires From the history of
the Greek City-States, and especially from the history of Athens, we can trace
how the tribal administration gradually gave place to the local principle in
government, and how the local community was developed into the City a new —
political typie of governance The Greek City was a true State in the modem sense
of the term in which the political, economic, intellectual, and moral life of the
people was focussed on the central city.
With the Greek City-State two ideas were integral Each City was a
art of self-government, but also in quest of virtue. To be a citizen of the State did
not merely imply, in the Greek view, the payment of taxes and the casting of a
vote It implied a direct and active co-operation in all the functions of civil and
every virtue and in all perfection” was the real life of the Greek City-State, and
Athens at the height of her fame may be regarded as the embodiment of all that
was most advanced in Greek political ideas
faction fight in their Cities between thench and the poor, nobles and commons,
friends of Athens and fnends of Sparta The works of the Greek historians and
political thinkere clearly show that the Greek society of their time was not in a
sound state The philosophers were constantly returning to the question, what
was virtue, and how it might be taught And they looked on this question as one
of immediate and even urgent importance to society. They felt that their
countrymen were thinking too much of liberty, and far t«jo little of discipline
And they foresaw that a people in this state of mind must f^all before that power
whose people were better disciplined than the Greeks The Macedonians, and
after them the Romans, proved the truth of this forecast
The Greeks were also wanting in humanity. They made liberty the exclusive
right of sufienor people and denied to others what they valued for themselves the
most. Even the wisest of the Greeks regarded slavery as a natural institution and
they never dreamt that civilised life was possible without slavery. Athens, for
example, had only about 20,000 citizens who obtained leisure for their public
duties by turning over all the rough work to a much larger body of slaves. Slavery
is incompatible with civilisation and, as such, with democracy. A democratic
society is one m which all enjoy equal rights and pnvileges without any barriers
o( class distinction The brotherhood of man is its basis and all its meml^rs stand
fHE EVOLUTION OF THE STATE 115
equal m the comiTion fraternity. This means faith in i^an as a man and his
personality.
State, whether its dimensions arc those of the city or nation, cannot draw the line
between law and custom, between enforcement and spontaneity, between the
conditions of order and those of culture So long as the theory is accepted that the
State IS omnicompetent, there will be confusion and suppression. Under such a
theory no form of life is safe, no religion, no opinion, unless its adherents control
the government. So the very which enriches a civilisation when
diversity
recognised as existing of right, creates under the principle of the ‘universal
partnership’ those violent and factious oppositions which on the contrary destroy
”
It
The Roman Empire. Rome was onginally just one of the numerous little
States which had been bom in Italy, in much the same way and for the same
geographical reasons as Greece But after 500 B C the Italian City-States were
united with Rome head As there were fewer geographical barriers in Italy
at the
than in Greece, unification was more easily attained.
definite periods which mark the growth of the Roman State.
There are three
First, there was the monarchic City-State The royal penod lasted from the
foundation of Rome about 753 B C to 510 B C At the head of the State was the
king who was at once the hereditary and patriarchal chief of the people, the chief
priest of the community, and the elected ruler of the State On the death of the
King, the sovereignty of the State reverted to the Council of Elders The Elders
appointed a temporary King for five days who, in his turn, nominated another
Elder This Elder actually named the new King subject to the approval of the
assembled people “The vote of the people was ratified by the approval of the
gods, as given in the ceremony of inauguration ” The powers of the King were
described as “imperium” and were technically unlimited, both in times of peace
and war But there were two customary limitations to these powers. First, the
King was expected to consult the Council of Elders and to follow their advice.
Secondly, all cases involving capital punishment were submitted to the people for
their final decision
During the monarchical period only the nobility, called the patricians, had a
share in political authonty. The landless, propertyless common people, known as
the plebians, had no share in the governance of the country and they enjoyed no
political rights. But later on they acquired some privileges
Monarchy in Rome came to an end in 5 IT) B C in the same way as when the
Greeks expelled their “tyrants”. It was substituted by a Republic. Civil and
military powers were vested in two officers called the Consuls, elected annually.
But It did not mean equal political rights for all citizens The plebians were
subject to political, economic and social disabilities. They could not hold any
public office. The patricians had entire control of the administration of law. The
public land and pastures were allotted only to them. The plebians were also
legally prohibited from marrying among the patneians The former struggled for
the removal of their disabilities and they eventually succeeded in getting all the
116 PRINCIPLES OP POLITICAL SCIENCE
ceased to function and the old political maxim that the ruler received his power
from the people gave place to the Divine Ongin Theory The authority of the
Emperor was interpreted to have divinely onginated and for a time he was
worshipped as God When Chnstianity was accepted as State religion, the Divine
Origin Theory was explained to mean that the Emperor was the deputy of God
on earth and unflinching obedience to his authonty was obedience to God In this
way, the Republican Roman City-State became the centralised autocratic
world-empire, thereby shifting the emphasis from the Greek ideals of liberty,
democracy, and local independence to the Romans’ ideals of unity, order,
universal law, and cosmopolitanism
The World Roman Empire at the height of its political glorymade some
very important contributions to political institutions The Romans were not a
brilliant people They did but little work in art and philosophy, but they
possessed in full measure the practical qualities which the Greeks were
in
deficient They were patient, methodical, skilful in arranging compromises and in
devising legal forms The Greeks pursued their ideal of “liberty and equal laws”
disregarding authority and discipline The Romans held fast to authority, in the
family and in the State At the same time, they were ready to concede rights to all
kinds of subject persons by extending tothem the right of full Roman citizenship
While they were reducing one country after another to subjection and order, they
were also developing their law on rational principles The Romans studied the
institutions and customs of the heterogeneous people over whom their authority
extended and found a common element of equity and convenience for all This
Law of Nations, as they called it, was a great step forward, which widened the
notions of lawyers and statesmen They also applied the Greek notion of the Law
of Nature to their legal system
But the Roman Empire could not endure long Among the causes which led
to her decline and downfall “were the sacrifice of individual liberty for the sake of
securing unity, the soulless efficiency which characterised her administration, the
moral depravity of the upper classes, devastating pestilence, the unsound
economic basis of the empire, failure to make rules for the succession of emperors,
religious disintegration, and the invasion of barbarian hordes ” In a word, the
weakness of the Roman Imperial system was that “it remained too Roman, too
centralised, too much dominated by the desires and interests of Rome, too
THE EVOLUTION OF THE SI ATE 117
dependent on the personality of the emperor of the day.” Though Rome fell, yet
she gave to the world the first welhorganised and well-govcmed State She also
contributed importantly to many systems of law and her influence may be seen in
the development of international law and world organization like the United
Nations Colonial administration is another contribution of the Roman Empire.
The Feudal State. It Roman Empire that the
was on the ruins of the
came to be established The tottenng imperial rule
so-called feudal type of society
gave rise to the growth of new principalities headed by the landed anstocracy
There was another factor which gave a fillip to this tendency. The Teutonic
barbarians who overran the Roman Empire were wedded to the ideals of
individualism, liberty and local self-government. The Roman ideals of adminis^
tration,on the other hand, were concentration of authority, uniformity of law,
and a centralised administration Feudalism was an admixture of two opposite
forces
Feudalism is the name given to the form of society and government which
prevailed in Europe from 476-1500 AD
According to the feudal theory, the
Kings were the vassals of the Emperor who, in his turn, was the vassal of God.
They received their dominions as fiefs to be held on condition of loyalty to their
lord Each King, then, divided his dominions into sufficiently large parts and
granted each part to a noble called the tenant-m-chief, on the condition of loyalty
and service to the King He continued to hold the land so long as he fulfilled his
obligations After his death the rights and duties of vassalage passed on to the
heirs of the lord The tenants-in-chief divided their respective lands into smaller
units and gave them to their vassab on similar conditions This process of
division and transference continued to many stages At all stages the vassal owed
1 the grant of land by a lord to a vassal who held it so long as he fulfilled his
obligations of loyalty and service,
2 the existence of close personal ties between the lord and the vassal, and
3 the lord of an estate exercised the full or partial nghts of sovereignty, over all
The estate of the lord, big or small, was called a fief or feud, and, as such, the
term feudalism
The obligations of the vassal to his lord were military service normally
limited to forty days in a year, payment of rent to the lord for his land and house;
work at the lord’s fields for a certain number of days in a year; payment to be
made on occasions like knighting of the lord’s eldest son, the marriage of hb
daughter, the ransoming of his person was made a pnsoncr of war;
if the lord
relief or payment made when a new heir succeeded to the fief, payment of fines
when the vassal alienated the land to another party; lodging and hospiuUty to
the lord and hb followers on hb journeys or hunting expeditions; and attendance
at the lord’s court.
The duties of the lord were to protect )ib vassal and to avenge his wrongs; to
among hundreds of petty authorities both lay and ecclesiastical, all confined to
small areas. But the feudal State was not a State in the real sense of the term.
There was neither common citizenship nor common law. There was no central
authority m the State and the loyalty of the people was divided at every step
The
individual owed his allegiance to his immediate landlord and only through him
to the King. The feudal system, in short, “was confusion rough organised.” Out of
this confusion emerged the superior authority of the Church, resulting m a deep
and continuous conflict between the Spiritual and Temporal authorities. Absence
of central authority, division of the loyalty of the people at every step, their
religious infatuation,and the inconceivably vast property under the possession of
the Church made it possible for the Pope to claim superiron ty over all the
Pnnccs. The Church had in fact, taken over some function which legitimately
belonged to the State A separate system of law and courts developed for the
clergy. Figgis has aptly observed, “In the Middle Ages the Church was not a
State, It was the State, the State or rather the civil authority was merely the
”
police department of the Church
decline The general course of events had been that powerful lords subdued less
powerful ones, and small kingdoms emerged by successful conquest or lucky
marriage, and by the con .sol id at ion of an authority that was generally welcomed
by the masses, if not by the more important lords, whose powers were gradually
limited by the new monarchs The Renaissance and the Reformation accelerated
the pace of this change The Tudors in England took advantage of the situation
and demonstrated to the European countries how the people could unite and
progress under a strong and centralised authority The ties of unity were further
fostered by the sentiments of nationality Britain’s insular position helped the
British in attaining the full stature of an Organised and conscious nationhood
The attempt of the English, in the early fifteenth century, to dominate
trance roused the national spirit in that country too A similar awakening, due to
various causes, had come in Spam and Portugal The sixteenth century saw the
Danish and Swedish peoples also similarly organised
A new type of State, thus, emerged The old concept of the State was
replaced by the State based on bonds of nationality strengthened by natural
boundanes A national State, with a dcstinci and separate territory of its own,
gave rise to the modem theories of sovereignty and equality of States The
nation-State also helped the growth of international law
thought of this period, also supported absolutism Machiavelli freed the ruler
even from the limitations imposed by public morality The theory of Divine
Right of Kings championed the cause of absolute monarchy.
But the absolute authonty of the Kings could not remain unchallenged for
THE EVOLUTION OF THE STATE 119
long. The next stage in the development of nation-Stat»* was the conflict between
the King and the people The people demanded their rights and privileges. They
began to realise that power was ultimately theirs, if they wished to wield it. It was
the rise of democracy and the aspirations for a representative system of
government Democracy brought with it three main principles, equality, popular
sovereignty and natioality The manifestation of the first principle was found in
the Declaration of the Rights of Man drawn up by the French Revolutionaries in
1789 Ever since 1789, this principle “has been at work emancipating and
elevating the hitherto unfree and downtrodden orders of society, and removing
civil, religious and race disabilities from disqualified classes in the State.” The
authority, and law is the expression of their will Finally, the principle <rf
nationality requires that the people, who feel they are one, are free to choose their
own form of government and to manage their affairs in their own way. Here,
again, it may be stated that the French Revolution was primanly responsible for
the revival of the national sentiment
The modem State is a nation-Statc and it has become the basic pattern
throughout the world It actualizes the principle of self-determination, or the
dence Within the last four decades the British Empire has become a “Common-
120 PRINCIPLES OF POUTICAL SCIENCE
wealth of Nations” Most of the rich Dutch Colonial Empire was lost when
Indonesia became independent and a Republic. The events in Africa especially
have proved to be the last phase in the history of the Colonial Empires
Future of the State* TTie process of the evolution of the State is not yet
complete With the liquidation of the Colonial Empires, the former narrow ideas
of nationalism are also breaking down and are now being replaced by the idea of
internationalism Developments in the means of communication and transport,
expansion of international trade and establishment of vanous international
organisations have further given a stimulus to the movement for internationa-
lism. One may even say that if our fathers thought nationally, we think
internationally Suggestions have also been made
for a world-State on the basis of
a world federation The was a devoted champion of World
late Professor Laski
Federation He said that the nation-Statc was not the final unit of social
organisation and that the pressure of world forces had already made the
sovereignty of the State obsolete for any creative purpose In his recent book,
Union Now, C A Streit visualised a federal union of the vanous democratic
nation-States. Like Laski, Streit, too, outlines the scheme and method of a world
government of the federal type
Federation may be the solution of the present world politics It is a device
which satisfies the claims of nationalities As a form of government, it is likely to
solve the problems of both nationalism and internationalism But a World federal
union IS an impossible ideal unless the States change their political and economic
attitudes and the tottenng impenal powers voluntarily relinquish their impenal
authority The Anarchists and the Communists, loo, shall have to change their
attitude towards the State, as both aim to establish a stateless society The future
of the State, under the circumstances, is difficult to predict and time alone will
reveal the shape of things to come
Evedution in State activity. We have travelled far from the oriental despotic
empires to the democratic modem State. We have also ventured to speculate on
the future of the State and concluded that the process of evolution is not yet
complete But the change in the forms and patterns of States has not been
confined to outward forms, or to the pnnciples on which they are based It is no
less marked in the functions the State performs, and the nature of its problems If
we just glance through the work of the government of any modem State, we find
that the majority of items in programme, for example, the education and
its
SUGGESTED READINGS
Gassier, EThe Mjfth of the State
Dc Grazia, S The Political Commumtjf
*
NATIONALISM
The modern State is a nation-State and it has become the basic pattern
throughout the world It actualises the principle of self-determination, or the right
of every nationality to govern itself Loyalty to the nation-State is expressed
through the nation or in other words to the people who “recognise their likeness,
and emphasise their differences from other men Their social heritage becomes
distinctly their own as a man lends his own peculiar character to his home
This sense of kinship, which binds them together and separates them from others,
is essentially a sociological and secondarily a political phenomenon and it may be
many or some of the forces like common race and language, common
the result of
religion,common residence in a contiguous area, common history of traditions
and culture, and common aspirations When the people, inspired of this special
sense of unity, determine their political destiny and establish their own
independent State, they become a nation and the State so formed is a
nation-State It adopts all possible means at its disposal to preserve the integrity
of Its frontiers and inculcates a spirit of homogeneity and a united people This
has been the course of the development of the State during the pjist five centuries
The nation-State replaced the old concept ol the State b\ the State based on
bonds of nationality strengthened by natural frontiers This process of evolution
of the State brings into focus the concepts of nationality, nation and the State
All the three concepts need to be clearly identified as the vagueness with which
they have been used is the source of much confusion, and misunderstanding of
the import of each
Nationality. Till recently, the terms nationality and nation were used
interchangeably Now they are used as two distinct terms, but even those who
have distinguished between them, have by no means been in agreement as to the
difference This is obviously due to the fact that both nation and nationality have
to share the same adjectival form ‘national’ and they have the same root natn
which connotes the idea of birth or race But nation has now definitely become
political in meaning as a consequence of the universal acceptance of the principle
connected with the term nation Nationality emphasises its root meaning of
common birth, real or fictitious It is in this context that James Bryce defines
nationality He says, “A nationality is a population held together by certainties,
as for example, language and literature, ideas, customs and traditions, in such a
122
NATIONAL!^ 123
way as to feel itself a coherent unity distinct from other populations similarly
held together by like tics of their own ” whereas a natio.'. is a nationality “which
do not between them and any others which make them cooperate with
exist —
each other more willingly, than with other people, desire to be under the same
government and desire that it should be government by themselves or a portion
” ^
of themselves exclusively
literature “There is nothing”, says Ramsay Muir, “that will give unity to
divergent races as the use of a common tongue, and in very many cases unity of
language and community ideas which it brings, have proved the mam binding
force in a nation ”Bohen explains that the concept of a mother-longue has made
language the source from which springs all intellectual and spiritual existence
Earnest Barker finds the closest affinities between nationalitv and language “Each
word IS charged with asscx'iations that touch feelings and evoke thoughts N ou
cannot share their feelings and thoughts unless you can unlock their associations
by having the key of language You cannot enter the heart nor the mind of nation
unless you know its speech Conversely, once you have learned the speech vou
”
find that with it and by it you imbibe a deep and pervasive spiritual force
reasons for Belgium to break away in 1830 from the imposed union with Holland,
but not the least was the diversity of religion The partition of India m 1947, into
two s^arate and Pakistan, was essentially the result of Mohammed
States, India
All Jinnah’s two-nation theory based upon religious differences between the
Hindus and the Muslims. But common religion did not deter the Bengali
Muslims to secede from Pakistan and form a State of their own
Religion, no doubt, was and is a great cementing force, but now writers are
little inclined to lay stress on religion as a contemporary factor “Sameness of
religion”, says Burgess, “was once a most potent factor in national development,
but the modem principle of religious freedom has greatly modified its influence
If Burgess should have combined with the modem principle of religious freedom
the modem decline in the religious faith, his explanation would have been more
NATIONALISM 125
apt. Indeveloped countries religion has since long bt^n separated from politics
and the cases are at least as numerous in which deep-rooted religious
differences
have formed no obstacle to national unification Apart from religion
there are
other factors which are a strong incentive to cohesion
nationality ’
Freedom
of religious belief and the spirit of toleration at least take
away the sting of fanaticism and create a sense of amity and neighbourly
relations in societies containing diverse religious groups
There is other side of the same problem also When diverse people live for a
long time under one government and the government is tolerant in its policy
towards all such diverse elements, with the passage of time they merge into a
single unified nationality Their children become political half-castes, and the
third and fourth generations lose their parental prejudices The peoples of the
original thirteen colonies, which comprised the United States of America after the
Declaration of Independence were in their first generation either Englishmen,
Germans, Poles or Czechs Their political aspirations to get rid of foreign
domination welded them in bonds of unity and all the different nationalities Were
fused together in one American nation Common government is the instrumenta-
lity through which much of the common historical heritage of a people takes
form.
Nation. The word nation is derived from the latin word natio which means
born. This gives the term a racial or ethnical meaning Etymologically, a nation
is a people descended from a common stock When used in this sense, a nation
means a people welded together in a society by ties of blood relationship. Burgess
and Leacock define a nation in a racial sense, though the former docs not seem to
But race and nationality are two entirely distinct terms. As said earlier, there
ISno pure race anywhere on earth The myth of purity of race is nothing else but
pride and predjudice of those who believe that they represent'^a pure and superior
race Sidgwick has correctly said that some of the leading modem nations are
“notoriously of very mixed race ” ® Nation, as such, has no racial significance.
What makes a group of people a nation is not necessarily a community of race,
language or religion, but a sentiment of common mass-consciousness or like-
mindedness It is true that language and religion arc important factors in knitting
the people in common bonds
of affinity and togetherness, but it seems clear that
the community and language, and community of national sentiment
of religion
are not necessarily connected Take the Swiss people They do not speak a
common language, nor do they profess a common religion, yet they constitute a
nation and they are as patriotic and as conscious of their common membership of
a nation as any other people Both France and Spain have a Basque population,
speaking a language of common origin and not spoken anywhere else in the
world, but the Basques do not form a nation Nor do Welsh and Breton Celts,
though there is a common legendary racial and linguistic inheritance A common
religious belief has been no doubt, a powerful nation-making force and powerful
to disintegrate nations also Pakistan and Bangladesh are two clear examples of
this type But they are two rare examples Generally speaking, that stage in the
history of civilisation seems to be nearly passed
a number of races and they came from different breeds But their wanderings
brought them into this territory and they settled down here because it appealed
them to settle down here While living together for a sufficiently long time, they
developed two forms of mental sympathy The first was a common “capital of
thoughts and feelings acquired and transmitted in the course of a common
history common capital, of tradition, which includes as a rule a common
a
language, a common religion (which may, however, assume a number of different
forms), and a common culture variously expressed in art and architecture, in
” The second was the common will to
literature, in social habits and otherwise
live together for the future freely and independently, thus, having common
thoughts, feelings and aspirations and thereby exercising their right of political
i
self-determination
5. Leacock, S ,
EUmenls of Political Same, p 15
6 Sidgwick, H Tfu EUments of Politics, p 223
Political Theory, p 53.
7 Barker, E, Principles of Social and
128 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAl SCIENCE
national State There must be a general social cohesion which should serve as a
cementing material before the seal of the State can be effectively imposed on a
population. If the seal of the State stamped on a population which is not held
is
The ties hat bind the people to make them a nation are psychological and
spiritual as they are in a nationality They are common feelings of an ardent
desire to live together and to serve or suffer for the cause of their Motherland or
Fatherland, cemented by the memories of a common history, a memory of
sufferings endured and victories won in common and the dear names of those
great personalities who
them above and embodied unto themselves the
lifted
character and ideals of the nation These feelings make the people a community
of patriotic sentiments and they transmit their common heritage to posterity to
keep aglow the light and zest of patriotism in the deep recesses of their hearts so
that they may ever remain dedicated custodians of the honour and integrity of
the nation A nation is, thus, the expression of the people’s consciouness of unity
and once this consciousness pneks through, it makes the people a nation It is in
the minds of the people that a nation is formed and created A nation, according
to Gamer, “is a culturally homogeneous social group which is at once conscious
and tenacious of its unity of psychic life and possession ” Zimmern defines it as “a
body of people united by a corporate sentiment of peculiar intensity, intimacy
and dignity, related to a definite home-country ” He succinctly says, “If a people
”
feels Itself to be a nation, it is a nation
The nation, to sum up, is a human group, inhabiting a given territory, where
its members may, but not necessarily, claim one origin, a certain indefinable
community of culture, traditions, memories, aspirations and interests and above
all a collective will to live together and make a common and concerted modus
vivendi to live together for ever with honour and dignity It must also be added
that the term nation now implies, for the majority of writers, a further political
and legal clement This community possesses common institutions and common
laws and forms an independent political entity
Nation and State. The theory of one nation, one State had its supporters in
the past too, but it became the practical politics after the first world war in 1918,
determination Since then there has been a tendency to equate nation with the
State, which really they are not For example, the constitution of the Republic of
Argentina bears the title of the “Argentine Nation ” Similarly, the name “United
Nations” is a misnomer, for it is an international organisation of sovereign states
and not nations. The State is a people organised for law within a definite territory
and it is sovereign both internally as well as externally whereas a nation is a
people psychologically bound together, with a common will to live together for
ever and share the common weal and woe
8 Ibid , p 55
NATIONALISM 129
I he new tvpe of State, thus, emerged The old concept of the State was
n placed by the State based on bonds of nationality strengthened by national
boundaries The nation-States began their caieers as absolute monarchies But
the people soon began to challenge the absolute authority of Kings They
demanded their rights and privileges and claimed that power ultimately
belonged to them The French Revolution gave a fillip to their aspirations and
reinlorced their struggle for wresting power from Kings who had proclaimed
themselves as the vice regents of God in defence of their right to rule and justify
the {‘xercise of their unlimited authority
the dawn of democracy as it rested on the two pillars of equality and popular
them with nationality Ever since 1789 these principles had
sovereignty joining
been at work emancipating and elevating the hitherto unfrec and downtrodden
orders of society and removing
civil, religious and race disabilities from the
disqualified people of the State.These principles not only made the people the
ultimate source of authority, but inspired them to claim their right, if they felt
that they were one and distinct from others, freedom to choose their own
government and manage their own affairs in their own way
with a new feeling of life and with a new religious fervour” Kings gave way to
the people and their aspirations
Nationalism came into its own in the early nineteenth century Since then
it has gradually spread throughout the world Within the last five decades it
flared up to new heights of militancy m
Naxi Germany It transformed an
international movement in Soviet Russia irfto a strongly nationalistic movement
It even changed the complexion of the movement in China It stirred passions to
fever pitch in the Middle East, leading nations to take actions contrary to their
Rightly understood, says Asirvat ham nationalism stands for the historical
process by which nationalities are transferred into political units and for the
legitimate right of a people who form a distinct and vigorous nation or
nationality to a place in the sun”*^ To put it straight, when a national group
either aspires to become self-governing or when having achieved self-government,
this fact becomes part of the complex of national sentiment, we speak of
nationalism
Nationalism is almost one idea foi which masses of men live and die It
combines love of country and suspiciousness of foreigners Love of country lomes
from shared values, and suspiciousness of foreigners comes from the belief
that foreigners do not share such values in the same strength “The first shared
value IS the love of famriiar places — the neighbourhood, the land, the homes,
the valleys, and the mountains, all of the surroundings that one loves because
they have been a part of oneself from infancy ” This is the logical corollary of
the eternal truth of man’s nature that he is a social animal and his instinct of
living together and co-operating with others among whom he lives creates
perpetual bonds of affinity and good-will and a love for the land— home
—
country which provides them with the wherewithal of life But nationalism, as
a emerged with assumed the form of ancient group principle,
the nation -State,
pride in one’s group and resentment of injury to a member of one’s group as it
was an attack on the solidarity and the honour of the whole Pride in one’s group
usual!) led to an imaginative abasement of all others “Pam economy”, says
Beni Prasad “set a high value on group solidarity and encouraged an
exclusiveness which inspite of some contrary influences of a political and ethical
character, sanctified group prejudices ” With the enlargemeni of human
groups and their frequent contact, prejudice has crvstallised round race and
nation
A Nationalist wants his people and his country to command all the respect
and deference from others, his people to have all the power, all the wealth, and all
the well-being He tends to claim all the rectitude and virtue for it, as well as all
his loyahties, like the family, the village, the caste, religion and other
associational loyahties Hans K.ohn defines nationalism in this context and says,
It “is a statemind permeating the large majority of the people and claiming to
of
permeate members, it recognises the nation -State as the ideal form of
all its
energy and economic well-being The supreme loyalty of man is therefoie due
to his nationality, as his own life is supposedly rooted m and made
possible by
its welfare
Nationalism has shown the vital quality of elasticity and stood for some
regions the attainment of political unification; elsewhere for winning indepen-
dence from alien rulers; with some States for the cultural assimilation of dissident
groups; and with others for economic aggrandisement In the last two cases it
RIGHT OF SELF-DETERMINATION
Principle of Self-determinaticm. The modern theory is that each nationality
should form a separate State and each State should comprise a single nation The
principle of morio-national State has lent support to the revolt of nations hitherto
held in subjugation and the right of every nationality to become a nation It
that both the countries would respect the rights of the peoples to choose their
own forms of government But Bntish Pnmc Minister’s nebulous note added to
his subsequent statement in Parliament confined its application to the States and
”
nations of Europe now under Nazi yoke
This doctrine of national self-rule was accepted and incorporated in the
Charter of the United Nations Chapter XI of the Charter on the Non-
Self-Govcming Territories fixed the principle of international accountability foi
was a great experiment not only in the art of self-government, but also in quest of
virtue The Constitution of the Republican Rome rested on four principles*
divided authority, a short tenure of office for magistrates, the final authority of
the people on all important matters, and the military authority of all magistrates
was limited The relevance of these principles is as important now as it was then
Changes, p. 69
Its Structure and
21 MacIvcr, R.M, Smety
134 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Asia. Africa and America resulting into the ultimate liquidation of the
l-atin
colonial empires Within the last four decades the Bntish empire has become a
Commonwealth of Nations Most of the rich Dutch C'olonial Empire was lost
when Indonesia became independent and a republic The events in Africa prewed
a last phase in the historv of the Colonial Empires 'Fodav, there are just a few
stray colonies that exist and the fate of their rulers is as precarious as it was of
their predecessors in the netvvoik of the defunct colonial empire
The critics of the right of self-determination, though not many, are equally
articulate and their criticism is rather trenchant They assert that it is historically
unsound and scKiologically untenable There are even now, many States in which
the population is composite and in all such States there is maximum freedom for
all and all nationalities are equal participants in the affairs of the State The
notable examples of multi-national States are USSR, the United States of
Amenca, Switzerland and India InU S S R there are 1()9 nationalities and 11
small national groups, all differing from each other in language, customs, history,
their level of culture and even religion The 1977 Soviet Constitution, like its
liberty and on respect for diversity Switzerland was the first country in the
world to establish republican institutions, and the only one State in Europe
which has always been a republic When the United States of America was born
as an independent nation, Switzerland had behind it a republican tradition of
some five hundred years The impact of Swiss republican institutions had been
profound on the United States of America, particularly, and other countries
adopting the democratic way of life
The United
States of America itself originally consisted of thirteen colonics
of immigrants drawn from nearly all countries of Europe By the gradual process
of intermingling of different cultures, a new culture, a blend of English and
continental characteristic's, conditioned by the environments of the New World,
was produced Together the new Americans fought their War of Independence
and in the Declaration of Independence adopted on July 4, 1776 announced the
birth of a new nation. They were in the words of BiMntschli, the conjunction of
various peoples who gave to the new State of Americans “breadth and variety”
that served “as an alloy to give strength and currency to the nobler metal The
delegates of the thirteen original States, assembled at the Philadelphia Conven-
tion in May 1787, to revise the Constitution of the Confederation, adopted
entirely a new Constitution, which, according to Gladstone, was “the most
wonderful work ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man.”
The new American system of government was based, as James Madison said, “on
that honourable determination which animates every votary of freedom to rest
our political experiments on the capacity of mankind for self-government ” A
publication of the United Sates Information Service, gives a matter of fact
summing-up “The United States is a country of great diversity . Geographical-
ly, there is a variety too And at the core of this varied land are the
people — the most varied of all, for they stem from countries and social levels
throughout the world But in spite of many differences, certain traditions— free-
dom, equality, individual rights— are common to all and are taught in the home,
m the church, and in the schools
Lord Action was a relentless critic of the mono-national State and the right
of self-determination He believed that a multinational State embodied the
genius of all the nationalities and consequently it is the amalgam of vigour,
promise and advancement “The combination of different nations in one State,”
life as the combination of men
he argued, “is as necessary a condition of civilised
in society Inferior by living in political union with races
races are raised
intellectually superior Exhausted and decaying nations are revived by the
contact of a younger vitality This fertilising and regenerating process can only
be obtained by living under one government It is m the cauldron of the State
that the fusion takes place by which the vigour, knowledge and the capacity of
one portion of mankind may be communicated to another He believed that a
mono-national State is “more absurd and more criminal than the theory of
Soc ialism,” for when political and national boundaries coincide, society ceases to
advance
Action deprecated the whole doctrine of nationality at the time of its almost
unquestioned ascendanev and uttered a solemn warning against the dangers
which lurked in it “By making the State an i the nation commensurate with ea^'h
other in theory,” he wrote in 1862 “this principle reduces practically to a subject
condition all other nationalities that mav be within the State's boundary It
cannot admit them to an equality with the ruling nation which constitutes the
State, because the State would then cease to be national, which would be a
contradiction of the principle of its existence According, therefore, to the degree
ofhumanity and civilisation in that dominant body which claims all the rights of
the community, the inferior race are exterminated, or reduced to servitude, or
outlawed, or put in a condition of dependence
conflagration involving in it even the major States Lord Curzon remarked at the
105.
23 Blufttschir J K ,
Theory of the StaU, p
Facts About the United
SiaUs (1956), p 4
24
25 Action, Lord, History and
Freedom and Other Essays, p 290
26 /W,p289
136 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
In the first place, it disturbs the balance of power m the international sphere,
and, secondly, itatmosphere of suspicion and distrust with the logical
creates an
implication of mad race for armaments Every state, big or small, old or new,
pursues a vigorous policy of arming itself against any future contingency and,
thus, begins the hysteria of war-preparedness That had been the course of history
since the Treaty of Versailles Laski has correctly said that nation-States enter
into” a competition in the armament
of power which acts so as to jeopardise the
maintenance of peace, provoke an atmosphere of nervous hostility, and to
to
induce the smaller States into alliance with powerful neighbours that may win
security by that multiplied strength So organised, the distribution of nation-
States resembles nothing so much as a powder magazine which, as in 1914, a
”
single chance spark may suffice to provoke into conflagration
t27 Laski, HJ ,
4 Grammar of Politics, pp 224-25
NATIONALISM 137
they fight for supremacy When the nation is glorified and the State idolized,
the characteristic of such a state is vigour and force Tensions and conflicts mount
and disputes between States, real or imaginary, are decided by the arbitrament of
war There had been a regular succession of wars, major and minor since the
birth of the nation-State and there seems no end to such wars In fact, mankind is
scared by past wars and is scared of new ones In the nuclear age of our times, no
country can afford to wait for defence to ward off the probabilities of war and to
win It, if It actually comes It is a contagion that ruthlessly spreads with
disastrous results
The nation-State is an exclusive State and it has two aspects In the first
place, It means race superiority and its supremacy The race problem become^
aggravated in to the conjecture of physiological and cultural
proportion
differences witheconomic conditions and political clash On the economic side,
the ideal of economic self-sufficiency, combines with the exigencies of modern
industry— Its ever present needs of raw supplies and markets and sometimes
cheap labour— to prompt the annexation or control of territories inhabited by
weaker peoples There is an old maxim that flag follows the trade and economic
nationalism, has its counterpart in economic imperialism Big industry and high
finance manipulate the patriotie sentiments and enthusiasms and
equate
over now, but colonialism has taken a new form There is a regular race betwen
the “big” powers to establish and extend their spheres of influence and the
obvious victims are the under developed and strategically important States The
most recent example of this political manoeuvring is Afghanistan and it seems
that the World is on the brink of another war as the two super powers have put
their reputation at stake
joined nationality with the twin principles of self-government and equality But
nationality became, in the words of Tagore, “one of the most powerful
anaesthetics” that the ingenuity of man has ever invented Education often
inculcates the type of patriotism which sanctifies an attitude of “my nation, right
or w-rong” The feelings of patriotism so drummed into us from the earliest
childhood that it is “only by a considerable intellectual effort that any of us can
liberate themselves from these forms of thought, to which we have been
moulded ” " Such a patriotic fervour to which nationals of all States had been
taught and trained did not usher an era of peace, cordiality, mutual trust,
goodwill and co-operation in the family of nations On the other hand, the
nation-State system is a dismal chronicle of national arrogance, aggression,
chauvinism expansionism and all the worst that human nature can display
Hayes, accordingly, comes to the conclusion that it is highly doubtful if “the
recasting of political geography on national lines has actually promoted either
humanity of justice and whether nationalism is a reliable harbinger of a quieter
”
and better world in the immediate future "
But the old ideas in the relations of races and nations have become
anachronistic and the former nations of nationalism are breaking down in the
atmosphere of contemporary civilisation Laski says that “the scale of modern
civilisation has made the national and sovereign Stale an institutional expedient
of which the political unwisdom and inoral danger are both manifest He
categorically affirms that the notion of a sovereign independent State, on the
international side is “fatal to the well-being of humanity The way in which a
State should live in relation to other States is clearly not a matter to which the
State entitled to be the sole judge The common life of States is a matter of
is
dictum of Kant, “So act as to treat humanity whether in your pierson or that of
another, in any case as an end, and never merely as a means ” If nations follow
the voice of reason and eschew emotions, parochial loyalties and narrow
consideration ipso facto disappear and an atmosphere of fellow-feelings prevails
that knows no territorial limits The brotherhood of man is the basis of
internationalism It rouses no passions and does not blur man’s vision to distort
his notions Reason
is the just steward of man’s mind Internationalism
presupposes the existence of sovereign national States and the voice of reason
enjoins to reconcile national interests with the larger interests of mankind with a
justmind in an atmosphere of mutual trust and goodwill Interdependence is the
natural necessity of nations and all are integral parts of one single human society
and their weal and w'oe is inseparablv intertwined Laski has succinctly said that
there are “no longer lotus-fields where men mav linger careless of life about them
The w'orldis one and indivisible in a sense so compelling that the only question
"
before us is the method by which we represent this units
in order to broaden the scope and obligatory nature of the decisions arrived at the
international conferences. Obligatory character of the decisions by majority votes
in various organs of the United Nations go counter to the principle of sovereignty
and Its orthodox attributes
lism. A revision of present day political arrangements is the sine qua non of the
emergence of nationalism free from the taints of intolerance and aggression It
has two dimensions Nationalism and internationalism are not antagonistic and
exclusive, provided nationalism, as Laski says, is equated with right The right of
every nation to be equal to others, to preserve and promote its individuality and
ensure its security with the corresponding obligation of recognising the same right
of other nations and States Thus, harmonising and balancing of diverse national
interests in a spirit of mutual trust, co-opcration and goodwill Secondly, the
spiritof exlusivcness and aggradizemcnt, which has long characterised human
relationships and which the educational machinery in every nation-State has
been used to inculcate, is out of tune with the present trends It must give way to
that of political equality and co-opcration among all the peoples of the world If
this can happen, it may be safely said, with Zimmern that “the road to
internationalism lies through nationalism”
WORLD GOVERNMENT
Concept and Prospects. It is now widely agreed that the real solution of
international tensions, conflicts and wars can be found in a world authority
which should be capable of asserting itself and effectievly compel obedience to its
directions and authonty Laski was the most ardent advocate of such a world
authority organised on a federal basis He argued that the nation-Staie was not
the final unit of social organisation and the ultimate unit in human allegiance,
and that the pressure of world forces had rendered the sovereignty of the State
obsolete for any creative purpose Albert Einstein outright re)ected the idea of
continuing with the nation-State even within the ambit of restricted exercise ol its
sovereign power and expressed the opinion “that the only step towards world
government is world government itself’ and regretted that no real progress had
been made in this area in the past so many years Jawaharlal Nehru agreed with
Einstein and affirmed that the world government “must and will come, for there
IS no other remedy for the world’s sickness” Kingsley Martin wrote in 1959 that
war is always likely until there is an international authority which is strong and
universally accepted ” Robert Hutchins is of the opinion that war can be
abolished only by a world authonty, the imperative need is to start working for
such a government He argued that any effort to secure international control of
atomic energy without discarding the existence of sovereign States is bound to
fail and maintained that any “proposal for a world atomic authority is a proposal
NATIONALISM 141
as “the true ideal ” There are many more who consider that a world government
is the only way to provide collective security for the States.
But no one has so far explained how the world government can be brought
into existence and what precisely shall be its structure and the mechanism to
work It. There has been an active movement in favour of a world State on a
federal pattern, spearheaded by the United World Federalists with its base in the
United States The programme of the movement rests upon two propositions
“wars between groups of men forming social units take place when those units
exercise unrestricted sovereign power wars cease the moment sovereign power
is transferred from them to a larger or higher unit Analogy of the original
thirteen States of the United States of America is cited and it is argued that
realising the “wisdom” of this experience a world government will be set up and
once It IS done world peace will prevail and wars disappear
But IS It possible to realize the ideal of world government in the near future ?
There is no definite answer to this question Some argue that gradualism defeats
the purpose of the ideal as the nation States shall continue to exist with the
inter-State system of collective security, without eliminating the exigencies of
conflicts and wars As long as suspicion of aggression continues to exist the States
holds the view that people of the world are not willing to accept the world
government, that they are not willing and able to do even what a world State
might require of them in fulfilling its purposes His conclusion is that
international peace cannot be “permanent without a world State that a world
restricted to the developed countries”. The task is, therefore, “first to accelerate
the pace of economic development in the developing countries to the point where
a more unified world system can be built The developed countries arc in the
least interested in this vital aspect of the world order In ail the international
conferences that have so far been held to devise ways and means to extend aid to
the developing countries, the affluent States have done a precious little There is
no unanimity among them even on a minor issue such as, the quantum of aid A
mere lip service to the poor nations docs not fill in the gap and as long as the
yawning disparities in the fortunes of the developed and developing countries
remain even the idea of a world federation shall be a nightmare, for equality is
the sine qua non in a federal organisation and, more so, if the tone of nationalism
is to be changed
There mav be a greater recognition for a world State among some peoples of
the world, but political evolution varies from one people to another Some older
States, and developed too, which wield immense power and influence in the
family of nations are averse to the sacrifice of their sovereignty with a view to
creating a world State There are many, if not all, among the newly independent
States who would even dislike the idea of compromising their national
sovereignty for the cause of world State, howsoever convincing the idea may be to
them No one can, indeed, think of a world State unless all, or almost all, the
States, big and small, developed and underdeveloped, abandon sovereignty and
spontaneously agree to the authonty of the World Government in the sphere of
international relations
n. 24
49. Nicholas J Sf^yman, Armricah Strategy m World Politics,
p 465
NATIONALISM 143
near future ‘it may come at the end of a long histoncal process if those interested
in bnnging about continue to make persistent effort in that direction
it The
establishment of a world government, if at all it comes, may well be accepted as
the last stage in the evolution of mankind towards international amity and peace
The need of the day is the management and control of power It cannot be
eliminated altogether, but it can be managed effectively if there is determination
and will of all nations, big and small, to do it
50 Verma, S P ,
“Struggle for Power", Harnam Singh (cd) Studies in World Order, p 121
SUGGESTED READINGS
SOVEREIGNTY
We have said that what differentiates membership of the State from that of
other associations is its compulsory nature and the fact that all other organiza-
tions and activities within the frontiers of the State are, in the last resort,
subordinate to it. The State issues directions and it also enforces them, if
necessary, by employing armed force “The modern State,” says Laski, “is a
temtorial society, divided into Government and subjects, claiming within its
allotted physical area, supremacy over all other institutions” Sovereignty is,
the most important constituent element of the State and there can be no state
without a Sovereign power “The basis of state sovereignty,” to quote Laski
again, “is the contingent power to use the armed forces of the State to compel
obedience to its will. And it is the possession of this legal right to resort to
coercion which distinguishes the government of the state from the government of
all other associations ” How essential that control is to the State’s effective power
is one of the clearest lessons of history
There are two aspects of sovereignty internal sovereignty and external
sovereignty Internal sovereignty refers to the presence in every independent State
of some person, assembly or group which has the final legal power to command
and enforce obedience to its authonty This supreme authority is absolute over all
men and all associations within that area but it receives orders from none of
them. 'Its will is absolute and it is subject to no legal limitation “What it
1 Laski, H } y
A Grammar of Politics, p 44
2 Ibid
144
SOVEREIGNTY 145
government, is delegated. Gettcll has aptly said: “If Sovereignty is not absolute,
no State exists, if sovereignty is divided, more than one Spates exist There can be
no legal power at the back of the sovereignty of the State and no legal check on its
scope
1 he Middle Ages knew nothing about the doctrine and practice of concerted
final authority The political form, then, was feudalism, based on personal
dependence and allegiance within many small group Feudalism was the
antithesis of unified authority There was open conflict between the Spiritual
and Temporal authorities and if anybody, under the circumstances, could claim
final authority, It was the Church and not the State Moreover, peoples' firm belief
in the laws of nature or God and the sanctity which was attached to such laws
human law made impossible the modem idea of the unlimited and indivisible
”
sovereignty of the State over all citizens
The religious wars of the sixteenth century destroyed the unity of the Church
and on the rums of this destruction was built the modern State The triumphant
J (iettcll, R G ,
IntroducUon to Pohtual Science, p 95
146 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Bodin and Hobbes. The new reality of sovereignty of the State was
given its by a Frenchman, Jean Bodin, and an
philosophical justification
Englishman, Thomas Hobbes, each wnting during the full agony of the civil and
religious wars of his country, the former at the beginning and the latter in the
middle of the seventeenth century. Both Bodin and Hobbes defended the need for
one single unified authority, which should be accepted by all and against which
no group or individual could raise the objection of any earlier rights to
independence or resistance. Rights were what the State granted, compatible with
the unity of the State and keeping of peace and order within it There could be
only one power within the community, they urged, which could not be limited, or
divided and shared Bodin’s sovereign was, however, subject to four limitations
Firstly, as the King did not possess supermundance sovereignty, God was above
him. Secondly, the supreme power of the King over his subjects was “subordinat-
ed” to “the law of God and nature,” that is, to the requirements of the moral
order Thirdly, the French King could not modify the succession or any part of
public domain, and, finally, the King could not touch pnvate property But these
limitations, Bodin maintained, did not limit the power of the King over the body
politic His assertion that the Pnnee was the image of God meant that he was a
sovereign living person and his authority transcended the whole political
community just as God transcended the cosmos. He said cither sovereignty meant
nothing or it meant supreme power ruling over the entire body politic He, thus,
defined sovereignty as “a power supreme over citizens and subjects, itself not
bound by the laws,” It gave orders and received orders from none
In this way, the concept of sovereignty took a definite form at the moment
when absolute monarchy was beginning to make its appearance in Europe With
Thomas Hobbes it reached its perfection when the sovereign power of the King
was held to be natural and inalienable His whole idea was to establish that the
King and inalienable right to rule over his subjects Once the
possessed a natural
people had agreed upon the fundamental law of the kingdom, and given the King
and his descendants power over them, they were depnved of any nght to govern
themselves, and the full natural right to rule the body politic resided in the
penon of the King whose authority was absolute and indivisible
political philosphcT, who justified the Glonous Revolution (16B8), and found its
fiiBett expression in the French Revolution. The French Revolution made the
people sovereign, “and not only transferred to it,” as Soltau remarks, “all the
Mttributes of the old mmarchy of divine right but removed ail limitations, on the
ground that the peopk, when governing itself, had no need lo imtrkt ki
SOVEREIGNTY 147
authority The State, in its corporate capacity, was, thu: endowed with all the
attributes of sovereigntywhich the monarch previously possessed. Two factors
reinforced the absolutism of the new democratic State One was nationalism
which added the claims of the nation to those of the sovereign people The
national State claimed not only unlimited authority at home over its members,
but also the nght to expand abroad at the expense of others. The second factor
was the enormous increase in the province of the State following the Industrial
Revolution. The activities of the State were not only limited to protection,
administration and dispensation of justice, but it became “an organiser of
State which makes the freedom of its members Rousseau asserted that the will of
the State is the will of the individual in so far as he has accepted this
identification of himself with the community His real self, his real will becomes
part of the common or General Will for the common good. If he does not agree
what the General Will consents for him, he pursues selfish ends and the General
Will can compel him to agree and by doing so he is forced to be free Thus, the
mystical operations of the General Will create conditions of unheard absolutism
Rousseau’s State was the Leviathan of Hobbes, crowned with the General Will
instead of the crown of absolute monarchs who were described as tyrants
complete and coherent form by Hegel, the German political thinker, who made
It more definitely philosophical and metaphysical “The State,” he said, “is
‘perfected rationality’, the eternal and necessary essence of spirit, the rational m
Itself and for itself, an absolute fixed end in itself ” In this way, Hegel completely
identifies the State with society and asserts that only in and through the State
does the individual receive what makes life worth living, without it he is nothing.
Consequently, the rights of the State are unlimited, legally as a matter of fact and
morally as a matter of right, and the individual lives in order to make his
contribution to the common life of the State He must be prepared to enjoy and
sacrifice what the good of the commtm life of the State either grants him or
demands from him. The State being not the agent of society, it does not exist for
the performance of some specific purposes and with clearly defined functiions.
The State, for Hegel, is the supreme community and oiganised moral life is only
possible within the State. It is die source of morality and of all civilised existence.
Austin and die Pluralisti. The legal theory of sovereignty received its logical
KINDS OF SOVEREIGNTY
Present-da> confusion. It will be evident that the whole sublet t of sove-
reignty IS a hopeless confusion of a number of different issues and view-
points This IS due to the confusion, in the past as well as in our own
essentially
times, between what and what some people would like the State to be Extreme
is
one thing to say,” writes Sohau, “that all authority comes from the' people afld
another to say that the people actually govern ” This they otiviolisly cannot do;
SOVEREIGNTY 149
government is the action of the few And when Rousseau said that the people
actually govern, he introduced in their governance that mystic element of
General Will which made it possible for his disciples to justify the omnicompe-
lent and omnipotent State where sovereignty rested in the hands of a small
number of men who make up the government Because of these confusions and
the unreality of the elaborate justification of the omnicompetent and omnipotent
State, Laski and others have suggested that the theory of sovereignty should be
kept out of political discussions But dropping of sovereignty itself does not
simplify matters It is impossible to drop it, because it exists and since it exists we
cannot avoid controversy Indeed, one of the most effective means of getting to
know the character of any system of government is to find out where sovereignty
can actually be located and how it is really exercised To know it is to know the
different forms in which sovereignty is expressed
sovereign powers of the kmg or monarch who has ceased to exercise any real
authority In theory, he may still possess all the sovereign powers which were once
enjoyed by him, but in actual practice there is some other man or body of men
who act on behalf of the sovereign and exercise supreme authority The best
example of titular sovereignty is the British King who is even today “our
sovereign lord the king ” Legally, the powers of the kmg are supreme He is the
source of all authority, the acts of the government are his acts, and the officers of
— —
the State civil and military are his servants appointed and dismissed at his
pleasure He is also the fountain of justice and law But in real practice all this is
not true The sovereignty of the king is now a legacy of the past. There is no
action of government which is the result of his initiative. The actual power and
direction of government rests with the king’s duly constituted ministers Lowell
has beautifully summed up the whole position. He says, “According to the early
theory of the constitution the ministers were the counsellors of the king. It was for
150 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
them to advise and for him to decide. Now the parts arc almost reversed. The
king is consulted, but the ministers decide.’* The king has now ceased to exercise
any real authority, it is titular
The authonty of the legal sovereign is absolute and its will is illimitable,
indivisibleand inalienable Law is simply the will of the sovereign. There is no
one to question its validity Within the sphere of law, there is, as Hobbes bluntly
said, no such thing as an unjust command. The authonty of the sovereign being
unlimited, he has the legal right to will whatever he may happen to desire All
nghts enjoyed by citizens are granted and enforced by the legal sovereign and
there can be no nghts against him This implies that if the legal sovereign can
grant rights, he can take them back or even annual them. In Britain,
King-in-Parliament is the legal sovereign In the United States the legal sovereign
consists of the combination of authorities that have the power to amend the
Constitution —conventions or two-thirds majonty in each House of Congress
which may propose amendments, and State Legislatures or State Conventions
which may ratify them It is, thus, the interaction of specified individuals and
institutions according to specified rules of procedure
6. Except in the Islamic countries where Islamic Law is supreme and unquestionable
SOVEREIGNTY 151
not disregard the will of the electorate It may even command the legislature to do
Its bidding If It docs not, the members of the legislature may be punished at the
next election for failure to obey the will of the electorate Every few years, the
electorate creates a new representative chamber, and in doing so it largely
determines the nature of parliamentary commands But on closer examination, it
will be found that the electors have no independent opinion of their own. They
are influenced by party politics and while casting their votes, they vote for the
party rather than for the candidates The decision of the electorate is also
influenced by religious and caste considerations, particularly in India, and the
role of press, publicity and propaganda in a democratic State is significant Thus,
so many influences, visible and hidden, affect the decisions of the electorate that
It becomes difficult to say where sovereignty precisely lies
In certain States and at certain times, the electoral sovereign may not exist.
It does not exist in a monarchy when the King succeeds to the throne by
hereditary right and exercises absolute power It did not exist in Mussolini’s Italy
and Hitler’s Germany and it does not exist in the Sovicty Union and other
communist countries. In Italy and Germany and the de facto sovereign controlled
both the legal sovereign and the electoral sovereign. In Russia, it is the
Communist Party and its Politburo The electoral sovereign did not exist in
7 Dicey, A V ,
The Law of the ComMutim (1915), Introduction, pp xviii-xix
8. Gilchrist, R N ,
Princtples of Pohtual Semee, p. 93.
—
under the influence of either the priestly class or landed aristocracy, or the
militarists Even if it is where the people believe
not, in the best of democracies,
that they govern themselves, itreal power gravitates
can still be suggested that
(or ascends) to a small elite It is, therefore, not the mass of the people which
constitute the political sovereign It really rests in that class of people under
whose influence they actually are
Similarly, political sovereignty cannot be equated to public opinion Public
opinion IS of a highly fluctuating nature and it is susceptible to varied influences.
Then, public opinion must have two charactenstics It should be, in the first
place, an opinion of a public nature, and secondly, it should be as widely held by
the public as possible But one cannot always be sure that the opinion actually
held IS of a public nature Perhaps the demagogue might have made the decision
for them, or the religious or caste appeal had influenced it Finally, in a
representative government, legislature is said to be the barometer of public
opinion Here public opinion is identified with the political sovereign and it may
coincide with the legal sovereign, as the British Parliament is
climate as that of their constituents, there were things that it would not, in
practice, dream of trying to do, howsoever extensive its legal competence might
9 Sidgwick takes certain hypothetical cases and tnes to illustrate the nature of
political sovereignty “Suppose that a monarch habitually obeys a priest, not for fear of
extra-mundance penalties threatened by the latter, but from fear of finding it difficult to
obtain olx'dience from his subjects if they believe him to be a special object of God’s
anger--we shall agree that he no longer completely possesses supreme political power And
if the influence of the priesthood over the monarch’s subjects were so strong that the bulk of
them unquestionably obey a direction of the chief priest to cease obeying the monarch, and
if, therefore, the chief priest’s directions were habitually obeyed by the monarch,—-it would
hardly be denied that the pnest had become really, if not nominally, the political suj^cnor
’’
of the monarch The Elements of Poltlta, pp 627-28 Leacock sums up “Following upon
this line of argument we might well expect to find that the legal and political sovereign
would but rarely coincide In one State the priesthood, in another the military or landed
classes, m another the personal entourage of the king or the predominant influence of the
”
metropolis, might supply the real motive power that controls the public administration
— Elemmts of Political Science, p 60
10 Leacock, S ,
Elements of Political Science, p 60
SOVEREIGNTY 153
Political sovereignty may, then, mean the electoral plus all other vehicles
and influences that mould and shape public opinion Gamer gives it a much
wider scope when he says, “In a narrow sense the electorate constitutes the
political sovereign, yet in a wide sense it may be said to be the whole mass of the
population, including every person who contributes to the moulding of public
opinion whether he is a voter or not ” But this definition roles political
sovereignty of its connotation as it is widely understood
which legislates in a manner contrary to the will of the people, will be replaced
by one more faithful to the popular will “In other words, the political sovereign
lies behind and conditions and, thus, limits the legal sovereign, though, legally
speaking, the legal sovereign is omnipotent ”*^Thc distinction between the legal
and political aspects is necessary and useful in that it reminds us that we are
dealing with the power, not of an inanimate machine, but of human beings over
their fellow-men We know from History that, however absolute the legal right to
13 Laski, J H ,
Grammar of Politics, pp 62-63
14 Gilc hrist, RN ,
Principles of Political Science, p 94
156 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
says that “the person orbody of persons who can make his or their will prevail
whether according to the law or against the law he, or they, are the de facto
ruler, the person to whom obedience is actually paid ” The dc facto sovereign
may be a usurping king, or a dictator, or a priest or a prophet, “in either case the
sovereignty rests upon physical power or spiritual influence rather than legal
right ” Let us take a familiar example. On October 28, 1922, when Mussolini’s
Black Shirts marched on Rome, the legal sovereign was Parliament Mussolini
became Prime Minister in the prescribed manner Immediately after his
appointment, he ruled Parliament and the country through Parliament Parlia-
ment still remained the legal sovereign, but the actual or dc facto sovereign was
Mussolini The commands which Parliament issued came from Mussolini and
they were enforced by him as the leader of the Fascist Party The legal sovereign
did what It was told to do Hitler, too, occupied a similar position in Germany
He controlled the legal sovereign— Reichstag— and he was the actual or de facto
sovereign, or, to use Bryce’s term, the practical sovereign The Reichstag was a
subservient organ to record formal approval of Nazi policy Stalin, who in his
lifetime was transformed into a superman possessing supernatural characteristics,
was really the actual sovereign in the USSR for about three decades He
controlled the Government and the Party both Collective leadership at any of
these levels was just a myth
History abounds in examples of dc facto sovereignty Many instances can be
cited when legally constituted sovereign power was displaced in consequence of
revolution or explusion by a usurper The Bolshevik regime in Russia, following
the Revolution of 1917, is the most familiar example in recent times, of de facto
sovereignty Likewise, Bachha Saka usurped the throne of Afghanistan after the
flight of King Amanullah and became the de facto sovereign in that country
Italy’s conquest of Abyssinia and General Franco’s usurption of power in Spain
are other illustrations of de facto sovereignty General Naguib’s coup d’etat in
Egypt and the abdication of King Farouk is also illustrative of dc facto
sovereignty Nasser succeeded Naguib The events in Iiaq, Pakistan, Sudan,
Burma, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, and in many other countries, particular!) in
Africa, tell the same stor\'
The de facto sovereign is, thus, the strongest active force in the Slate and
capable of making its will prevail But the dc jure and dc facto sovereignty
should ultimately coincide, otherwise there is a danger of conflict between them
Gamer says, “The sovereign who succeeds in maintaining his power usually
becomes in the course of time the legal sovereign, through the acquiescence of the
people or the reorganisation of the State, somewhat as actual possession in
private law ripens into legal ownership through prescription ’’
New laws are
made dc facto sovereign m order to expedite the
to give a definite status to the
extinction of the previously existing de jure sovereign The de facto sovereign
himself, too, will not like to continue his authority based exclusively upon
physical force for an indefinite period of time There is, as Bryce has said, “a
natural and instinctive opposition to submission to power which rests only on
force” The new sovereign will, therefore, endeavour to make his de facto claim
converted into a legal right, because sovereignty established and exercised on a
legal basis makes obedience spontaneous and enduring
21 Garner, J W ,
p 168
Introduction to Political Science,
the source of law in the will of the prince In modem times the development of
the theory of sovereignty coincided roughly with the growth of the state in power,
functions and prestige From Bodin, through Hobbes and Bentham, this juristic
idea reached its climax in John Austin as contained in his lectures on Jurisp-
rudence, published in 1832 Austin endeavoured to build up an exact juristic
superior, receives habitual obedience, from the bulk of a given society, that
determinate human supenor is sovereign in that society, and that society
”
(including the superior) is a society political and independent
25 Austin then proceeds “To that determinate superior the other members of the
society arc dependent 1 he position of its other members towards that determinate superior
IS a state of subjection or a state of dependence The mutual relation which mbsists between
that supt'nor and them may be siyicd the relation of sovereign and subject, .or fjie relation
of ,
^
—
(i) That there is, in every independent political community, some person or
body of persons who exercise sovereign power. Sovereign power is as essential m
”
every political society “as the centre of gravity in a mass of matter
(ii) That the sovereign is a determinate person or body of persons. “He is not
necessarily a single person* in the modem western world he is very rarely so, but
he must have so much of the attributes of a single person as to be determinate
The State for is a legal order in which there is a determinate
Austin
authority acting as the ultimate source of power Sovereignty, therefore, neither
Rousseau conceived, nor in the mass of the people,
resides in the general will as
That such a determinate human superior must not himself obey any
(iii)
other higher authority His willis supreme over all individuals and associations
enough for purposes of the sovereign comes from the bulk of the
power if it
society —
its large majonty. Where habitual obedience from the bulk of the society
28 Refer to Sidgwiclc, H ,
Elements of Politics, Appendix (A), p 651
29 Maine, H ,
The Early History of Institutions, p 359
30 Ibid
majority of not less than two-thirds of the members present and voting in each
House of Parliament But the Constitution may itself limit the Constitution
amending authority Carl J Friedrich maintains that where the constitution
amending power is vested in the Legislature, “limitations are usually imposed
upon it In France, an amendment of 1884 provided that the republican form
of government should never be made the subject of proposed revision Article V
of the United States constitution prescnbes that no State, without its consent, can
be deprived of its equal representation in the Senate
Next, Austin’s definition of law that it is a “command given by a supenor to
an inferior,” which forms the basis of his theory of sovereignty cannot be
accepted as a simple truth Laski says that to think of law as simplv a command
”
IS even for the jurist “to strain definition to the verge of decency ^^No sovereign
can Ignore the existence of customary law which has grown through usage in
every country Customary law is not the fiat of a determinate superior, and in
earlier stages of society laws were seldom, if ever, positivecommands of a
sovereign Ranjit Singh, to quote Maine, “never issued a command which Austin
would call a law He never made a law and never did or could have dreamed of
changing the civil rules under which his subjects lived Even a sovereign
legislative assembly, like the British Parliament, dare not pass a law which aims
to violate the established customs and traditions of the country Maciver has
aptl> said that “State has little power to make custom, and perhaps less to
destroy it, although indirectly it influences customs by changing the conditions
out of which they spring Custom is not a deliberate statute, it is the outcome
of ages and even an autocrat must be the guardian and servant of customs, if he
desires to obviate the possiblities of a revolution For, custom, “when attacked,
attacks law in turn, attacks not only the particular law which opposes it, but
what IS more vital, the spirit of law-abidingness ” Austin himself was fully
conscious ol the force behind customs and maintained, “whatever the sovereign
permits, he commands ” Austin argued that customs, unless enforced
by courts ol
justice, are merely ‘ by opinions But as soon as
positive morality”, rules enforced
courts of justice enforce them, they become commands of the sovereign, conveyed
through the judges who are his delegates or deputies
The concept of law, prior to the Analytical School, conveyed the notion
of order first and then the notion of force The Analytical Jurists, on the other
hand, lay down unhesitatingly that the notion of force has priority over the
notion of order Austin lays too much emphasis on force and prescnbes that
disobedience of law is visited by a penalty It means, in the words of the
Analytical School, that people obey laws for fear of punishment The modem
view is that we obey laws not because their disobedience is accompanied by
35 Maine H ,
The Early Hutory of Imtuutiom, p 382
36 Mativer, R M The Modern Slate, p 160
,
37 Gikhri-st, R N ,
The Principles of Political Science, p 114
38 Maciver, R M , The Modem State, p 161
SOVEREIGNTY 161
sovereignty as valid for political philosophy, as it postulates for the sovereign such
powers as cannot in fact be exercised Moreover, it narrows down “the meaning of
vital terms to a content which, if maintained, would be fatal to the existence of
society We cannot accept law, which is an important factor in the life of the
State, from the purely view It must be built upon general social
legal point of
PLURALISM
supreme over all individuals and associations within its territorial limits, and is
associations which do not derive their existence or rights from the state From this
The and
pluralists regard the monistic theory of sovereignty as a pernicious
futile doctrine The pluralistic State which there exists no
is simply a State m
single source of authonty that is all-competent and comprehensive There is no
unified system of law, no centralised organ of administration and no generalisa-
tion of political will “On it is a multiplicity in its essence and
the contrary,
manifestation, it is and should be divided ” Pluralism, in
divisible into parts
brief, undertakes to transform the State It criticises and “discredits” the State as
among equals Being only one among many associations,Tlic State has no ngfitlul
(Taim to eminence and it cannot be the sole repository of power or focus of
The pluralistic theory, thus, finds its practical explanation in the bewilder-
ing vanety of associations and groups which exist to promote the industrial,
political and other varied interests of man All these groups, as Laski says,
determine, “quite largely, his choice of friends, of opportunities, of a career
They plan his activities and provide him with opportunities lor the expression of
his desires “They seek to give him mastery of the event, to enable him in concert
”
with like-minded men, to control the environment to a destiny he wants
Society, in fine, far from consisting of a mass of isolated individuals, is actually a
web of associations and groups that link men and women with one another The
old concept that society is an association of individuals in a common life does not
hold good any longer It is a “nation of joiners ” Pluralism is, thus, a natural
accompaniment of the “atomistic” view of society and human freedom To put it
in the words of Ernest Barker, the State is more an association of individuals,
already united in various groups “for a further and more embracing common
purpose It means that the State is only one among many other forms of
The fact that society contains many associations has a number of conse-
C:oker, R W ,
Recent Political Thought, p 504, also refer to A History of Political
1 hemes, Recent Time^ Edited by C E Mernam and H E Barnes, pp 89-98
44 Laski, Grammar oj Politics, p 256
45 P>ifl^
p 257
46 Ernest Barker, Political Thought in England from Herbert Spencer to the Present Day, pp
175-83
164 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
qucnccs. First, it takes individuals out of a state ci isolation and gives them a
change to participate in the common endeavour, that is, the good of man and
society Secondly, it permits citizens to have a variety of loyalties and allegiances,
thereby preventing the possibility that they might live under a single source of
authority Finally, “a network of voluntary associations stands as a ‘buffer’
between the relativelv powerless individual and the potentially powerful
”
state ‘*^The pluralists, thus, consider the State as essential in the life of the
individual as other associations composing society are. They are not against the
State, but would discard the sovereign State with its absolute and indivisible
power They denounce coercive government and dispute its right, and even its
power to compel obedience. They believe that the various associations and groups
fulfil the many and diverse wants of the individual and help to make his life
whole and rich, and, accordingly, assert that any interference on the part of the
State, and for that matter of the government, m the independent existence and
functioning of these associations is not only undesirable but defeats the purpose
for which the State came into existence and continues to exist Greaves says that
the State is a system of order and, as such, it requires a body of rules “to provide
in their certainty and predictability a foundation for order ” It needs organs to
make these rules and to interpret them Clearly it is also necessary that the State
should have at its command the use of physical force to ensure obedience to its
rules But “Order is merely a prerequisite for the achievement of ends which the
members of the association have in common and
in realization of which the state
”
may be an instrument for realizing ^^The State is not merely a system of order
It is a co-operative organization for the promotion of the well-being and
development of the personalities of its members
The central idea of Pluralism has been summed up by Gettell He says, “The
Pluralists deny that the State is a unique organisation, they hold that other
associations are equally important and natural, they argue that such associations
for their purpose are as sovereign as the State is for its purpose They emphasize
the inability of the State to enforce us will in practice against the opposition of
certain groups within it They deny that the possession of force by the State gives
It any superior right They insist on the equal rights of all groups that command
the allegiance of their members and that perform valuable functions in society
Hence sovereignty is possessed by many associations It is not an indivisible unit,
the Stateis not supreme or unlimited All this may be reduced ’’
to the following
bare analysis —
1 The parts of the State are as real as the whole The State is, therefore,
distributive, not collective
2 The distinction between the State and government is not real Both are
the same The State docs not command, it serves and is a public or social service
organization
3 The State is one among other groups which man needs to fulfil the
purposes of his life His allegiance is, accordingly, not unified It is divided and
diffused. His allegiance to the State mav conflict with his allegiance to other
associations, and may even take pnority over his lovalty to the State
47 Andrew Hacker, Thf Study of Politics, The Western Tradition and American Origins
p 25
48 Greaves, H R G ,
The Foundations of Political Theory, 14
SOVEREIGNTY 165
5 The State can serve its purpose by and through good will alone It
cannot destroy associations and groups, as it cannot create them Nor can it
enforce its will against the opposition ot associations and groups within it Since
the State expresses the will or purpose of the human beings within it, it “does not
enjoy any necessary pre-eminence for its demands,” as Laski puts it As the State
IS only one of the many associations to which the individual happens to belong,
“politically there is no such thing as sovereignty at all”, he concludes
Development of the Theory. The theory of pluralism originated in the
writings of Otto V Gierke and F W
Maitland m the last quarter of the
nineteenth century, although earlier political thinkers, too, had recognised the
part associations played in the life of man The doctnne of Gierke and Maitland
IS that various associations which exist within any society, are instinctive to man
They are not hypothetical, fictitious or created from without Each association
has a real piersonality and a collective consciousness and will Each is indepen-
dent of the State and may be even prior to it According to Gierke, all such
associations have their own rights, duties and functions He argues that “the
State should accept the common point of view that permanent associations have
rights and duties as groups, whether or not the State has accepted them as
”
corporations
There are other writers who have emphasized the autonomous rights of
particular groups orwho support some special type of social organisation They
protest against the omnicompetence of the State Figgis criticised the efforts
of the modern political leaders, “to invade the proper spheres of such essential
social groups as churches, trade unions, local communities, and the family ” The
State, he said, did not create the family nor did it create the churches, nor even in
any real sense be said to have created the clubs or trade unions, nor in the
can it
middle ages, the guild or the religious order, hardly even the universities or the
colleges within the universities, they have all arisen out of the natural associative
instincts of mankind, and should all be treated by the supreme authority as
having a life original and guaranteed, to be controlled and directed like persons,
but not regarded in their corporate capacity as mere names ” Figgis gives to the
Slate a superior right over all other associations, but this supenor right is only for
co-ordination and adjustment
Laski recognised complete aulomony tor all associations He emphasised
that the parts of the State are as real as the whole “We do not proceed,” he
said, “from the State to the parts of the State on the ground that the State is more
fundamentally unified than its parts, but we, on the contrary, admit that parts
are as real and as self-sufficient as the whole ” The essence of his arguments may
be stated in his own words He said, “But because society is federal, authority
must be federal, also “ Laski assailed the moral validity of the doctrine that
attributes sovereignty to the State The State, in his opinion, has no right to the
allegiance of an individual except in so far as his conscience assents to “The
claim of authority upon myself is legitimate proportionately to the moral
urgency of its appeal”^'* He further said, “The only State to which I owe
allegiance is the State in which I discover moral adequacy, and if a given State
fails to satisfy that condition, I must, to be consistent with my own moral nature,
attempt expenmenl Our first duty is to be true to our conscience ”^^He tersely
summed up, “We give to this particular group (the State) no particular merit
Laski would, thus, deny to the State any supenor claim over other
associations He would even condition obedience to its authority His general
view was that the “sovereignty of the State will pass, as the divine right of the
kings had its day ” The State would continue only to cordinate the functions of
various other associations without any right to assume omnipotence Powers, in
this way, would become coordinate instead of being hierarchical, and authority
federal
There are many other contemporary political writers who have advocated
Pluralism — Maciver, Lindsay, Barker, G D H Cole, Miss Follet and others
Maciver, for example, accepts the Slate as an association like various others
such organisations No one can deny that voluntary groups and associations play
an mportanl role in the local and national life of the people Man is not merely a
'll Figgs,J N ,
Churches in the Modern State, p 47
52 Laski, H ,
The Problem of Sovereignly, p 9
53 l^ski, H ,
A Grammar of Politics, p 27
54 p 349
Ibid ,
55 Ibid p 289,
citizen He has his duty to the family, to the community and to himself. He owes
allegiance to such associations as make his life full and contribute to his
all
well-being A healthy society is one which the individual has an abundance ofm
opportunities for pursuing his own particular interests in collaboration with
others Accordingly, in general, the greater the number and variety of associa-
tions, the better will be his opportunities
The Pluralist theory is a protest against the elevation of the State to mystical
heights Hegel viewed it as “God on earth” and invested it with not only supreme
legal, but also supreme moral authority Pluralism demarcates and limits the
functions of the State and defines its authority It accepts the State at par with
other associations and demolishes the edifice of its glorification which Hegal
built Miss Follett in her admirable book. The New State, sums up the merits of
pluralism as folows
1 The Pluralists “pick the bubble of p/esent State’s right to supremacy They
see that the State which has been slowly forming since the Middle Ages with
”
Its pretences and unfulfilled claims has not won either our regard or respect
2 “They recognise the value of the group and they see that the vanety of our
group life today has a significance which must be immediately reckoned
within political life ” 7'hey also repudiate the notion that the groups are
bodies by its position above them, for the State alone there is no limit through a
higher collective existence, its will is the sovereign general will, the State is the
57 Gilchrist, R N ,
Principles of Political Science, p 104
58 As quoted in Coker, R W ,
Recent Political Thought, p 513
168 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
highest Machtverband.^*^ Paul Bancour regards the State as the sole representa-
and national solidarity He would assign to the State the
tive of general interests
duty of preventing any group from acting aggressively towards other groups and
Its own members Lindsay recognises the State as the “organisation of organi-
sations.” Miss Follett criticises the pluralists’ conception of the State a»
“competing” for the citizen’s loyalty Even Laski did not propose to get rid of
the State altogether He recognised the distinction between the State and an
association and defined the State as “the association to protect the interests of
men as citizens ” He agreed that “to satisfy the common needs, it must control
other associations to the degree that secures for them the service such needs
”
require ” He also accepted th#* need of the ultimate reserve power of the State
Laski finally conceded “And however much we may reduce the direct
administrative capacity of the political State, the fact remains that once it is
charged with the provision of services which men stand in common need, it has
their interests in trust to a degree with which no other body can, at least in a
temporal sense, compete Even if we abstract from the modem State the final
control of international affairs, the civic area of internal matters that is left seems,
at any casual glance, overwhelming
We
may, then, conclude that in spite of their convincing arguments the
“expunge” the notion of sovereignty from political theory as they
pluralists fail to
claim There is yet another interesting and perhaps somewhat surprising fact to
note “While most Pluralists have sourght to drive sovereignty out of the front
door of their new society, they quietly smuggle it again through back door, more
or less disguised, but nevertheless a sovereignty ” Such, indeed, is the case with
Krabbe’s “legal community” ruled by the sense of right, Duguit’s monistic
principle of “social solidarity”, and Cole’s “democratic supreme court of
functional equity ” The pluralists attempt to abolish sovereignty, but are
finally compelled to restore it There is always some ultimate authority in society,
heard” The pluralists may refuse to call this channel the sovereign person But
the fact is that with whatever name we may designate it, sovereignty is still
sovereignty It does not lose the quality of supremacy, no matter by whom and in
which manner it is exercised In fact, the pluralists are not out to destroy
sovereignty, but to recognise it so that the political power shall become the true
expression of the community “To destroy sovereignty”, as Hsiao says, “is as
dangerous as it is futile
The possession of power does not mean its perpetual exercise whenever the
sovereign’s command is opposed If the opposition is resolute and determined,
common sense and good judgment may suggest it to the sovereign to give way If
he does not, perhaps the cost would be too great, disproportionate to the
satisfaction of vindicating the law Would it have been wiser to meet the Indian
demand for Swaraj and Egyptian nationalism with wholesale military repression
instead of granting independence to both the countries^ The sovereign will
59 /W.p512
6() H The Problems of Sovereignty,
l^ki, ,
p 75
61 Political Pluralism,
p 140
SOVEREIGNTY 169
which the sovereign has given way before group pressure The behaviour of the
legal sovereign can best be explained by his dependence on the political
sovereign If the political sovereign has not been reduced to impotence as the
mere tool of a dictator, he hangs over the head of the legal sovereign like a sword
of Damocles Even a dictator is afraid of his future and will hesitate to take an
action which is likely to jeopardise his existence Maciver appropnately says
that “all governments depend simply upon a margin of strength, represented
by the balance of opinion in their favour” and “an act which reduces the margin
weakens its authority entirely out of proportion to the turn over of opinion ^2 If
the legal sovereign flouts public opinion, when the voters finally act, they will
entrust legal sovereignty to a diflPerent set of men and so reverse the unpopular
policy of repressive actions
CHARACTERISTICS OF SOVEREIGNTY
The traditional distinctive attributes or characteristics of sovereignty arc
permanence, exclusiveness, all-comprehensiveness, inalienability, indivisibility,
and absoluteness
Permanence. Sovereignty is permanent and it continues uninterrupted as
long as the State exists Changes in government do not mean cessation of
sovereignty Bearers of the authority of government may change, but the State
endures and so does sovereignty It does not cease with the “death or temporary
dispossession of a particular bearer or the reorganisation of the State, but shifts
immediately to a new bearer as the centre of gravity shifts from one part of a
physical body to another when it undergoes external change
Exclusiveness. The power is exclusive and there is none to
sovereign
compete with it There can be only one sovereign power in a State which can
legally command the obedience of its inhabitants To hold otherwise would be to
deny the principle of the unity of the State and “to admit the possibility of an
imperium in imperio.*'
operation with the jurisdiction of the State and comprehends within its scope all
persons and things in the territory of the State The modem State does not
recognise the existence of any nval within its jurisdiction. There can be neither
62 Maciver R M ,
Thr Modem State,
p 292
63 Garner, J W ,
Political Science and Government, p 170
170 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
any person, nor any organisation, however universal, which can affect the
sovereignty of the State
The State and sovereignty are essential to each other But when the St Jte cedes a
part of Its territory, it does not mean that the State has lost its sovereignty It is,
on the other hand, “an excellent example of the working of the sovereignty of the
State All that happens is that, whereas formerly there was one State, now, with
”
such cession, there are two States
Closely connected with inalienability is the attribute of the imprescnptibili-
This means that sovereign power cannot be lost with the lapse
ty of sovereignty
of time by the non-exercise of such power “Sovereignty cannot be lost,” says
Gamer, “by mere lapse of time, as property in land may be lost by prescnption at
”
private law
divided sovereignty was brought into prominence when the United States of
America emerged as a Federation. A federation is normally the result of a union
between hitherto sovereign States It is one of the essential features of a federation
that while agreeing to a union, the federating units must preserve their
individuality. The subjects of administration are, accordingly, divided between
the newly created central government and the federating units At the time of
adopting the Consitution, it was generally held by the publicists in the United
States that both the central government and the units of a federation remain
sovereign within their own respective jurisdiction and sovereignty, as such, was
divisible. This theory was strongly supported by Hamilton and Madison. It was
64 Gilchrist, R N ,
Principles of Political Scunce, p 1 10
65 As quoted in J W Gamer s, Politual Science and Government, p 1 73
SOVEREIGNTY 171
such eminent constitutional lawyers as Judges Cooley and Story and political
writers asDe Tocqueville, Hurd and many others “There is no question,” says
Hurd, “that the statesmen of ail sections who made the constitution of the
United States understood that political sovereignty was capable of division
”
according to its subjects and powers
This IS not a correct estimate of sovereignty in a federation A federal union
does not envisage two States It makes only one State and, therefore, one
sovereignty The units of a federation are not really States It is a misnomer if
they are named so They are subordinate lawmaking bodies with guaranteed
powers They are not sovereign, but autonomous within their sphere of powers as
the national government is within its own sphere of jurisdiction What is divided
in a federation, between the centre and units, are the powers of government, and
not sovereignty Those who believe in the division of sovereignty confuse the
State and government Calhoun says, “There is no difficulty in understanding
how powers appertaining to sovereignty may be divided and the exercise of one
portion be delegated to one set of agents and another portion to another, or how
sovereignty may be vested in one man, in a few or in many But how sovereignty
supreme power, can be divided ”
Itself, the it is impossible to conceive
State Like the honesty of a man or the beauty of a flower it does not need to be
located
All this IS true in terms of law But there is no such thing on earth as absolute
sovereignty It is through human agency that the sovereign power is expressed
and exercised Man can never be perfect and independent Dependence is his very
nature How can he be absolutely sovereign then^ Even the most despotic ruler is
b6 Gilchrist, R N ,
PnnapUs of Political Science, p 107
172 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
limited by his natural limitations. Sovereign power is, also, limited by what
Gilchrist calls “human endurance'’. He says that the religion, education,
character and environments of the sovereign must colour his actions.^’ There are,
accordingly, limits of individuality, expediency and commonsense Moreover,
some writers hold the view that man and inherent
possesses certain natural
rights. These rights exist independently of the State and no sovereign can
supersede them Bluntschli says that even the State as a whole is not almighty, for
It IS limited externally by the rights of other States and internally by its own
nature and by the rights of its individual members
The doctrine what the State is absolutely supreme is fallacious and even
dangerous We have already discussed the nature of political sovereignty and the
vast mass of influences which ^rpetually shape, limit or forbid the actual
direction of the forces of society by the sovereign There are some who even
maintain that sovereignty is limited by the prescnptions of divine law Sir Henry
Maine tried to establish that the sovereign can, under no circumstances, act
contrary to the immemorial customs and long-established traditions No
autocrat, to repeatwhat we have already said, be he Ranjit Singh, or Galeazzo
Visconi, can compel an unwilling people to change their deep-rooted habits and
customs He is always confronted with the risk of revolution Nor has any State so
far devised a machinery for controlling thoughts In fact, none has gone as far as
this, though the device of brain-washing is there Finally, there are limitations
within legal orders which determine their bounds and may limit their activities
In the United States no government may pass an ex post facto law. Even the
State, as it operates through the amending power, is subject to limitations It may
strive to enact law that runs so counter to the convictions of large number of its
people that it fails to be obeyed and to receive the requisite “acceptance ” Such
was the case with prohibition in the United States
What Sovereignty means now. We have dealt with so many conflicting
issues involved in the concept of sovereignty These conflicting issues are
essentially the creation of nineteenth century jurists and political theorists who
created such a maze that it becomes difficult to extricate oneself therefrom The
modem State is sovereign and it is now universally admitted that without
sovereignty there can be no State. The sovereignty of the State is recognised, first,
the legal .sovereign must ultimately bow, otherwise it endangers its own existence
In a period of politica’ transition or stress, some person or group in the
community may become the centre of real or effective power, the actual or de
facto sovereign This sovereign may either destroy the other sovereigns, as
General Ayub did in Pakistan or General Daud, and hr two rapid successors in
Afghanistan, or else, preserving them, as Hitler and Mussolini did in their
countries, bind them to his will If the de facto sovereign establishes his stability,
his de facto sovereignty will become de jure sovereignty. Whatever be the nature
of sovereignty, we use the term with reservations
The reservations are obvious and they hinge upon two important facts First,
the State is not society nor is it regarded as sui generis, one of its kind It is one
likemany other associations which compose society no doubt, and it is the result
of human endeavours and aspirations Its purpose is to uplift man and men This
gives to the State an independent status and an eminent position in order to
enable it to perform
efficiently its functions of social regulation and adjustment.
The authority of the State is, therefore, accepted and respected by all individuals
and associations within it for what it does, that is, its services Once this truth is
realized, the second fact flows from it Since the State is not the engine of power
but service, the laws it makes are regulatory in nature rather than imperative in
character If the State continues to exist for the good life of man, naturally, it
follows that “the test of a good law is whether it subserves the social purpose or
not and whether it commands the willing allegiance of those whose interests it is
made to promote ” The Sociological jurists even believe that law is anterior and
superior to the State This belief directly challenges the assertion that the State
makes law or law is what the sovereign wills 1 hey uphold the sovereignty of law
If we accept these two facts about the State and the nature of law, the term
sovereignty assumes the role of authority and influence All recent schools of
thought concede that much to the State And it is more appropriate to recognise
it, if and international peace are to be secured The ultimate
collective security
good of man and men cannot be cramped into the exclusiveness of States It must
transcend their boundaries But will the States as a matter ofreality, whatever be
the extent of and conviction, drop the use of the term sovereignty ^ It is
its logic
highly problematic in the context of the state of affairs in which we live, and
sovereignty still remains sovereigntv, as reminder of its orthodox characteristics
When all is said, it cannot be denied that the recent political thought and a
sharp swing towards internationalism have made a big dent on the traditional
theory of sovereignty No State can remain oblivious of public opinion for long,
no matter whether it is national or international If the welfare of the individuals
and any meaning, they must find full expression in what the
their happiness have
State does within and in relation to other States If the State does
its territories
is, on the international side, fatal to the well-being of humanity The way in
which a State should live in relation to other States is clearly not a matter in
which that State is entitled to be the sole judge The common life of States is a
” The growth of a sense of
matter of common agreement between States
international solidarity has been marked during the course of the present century
by the establishment, not merely of a vast network of inter-govemmental bodies,
but also of a series of international functional organizations and of a large
number International conferences on
of voluntary international associations
International Language, and World Government have become accepted and
normal events In fact, any problem which affects or is likely to affect the peace
and security of the world is a matter of common concern and it is obligatory on
174 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
It may, however, be noted that the United Nations is merely an external and
organizational device designed to solve international problems “Organiza-
tions succeed only,” as Acharya J.B Knplani said, “when the mind behind them
IS reformed
” In international affairs, too, reformation of the mind follows the
most important rule of social conduct do unto others as you would have other do
unto you If the nations adopt this simple rule of behaviour in their international
transactions, sovereignty of the State in its legal manifestations stands modified
But statesmen do not always listen to the voice of reason in their international
international politics and dominance over others The weaker States seek refuge
in sovereignty and preach to their countrymen to maintain it at all costs
The most fundamental attack that can be made on the traditional doctrine
of sovereignty is on the legal omnipotence which the term has acquired But legal
omnipotence has never existed No sovereign authority has ever been omnipotent
Apart from various other limitations, the facts of nature and human behaviour
limit the illimitable exercise of sovereign authority If the term sovereignty is
something really pernicious, we, then, need a term to express the fact that there
must be, as Merriam puts it, “a concentration of recognized authority for the
common good and of power of common action, a final authority capable of
commanding the loyalty of the great mass of citizens The concomitant of
68 Mcmam C E ,
Barnes, H E (Eds ), A History of Political Theories Recent Times, p
p 97
69 Ernest Barker, Political Thought in England from Herbert Spencer to the Present Day, p
p 246
70 As cited by Roger H Soltau in his An Introduction to Politics, p 104
SOVEREIGNTY 175
claim acceptance by and the loyalty of the bulk of the population Authority
which is not legitimate has little chance of surviving
Thus, all individuals and political systems “need some sense of author-
ity ” But authority must not be accepted blindly, uncritically or without limits
A legitimate authority, as Deutsch says, “has also an objective character It
implies that its commands will remain compatible with other values which we
personally hold, and with the needs of the persons and communities which we
hold dear Its test is performance, for authority is both the product of a
political system and a condition for its future Its effectiveness can be measured
by the frequency and dependability with which it is obeyed in the absence of
coercion Absence of coercion implies consent and, therefore, loyalty An
authority which can evoke loyalty must be limited It is limited in practice, says
Solatu, “by many by numerous social sanctions
forces, moral, religious, scientific,
that both check and complete State action ” There are hundreds of forces, he
concludes, determining the sovereign will, how exactly they work is perhaps
largely an academic question
71 Karl W Deutsch, Politics and Government How People Decide Their Fate, p 209
72 Ibid
73 Roger H An Introduction to Politics,
^ 104
SUGGESTED READINGS
Asirvathan ,
A Political Theory, Chap X
Austin, J Lectures on Jurisprudence, Vol 1, Lecture VI
Chap III
rights and Laski has aptly said that every “State is known by the rights thant
”
”
maintains
There are certain bare necessaries without which man cannot live a life of his
own They are known as primary wants of life, and the higher needs of social life,
for example, the need to have a family, the need to work in order to earn his
living, the desire to live with his fellowmen, to express his opinion, and to share
one another’s weal and woe Nature has, no doubt, given to man certain powers
of action to satisfy his wants, but these powers are not devoid of reason Power
without discrimination and reason is another name for force The basis of force is
physical might, and might does not recognise rights Use of might is not the way
of common life, and a common life means a common good The life of
togetherness aiming at a common good demands that each man should exercise
rationally his powers of satisfying his wants He recognises that if he possesses the
power to do a thing, so do others possess a similar power He, accordingly, allows
to others what he wishes for himself Rights arc, therefore, as Hobhouse puts it,
“what we may expect from others, and others from us, and all genuine rights are
conditions of social welfare Thus, the rights anyone may claim are partly those
which are essential to every man in order to be a rational human person, and
partly those which are necessary for the fulfilment of the function that society
expects from him They are conditioned by, and correlative to, his social
”
responsibilities
Life, according to Aristotle, is not merely living but living well If good life is
the aim of man’s life, then, its pursuit and achievement involves the fulfilment of
certain conditions It implies that every individual should be conscious of his own
good and develop his powers of action to realise it Secondly, he must be
conscious of the good of others and help in creating conditions which lead to the
development of their powers of action Consciousness of this fact, namely, that
individual good can be realised in common with the good of others, is the essence
176
RELATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND STATE— RIGHTS 177
social life without which no man can seek, in general, to be himself at his best.”*
A right thus understood is an essential condition of the individual’s self-
development, as It IS also a condition of social welfare In the words of Bosanquet,
“we have a right to the means that are necessary to the development of our lives
in the direction of the highest ”
good of the community of which we are a part
This right is recognised and sanctioned by society
No rights outside Society. Two conclusions emerge from what has been said
above Firstly, rights are meaningless outside the organised society, because apart
from communal life they are hopeless abstractions If there is no society, there can
be no rights Robinson Crusoe had no rights on his lonely island He was the
master of all that he surveyed There could be no limit to his freedom or
activities Limit to freedom arises only when there are others to exercise similar
freedom It is only in society that man recognises the freedom of others while
exercising his own freedom Recognition of this fact is the basis of rights, for our
rights are the duties of others towards us and their rights are our duties towards
them In the words of Hobhouse, “Rights and duties, then, are conditions of
social welfare, or as we define such welfare, of a life of harmony to this welfare,
every member of the community stands in a double relation He has his share in
It That IS the sum of his rights He has to contribute his share That is the sum of
his duty”" It follows that rights must be compatible with the common good
”
expressed in “a complex of rights and duties linking men to each other
Another way of saying this is that every right has a corresponding obligation
or duty If 1 have a right to work and earn my living, it is my duty to recognise
the same right in othen and concede to them their right to work and earn their
living I c:an enjoy my rights only if I respect the rights of others “He that will
not perform functions cannot enjoy rights any more than he who will not work
ought to enjoy work My claim to rights arises from the fact that I share with
others the prusuii of a common end and the common end is the good life of man
and men If I fail to performmy duty, it is for the State to see that I act as a
moral unit of society The State exists to maintain and coordinate the vau-ious
claims of individuals
Rights are, thus, claims that are socially recognised to make life happy,
contented, harmonious, and, therefore, worth-living They are prior to the State
as they fulfil the basic conditions of social hie The State does not create them
It only recognises, maintains and coordinates them so that all may realize the
benefits of such rights and, in case of violation, may protect them It is the
primary function of the State to ensure that all equally enjoy their rights and
create those conditions without which man cannot develop the powers inherent
in him It involves equal opportunities for all Rights are a special kind of
freedom, because they must be accorded to all men equally II some people are
allowed to property and others not, then property ownership is a privilege
own
and not a right Since the chief characteristic of rights is their equalitarian basis,
It IS necessary to define the basic rights and make them definite When rights are
formulated, neither the State nor the individuals dare trespass them. They
command sanctity
1 Rights arise in society They are the result of the social nature of man.
Without society there can be no rights
2 Every right has a corresponding obligation. My right is your duty and your
right IS my duty Rights and duties are the same thing looked at from
different points of view They are two sides of a com, they are correlative and
can never be separated This has been beautifully expressed by one of the
writers He says, “Rights without duties are like men without shadows they
”
only exist m fairy tales
3 Right IS not a claim A claim is selfish m nature, as it affects the interests of a
person or a number of persons A right, on the other hand is socially
recognised aiming at the good of all and it has a social and moral end to
serve When I assert m) rights, I do a public duty, because I guarantee to
others what I claim for myself
4. It must be compatible with the common good Society
follows tnai rights
recognises only those rights which,m the last resort, are relative to some com
mon good or moral good
5 The State does not create rights It simply maintains and coordinates those
rights which are socially recognised By giving such rights a legal sanction,
the States ensures to every one the enjoyment of his rights, as rights have an
equal itarian basis
6 Rights must be definite and hence the necessity to define them Rights do
not remain rights when every individual has his own separate claims
7 Rights have a tendency to grow They must be consistent with the needs oi
man and the needs of man always ( hange, the\ expand and so do rights 'I he
dynamic nature of rights is manifested m their changing content
CLASSIFICATION OF RKiHTS
Moral Rights. Rights are broadly divided into moral and legal rights A
moral right is that which is based on the ethical ccxle of morality of the people,
that IS, what we think ought to be our rights It extends “over the field of conduct
and refers to all those actions and forbearances which it is our moral duty to
perform ” But a moral right is not supported by the laws of the State Its sanction
IS the moral opinion of the community If there is a breach of moral rights there is
nothing legally to punish the recalcitrant A wife has a strong claim to be kmdl>
treated by her husband But she has no right to kind treatment, as laws of the
State cannot compel a man to be kind A claim is called a right not because it is
just, but because it has been recognised by the State and can be enforced by any
legal process or through the courts Whenever we talk of moral rights we mean
claims which can be cpnverted into rights only when they have been recognised
by the State. Moral claims even when designated as moral rights still lack the
force to be enforced It is my moral duty to help the poor, the needy, and the sick
because as a moral agent of society I must try to create conditions which may
contribute to the social good But if I fail in my moral duty, laws of the State do
not take cognisance of it. It must, however, be remembered that a moral right has
a moral reference with it It is recognised and sanctioned by society What is
recognised and sanctioned by society must be sanctioned by laws of the State
No State, if it really docs serve its purpose, can long afford to ignore things which
are sanctioned by society If it does, the citizens have a moral right to revolt
against the authority of the State History tells us that great reformers and
RELATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND STATE— RIGHTS 179
leaders of the community had to battle against unjust laws and traditions in
order to lift men to a higher moral level Gandhi’s mission in life was to moralise
man and society and throughout his political career, first in Africa and then in
India, he stood arrayed against tyranny of any kind, whether that tyranny was
that of the State or of the individual
Legal R^hts. A
on the other hand, is recognised an^ maintained
legal right,
(i) Civil Rights. Civil rights provide for the fulfilment of the elementary
conditions of social life, that is, rights which relate to the protection and
enjoyment of life and property by individuals Without thetn civilised life is not
possible and they arc regarded as essential to the free and progressive life
of man Their enjoyment is universally guaranteed, because “opportunities to
all alike” is the principle determining civil rights Civil rights include the right to
life and freedom from arbitrary arrest, freedom to acquire and hold property, to
speak and write for publication, to meet publicly, to form associations for
peaceful ends, to make contracts, etc A well-organised State must protect the
civil rights of its people against encroachments by both the individuals or
(ii) Political Rights. Political rights are not enjoyed by the individual in
his personal or private capacity, but in his capacity as a citizen and they entitle
him m the legal expression and administration of the sovereign power of the
State Political rights are the means by which an adult citizen is entitled, b> the
const itufion and laws of the State, to participate in the affairs of the government
of his country They consist in the right to vote and elect, the right to be elected,
the right to hold public offices, and so on It is through the exercise of political
rights that democracy operates and functions, and, it is only a democratic
.:onstifution which confers these rights on the people
But the classification between the civil and political rights is not stnctly
adhered to, as there are certain rights which fall in both categories. For example,
ItIS now generally recognised that the right to vote should belong to all adults,
men and women Then, certain rights, such as freedom of speech and assembly,
arc often regarded as being at once civil and political rights Both civil and
political rights aim to provide equal opportunities to all and, hence, the
distinctionbetween the two becomes hazy Yet, this two-fold division has an
important historical significance Civil rights have existed and can exist even in
those countries where political rights have been denied to the people Political
rights are the gifts of democracy and prerogative of the citizens of a democratic
State
proposing laws and deciding on laws, in appointing the officers of the government
and ratifying their policies and actions. But direct democracy is not obtainable
180 PRINCIPLES OP POLITICAL SCIENCE
now except in some of the Cantons of Switzerland It can only exist in small
States with limited areas and populations Large States with huge populations
have a system of indirect or representative democracy where citizens in possession
of political nghts elect their representatives and delegate to them the work of
making laws, and out of them those who can command their confidence and have
the ability to lead others, are entrusted with the work of the government Some
States having the apparatus of representative democracy have introduced some
institutions of direct democracy, such as, the referendum, the initiative and the
recall. The essence of a democratic government is that as many citizens as
possible should share in the exercise of political rights, that there should be an
equal opportunity for all citizens to be appointed to the highest offices in the
government, and that the laws of the State should represent the will of the
majority of the people The majority which controls the government must respect
and defend minority nghts
Each State decides what persons shall possess political rights and the extent
of such rights Aliens are every'where debarred from the exercise of political
rights Similarly, all States exclude minors, criminals, and lunatics from the right
to vote Some States deny it to women The age of the adults enjoying political
rights also vanes from State to State Obviously, equal political nghts for all are
not possible The State must organize its practical operations through the agency
of its government efficiently and successfully and, accordingly, the right to
participate in its affairs is given only to those citizens who possess the requisite
mental and moral qualifications and unequivocally manifest, both in words and
deeds, their loyalty and allegiance to the State of which they are citizens The
problem of the State, therefore, “in creating political rights is to secure an
organization in which legal sovereignty will coincide as nearly as possible with
political sovereignty, in which as many persons as possible may possess political
rights as nearly equal as possible without destroying the efficiency of government,
and, in general public opinion, may be made into law without tyrannizing over
those who hold different opinions”'* It means political rights must be exercised
wisely and m a spirit of devoted service
such rights and they suffered from all kinds of political and economic disabilities
Even the wisest of the Greeks regarded slavery as a natural institution and
Aristotle considered it essential for citizenship and human progress The slaves, m
brief, were not entitled to the privilege of a citizen
Much the same position continued in ancient Rome or in the European
medieval free-citics, except that in the latter serfs took the place ol the slaves. The
rise of dynastic States m Western Europe around 1500 AD again made the
(Jcttell, A (j ,
Introduction to Political Scunct, p VA
RELATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND STATE— RIGHTS !81
State the focus of severe ipi powers, but the individual was still a subject, a
recipient of orders and not a participant in the public affairs. The Glorious
Revolution in Britian and the French Revolution reversed the scales and brought
about a phenomenal change m the concept of citizenship. The theory of limited
and free government recognised the brotherhood of man and claimed equality for
all in the common fraternity This view was powerfully supported by the
sentiment of nationalism, which encouraged men to assume participation in
government as their right The modem concept of citizenship is, therefore, the
product of a limited government and of a sovereign State It concerns the rights
and privileges of the citizens of a State, as distinct from aliens
A citizen may be defined as a full member of the State, enjoying, if properly
qualified by age, residence, and other lesser requirements, the fullest extent of
rights and privileges in that State These rights and privileges are* the civil and
the political rights As every nght has a corresponding obligation, a citizen owes a
duty to the State to provide the general well-being of his fellow-citizens. He may
even be called upon to sacrifice all that he has and all that he can claim to
possess, including hislife, to maintain the integrity and sovereignty of the S^tate
to which he belongs and owes allegiance For the proper exertise of his rights and
discharge of his duties a citizen, to put it in the words of Laski, must make
“contribution of one’s instructed judgment to public good ” To express it in
another way, a citizen enjoys rights and owes duties to the State, which, inter
alia, include defence of the State, maintenance of its unity and integrity, and
provision of the general well-being and progress of the people with whom he
shares his weal and woe
similar, Britain, too, has recently regulated by law the entry of Indians and some
other countries and the rules made there under are unethical and humiliating
When a country is at war, restrictions on aliens become pretty stringent,
particularly on the citizens of the belligerent countries, who are called “enemy
aliens” as distinguished from “friendly aliens”, that is, citizens of States that are
not at war
Kinds of Citizenship. Citizenship is of two kinds, natural and naturalised
Natural citizenship is governed by the principles of Jus Sanguinis and Jus Soli or
Jus Loci. According to the principle of Jus Sanguinis blood or descent determines
citizenship A child follows the nationality of his parents or one of them,
regardless of the place of birth But all States do not follow the principle of Jus
Sanguinis. Some follow the principle of Jus Soli or the law of the soil A child
born in the State, where this principle is followed, becomes the natural citizen of
18^ PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
that State, regardless of the citizenship of the parents. It is the place of birth
alone which determines citizenship The principle of Jus Sanguinis is older than
the principle of Jus Soli It was incorporated into the Roman Law. The principle
of Jus Soli appeared at a later stage in response to the feudal theory of territorial
sovereignty
Majority of the States follow the principle of Jus Sanguinis as the basis of
natural citizenship There are, however, some States, ^or instance, India, Britain
and the United States of America, which follow both the principles of Jus
Sanguinis and Jus Soli. In these countries children born of citizen-parents become
natural citizens whether bom within the State or abroad If born within the
State, they are governed by the principle of Jus Soli, and if born in some other
State the principle of Jus Sanguinis is the basis to determine their natural
citizenship Since there is no uniform principle followed by the States in
determining natural citizenship, very often children acquire double citizenship at
the same time For instance, a child born of Indian parents on a visit to France
acquires the natural citizenship of the country in which he is born in accordance
with the principle of Jus Soli as well as that of India according to the principle
of Jus Sanguinis. But on attaining the age of majority, he is free to retain the
citizenship of the State of his choice and relinquish that of the other One cannot
be a citizen of two States at the same time
Acquisition and Loss of Citizenship. Citizenship can also be acquired by an
alien and it is called naturalised citizenship M(xlem States differ widely in their
attitude toward admitting aliens to citizenship by formal grant of naturalization
Citizenship conferred by this process “is gratuitous concession” on the part of the
State to w'hich naturalization is sought and it may be granted under prescribed
conditions or may be refused for any reason which the Stale considers sufficient
In some States, the process is made easy and resident aliens are encouraged to
acquire citizenship, in others the process is so difficult as to discourage the
admission of new citizens There are, however, some rules which are in usual
practice
The first is the rule of residence All States presenbe a minimum period of an
alien’s residence in the State In Britain and the United States it is five years
whereas in France the period is ten years In Japan the requirement of the
minimum penod of residence is waived if an alien married to a Japanese woman
applies tor naturalization Secondly, an alien de.siring naturalization is required
to make a declaration on the prescribed form, of his intention to that effect
Thirdly, he must renounce his previous citizenship and lake an oath of allegiance
to the State of which he intends to become a naturalized citizen Some States
insiston the testimony of his good moral character, and that he should be solvent
and financially sound to support himself Some States require that the applicant
should possess a working knowledge of the national language of the Stale ^Some
States have imposed definite restrictions on the admission of persons of Asiatic
origin or of certain races Naturalisation may either be complete or partial If a
naturalised citizen stands at par with a natural citizen of the State in the
enjoyment of his rights and privileges and there is no discrimination of any kind,
naturalisation is complete If discrimination is made between a natural citizen
and a naturalised citizen in the enjoyment of rights and privileges, it is partial
Citizenship. For example, the Constitution of the Unitec States of America does
not permit a naturalised citizen to become the President of the State Only
natural citizens can occupy that august office
With the acquisition of naturalization the citizenship of the parent State is
Indian citizen accepts one, he violates the constitution and forfeitshis nght to be
acitizen of India until he relinquishes the title and reaffirmshis allegianceto the
country, and the government accepts such reaffirmation But the common cause
of loss of citizenship is expatriation, that is, relinquishment of citizenship If a
person naturalised m a State decides to again acquire the citizenship of his parent
State and regains it, it is called repatriation Repatriation may be voluntary or
forced If the State compulsorily repatriates a person from the State of his
naturalization, it is forced repatriation If it is of one’s own accord, it is volunatry
THEORIES OF RIGHTS
Vanous explanations of rights have been offered froni time to time, but we
consider only the following important theories
“Nature”, as the original creating force which gave to every man the power of
finding by reason the nght principles on which to organise his me these
principles, it is claimed, are based upon the universal law, the law of nature, and
are common to all people m all countries They are the product of human nature,
that IS, all men are born with certain rights and these nghts are inalienable
The concept of Natural Rights originated in ancient Rome and came from
the discovery thatmen of all races and countries living under Roman rule seemed
to have some common rules of life, some objective standards of right and wrong
given to them by the mere fact of their being men with human nature This bexly
of principles men, the Romans called “Natural Law” and they
common to all
based on it a considerable part of their legislation Their principle oi Naiuial
Law finds its best explanation in the words of Cicero and therefrom flows the
doctrine of Natural Rights He said, ‘The
of a universal and existence
A'orld-wide law, which is and human nature, and
one with reason both in nature
which accordingly knits together in a common social bond every being that
possesses reason, whether God or man, the principle of natural law becomes a
recognition of intrinsic worth in human personality, with the necessary implica*
lion of equality and universal brotherhood” Tne Natural Law, is. as such, the
184 PRINCIPLES OP POLITICAL SCIENCE
In the Middle Ages Natural Law was identified with the Law of God and of
the Church and it no longer remained the assertion of the rights of man till it was
revived in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries Locke was the first to restate
It in purely philosophical terms, and he made it the source of political obligation
He assumed that certain rights were “natural” and, indeed, believed that the
rights which the social contract was designed to protect were both natural to
man and approved by God “The Law of Nature”, he said, “stands as an
eternal rule to all men, legislators as well as others The rules that they make for
other men’s actions must, as well as their own and other men’s actions, be
conformable to the Law of Nature — i e ,
to the will of God, of which that is a
declaration, and the fundamental law of nature being the preservation ol
mankind, no human sanction can be good or valid against it ” He also held that
“the state of nature has a law of nature to govern it, and reason, which is that
law, teaches all mankind who will but consult it, that being all equal and
independent no one harm another in his life, health, liberty or possessions ” The
need for a civil society was felt, according to Locke, because of the presence of
certain inconveniences in the state of nature and men agreed to transfer some of
the rights in order to safeguard the remaining natural nghts, life, and
liberty
propierty
Locke’s teachings had a profound effect on the Americans and the French,
the former seeking to justify their struggle for independence and freedom from
foreign control, and the latter seeking to justify revolt against arbitrary rule The
American Declaration of the Rights of Man stated, “We hold these truths to be
self-evident that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator
with certain inalienable nghts, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit
of happiness That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men,
denying their just powers from the consent of the governed, that whenever any
form of government becomes destructive of those ends, it is the right of the people
to alter or abolish it*” Thirteen years later, these words of Jefferson echoed in the
French National Assembly when it was declared that “the ignorance, the
oblivion, the contempt of the rights of man were the only causes of public
misfortunes and of the corruption of governments ” The Assembly resolved “to
state in a solemn declaration the natural, inalienable and sacred rights of man”,
which were equality in rights, liberty, propierty, security and resistance to
oppression, together with the fact that sovereignty resides in the people
the theory of natural rights. They reject completely the notion that natural rights
are those which belonged to man in primitive society ai d that he brought them
with him when the State was established. Natural rights, they maintain, are those
immunities and freedoms of man which are conducive to the most effective
functioning and rapid development of the social organism What is natural must
be m harmony with the essential conditions of existence and development of
man Natural rights, as Professor Giddings says, “are socially necessary
forms of right, enforced by natural selection in the sphere of social relations, and
in the long run there can be neither legal nor moral rights that are not grounded
”
in natural rights as thus defined
The doctrine of natural rights has been subjected to. severe criticism. The
term ‘natural’ has been given a variety of meanings and the concept of natural
rights has, accordingly, varied with these interpretations Since the term ‘natural’
IS used without any prec’se meaning, there is, no common list of natural rights,
which may be acceptable to all the advocates of the theory, men have disagreed
about rights, as they have disagreed about everything under the sun For
example, there no unanimity of opinion, even in our own times, whether men
is
and women are by nature equal A British writer has claimed that SP' months
scrutiny of a correspondence column revealed “a natural right to a living wage, a
right to work, a right to trial by jury, a right to buy cigarettes after eight p m., a
right to camp in a caravan by the road side, and a right lo walk on the grouse
moors of Scotland during the close season.”^’ Then, rights cannot be independent
of society and unless they are recognised and upheld by the State there is no
substance in them The theory of the Contractualists that rights are pre-social or
pre-political is untenable Complete freedom for everyone is a political impossibi-
lity Nature gives to individuals certain powers These powers are not rights
They become rights when opportunity is given for their proper development and
the State provides all such opportunities Finally, there can be no inherent
natural rights that are absolute under all conditions. Rights change with time
and place and they do so according to the prevailing belief as to what is right and
just Some rights which were considered natural in the past, such as the right of
revenge or the right to own slaves or large estates of land, have turned out not to
be rights at all in other times and places, and societies function fairly well
without these
If by natural rights we mean those rights which are inherently for the good
of man and which tend to create conditions necessary to lead a happy and full life
and ensure th^ realization of his potentialities as a human being, we agree with it
and citizens must be guaranteed such freedoms The State which does not
guarantee these basic freedoms, denies to its citizens the very end for which it
exists Laski has aptly said, “Every State is known by the rights it maintains Our
method of judging its character lies, above all, in the contribution that it makes
to the substance of man ” Karl Deutsch ascribes to the concept of natural rights
“an operational meaning ” He explains that natural behaviour is probable
obstacles, that is, by obstacles which are less probable and which can be
maintained only by special efforts or arrangements ” He defines natural rights as
rights “which people are likely to claim whenever not specifically restrained from
doing so, and likely to claim again as soon as the restraint ceases.” Whether a
at mai}y times and places—is a question of fact and it is the task of Political
Scientists to look at the facts whether and to what extent this is the
“and to see
case” Natural eights accepted as such “cannot be sold or signed away By
dehnition people will automatically claim it again as soon as no one stops them^
and they will claim it anyway if they are strong enough ” They are “imprescripti-
’
ble’ and “inalienable
That are certain basic rights, universal in nature, has been recognised
by the Ch;«rtpr of the United Nations Fhe Charter has so much faith in the
existence and reality d such rights that the clause about the -promotion and
encouragement of human nghts and fundamental freedoms occurs five times
in It The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, passed and proclaimed by the
United Nations Assembly on December 10, 1948, lays down a minimum standard
ofhuman rights based on the “inherent dignity” and the “equal and inalienable
rights of all members of the human family ” It affirms that all human beings
ought to be treated as equals, and as having a fundamental right to individual
liberty
League for the Rights of Man to the Secretary General of the United Nations'^
The Legal Theory of Rights. According to the Legal Theory of Rights there
are no nghts whichlnhere in man, they are created and maintained by the State
Neither they are pnor nor anterior to the State The State formulates or defines
rights, restricts their scope and provides guarantees for their enjoyment Since the
State IS the source of ail rights, there can be no nghts without or against the
State. To
have rights against the State is tantamount to saying that the
individual has no rights at all
Such a theory of rights is not acceptable to pluralists and many others Laski
says that the State does not create nghts, but only recognises them Nor is it true
he says, that an individual has no nghts against the State The State must
observe the rights of man and *'it must give him those conditions without which
he cannot be that best self that he may be It is not merely as a member of the
State that the individual has rights The State is one like various other
7 Karl W DcuP>ch Politics and iknmnment. How people Decide Their Fate, pp 210-11
8 Pickles, Dorothy, M ,
Introductum to Politics,
p 155
9 The Sunday Tribune Ambala Gantt December , 14, 1958, p 1
the common it must take cognisance of the reality of the claims of the
good,
association, and it must not be oblivious of the claims of the community on its
constituent elements
The arguments referred to above are quite convincing The Legal Theory
does not give us a satisfactory explanation of rights But all that the advocates of
the legal theory say cannot be brushed aside Rights which are not supported by
the laws of the Slate remain only claims Barker has correctly said that the State
IS the immediate source of rights No State ran for long overlook the claims which
are deemed essential for the moral development of man Once these claims are
recognized, they become rights Thomas Paine, a devoted champion of natural
rights, maintained that every civil right grows out of a natural right, and natural
rights, he defined, “are those which appertain to man in right of his existence Of
this kind are all the intellectual rights, or rights of the mind, and also all those
rights of acting as an individual for his own comfort and happiness, which are not
injurious to the natural rights of others The essence of Paine’s observation is
that the representatives of the people should endeavour to win legal recognition
for all our rights which have a moral basis It is in this context that Laski made
“
his classic statement that “Every State is known by the rights that it maintains
A both a moral and legal reference “A typical right,' as
right has, thus,
Bosanquet affirmed, “unites the two sides It both is and ought to be, capable of
”
being enforced at law
The Historical Theory of Rights. The Historical Theory of Rights empha-
sizes that rights are theproduct of history They have their origin in customs
which once possessed practical social utility and passed on from one generation to
another, ultimately having been recognised as inherent claims or rights. Ritchie
says that “those rights which people think they ought to have are just those rights
winch they have been accustomed to have, or which they have a tradition
(whether true or false) of having once possessed Custom is primitive law.” In
1 1 Ibid ,
p 92
12 Ibid.
13 Ibid
p 141
14 Thomas Paine, Rights of Man, pp 32-34
188 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
generations have habitually followed them. Habits are ‘natural’ as they grow.
They are neither instituted nor are they invented
Burke maintains that the French Revolution was based on the abstract
rights of man, whereas the English Revolution was based on the customary rights
of the people of that country There is much truth in what Burke says I'he
French Revolution itself was the result of the conditions that prevailed in the
country, but its slogan was liberty, equality and fraternity, the three abstract
principles of universal application The Glorious Revolution, on the other hand,
was simply a reasscrtion of the histone liberties of Englishmen, which had been
their heritage since the days of the Anglo-Saxons, and had found due expression
in the Magna Carta, the Petition of Rights, and vanous other documents of
constitutional importance
There is much truth in the Historical Theory of rights and many of our
rights really find their ongm in primitive customs It docs not, however, mean
that the origin of all rights can be traced to customs and traditions When rights
are rigidly tied to customs alone, we dynamic nature of
altogether ignore the
society and the changing contents of change with the facts of time
rights Rights
and place History, as such, is not the only basis of rights and customs do not
provide an absolute right or standard
life without which no man can seek, in general, to be himself at his best.” The
system of rights is an organic whole which is moral in nature and helps to uplift
the stature of man and society simultaneously
Gandhi dedicated himself man and society simultaneously.
to the uplift of
He was out to moralise man and
True morality, said Gandhi, must
society
manifest itself in every action of the individual and also as a member of society
Both act and react upon each other The Gandhian outlook may be reduced to a
simple formula “If you have to reform yourself you must do so while reforming
society ” This is also the essence of the Idealistic Theory of Rights
The Social Welfare Theory of Rights. The advocates of the Social Welfare
Theory hold that rights are conditions of social welfare They are the creation of
society, and law, customs, traditions and the natural rights “should all yield to
what IS scx'ially useful or socially desirable ” What is socially useful should have
lor Its test the greatest happiness of the greatest number Take, for example, the
right to speech It is not an absolute right It is limited by the social needs of a
coordinate body Similarly, the right to property does not mean the right of the
few to prosper at the cost of the many
The Utilitarians,Bentham and Mill, are the real exponents of the Social
Welfare Theory of Rights They set up the principle of the greatest happiness of
the greatest number and made it the criterion of utility But utility, they
believed, should be determined by considerations of reason and experience Laski,
too, accepts utility as the basis of rights, though he gave to the term a meaning
which IS consistent with the modified conditions of his times He holds that the
test of a right is utility, and the utility of a right is its value to all the members of
the State The claims, he says, which the State must recognise “are those which
in the light of history, involve disaster when they are unfulfilled ” Rights are not
independent of society, but inherent in it “We have them for its protection as
well as our own Rights, therefore, are correlative with functions ” We have
rights so that we may contribute to the common good My rights are built upon
my contribution to the well-being of society “I cannot have nghts against the
public welfare, for that, ultimately, is to give me rights against a welfare which is
intimately and inseparably associated with my own Rights, as such, are built
upon their utility to the individual and the community
The Social Welfare Theory of Rights has much to commend But one cannot
say what social welfare actually means Does it mean the greatest happiness of
15 I.aski, H j ,
Grammar of Politics, p 92
16 p 96
190 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Rights and it finds its inspiration in the teaching of Karl Marx It rejects the
concept of natural and inalienable rights as also vanous other theories enunciated
from time to time as an explanation of the nature of rights Marx’s thesis is simple
and to a certain extent convincing too He regards the state as a coercive agency
to uphold the particular type of social organisation and law is a tool of the State
that perpetuates and safeguards the interests of the dominant group in the
society Marx explained that political, social, religious and other institutions of
any given historical era are determined by economic factors, which is essentially
the mode of production To each state of production in the development of society
corresponds as appropriate political form and an appropriate class structure and
every system of production has given nse to two opposing classes, the exploiters
and the exploited, the owners and the toilers— freeman and slave, patrician and
plebian, baron and serf, guildmaster and journeyman As in the ancient world the
itnerests of the sla\e owners were opposed to that of the slaves, and in the
Mediaeval Europe the interests of the feudal lords were opposed to that of the
yrts, so m our times the two opposing classes confronting one another are the
(mployers and the workers, the exploiters and the exploited, and there is an
iimnteiTupted warfare between the tw^o, “now open, now concealed”
Laski, too, mainU agrees with Marx’s thesis and maintains that the way the
economic power is distnbuted at any given time and place will shape the
character of legal imperatives which are imposed on that time and place The
economically dominant group and regulates the machinery of
in society controls
government and occupy all the key positions of power, authority and influence
The laws are so made and the policies of the governing class are so devised and
formulated that they protect and further the interests of this group alone It is a
society of vested interests and relentless exploitation of the masses is its raison’d
etre. Consequently, the dogmas of equality before the law and other fundamental
nghts of the people are only a cloak of inequality, m fact, slavery
Rights are, as such, neither the product of human nature nor their origin can
be traced to the hoary customs, or in their inherent utility, nor are rights the
result of external conditions essential to man’s internal and real development
The economic structure of society at a given period of time is the foundation on
which the political system of a country is built and its legal framework
formulated In a capitalist society, the aim and nature of rights promote and is to
foster the interests and privileges of the dominant economic group that owns
productive forces, but is in a miscroscopic minority For the masses rights arc the
instruments of their thraldom Karl Marx firmly believes that rights can exist and
flourish only in a classless society where all are equal and no one is an exploiter
17 Laski, H J ,
Introductron to Politics,
p 17
RELATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND STATE— RIGHTS 191
There is much truth in What Karl Marx says and evidence of history is
strong enough to support him He opens a new vista of the nature and content of
rights But all that Karl Marx says is not correct The laws of the State are the
product of multiple sources and not alone the handiwork of the dominant
economic class It is an inescapable truth that rights can exist and flourish in a
plays a vital role and brute economic disparities, that have plagued the society so
far, are wiped out
u ithout which man cannot be at his best or give of his best, what is needful to the
adecjuale development and expression of his personality If inequality is
d( vt lopment of man and his personality The true essence of rights is the creation
()l that atmosphere which is congenial for chiselling of man to be the best of
himself To rely exclusively on an economic factor and subordinating civil rights
C.onclusion. There is not one single theorv which can adequatelv explain the
origin and nature of rights Each theorv is the product of its own time and in
conformity to the genius of the people with whom the propounders of the theory
were associated There is some element of truth in all such theories But there is
one eternal truth that cannot be ignored Individual good and social good go
together Society is an organic unity and welfare of the community is built upon
the welfare of the individual. Both go hand in hand This is the essence of rights
Welfare is all-embiac mg and well-feeling is one of its ingredients
FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS
The we said before, are relative I hey are limited
Bill of Rights. Rights, as
by the majority party, and it is possible that cither as a result of political rivalry
or by yielding to passion, it may curtail the cherished rights of the minority
party or parties withdraw fundamental rights from the pitch of
In order to
political controversy and to place them beyond the reach of majorities and
officials they are embodied in the constitution and given special sanctity Their
in the constitution and constitutional changes are not easy to make, however
great the needsuch changes may be Then, the constitution requires
for
interpretation The American and Indian systems of judicial review disclose that
It is a frail safeguard The judges, while giving decisions, and in whatever legal
dress such decisions arc clothed, render political decisions and that, too, with a
five to four majority in the United States and six to five in India as in the famous
Golak Nath case
All the same, no one can discount the political utility of the declaration of
fundamental rights It is true that fundamental safeguards alone do not ensure to
a people the enjoyment of their basic liberties. But the guarantees for the
RELATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND STATE—'RIGHTS 193
Rights) acts as a rallying point in the State for all who care deeply for the ideal
of freedom ” The Constitution of India contains a carefully chosen code of
not stifle his freedom of speech or stop him from worship according to his
him to worship against his conscience Now the demand is for
conscience, or force
positive human rights The right to life now includes the right to food and shelter
and even medical aid Freedom of speech implies the right to knowledge and
education It is argued that the absence of restraint is futile without the presence
of opportunity and the knowledge and capacity to act
as possible. In addition to the usual basic rights, many countries offer guarantees
against economic insecurity and exploitation, opportunities for free education
and many other social facilities. The kind of rights recognised and maintained by
each State is one of the ways by which States are recognised and differentiated
Here are some of the important Civil Rights*
R^hts and security of person. Rights arise because of man and his
to life
social nature Without man there can neither be the State nor rights Human life
would be nowhere if the scaredncss of this claim is not accepted The right to life
is, therefore, the most fundamental of all rights, as it is the very core of humanity
It means a claim to so live that the existence of one docs not jeopardise the
existence of others. It also means the right to defend oneself against attack If any
one makes an attack upon my life, it is my nght to defend myself and even to
use force for self-preser\'ation Use of force, however, is permitted only as an
extreme measure.
Every State, however primitive its must adequately
political organisation,
provide for the personal safety of its power to
citizens In early societies the
punish was private The blood relations of the deceased avenged his death The
system of private revenge led to blood feuds But now every State takes away
from individuals their right of vengeance and substitutes in its place punishment
as provided in its laws The right to life is, thus, safeguarded by law Punishment
is held the logical consequence of the anti-social acts of those who violate law
Crimmals are adequately punished as their acts disturb the moral order of
society. According to Kant and Hegel punishment is the negative reward for
crime It IS that the criminal deserves and the State simply gives him his due The
advocates of this point of view plead that punishment lor a murder should be
death.
The right to life also demands punishment of those who attempt to commit
suicide The reason is obvious Every individual is an integral unit of society If
suicide is permitted, we deprive society of valuable lives who may contnbutc to
its moral enrichment Secunty to person cannot be claimed if the individual is
allowed to murder himself Suicide is an attempt to disintegrate society and
inflict on it a social injury It must, therefore, be punished, as it cuts at the very
root of human life.
But the right to life is not absolute If the State guarantees to its citizens the
security to life, the citizens, too, owe a duty unity and
to the State to maintain its
integrity. During times of war or any other national emergency, it is the duty of
all citizens to protect and uphold the sovereignty of the State even if they have to
sacrifice their lives. Then, the right to life depends on obedience to laws. If laws
arc wilfully disobeyed there is neither certainty nor security. This means
RELATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND STATE— RIGHTS 195
conditions of chaos and disorder and both life and property cannot be assured
under these conditions.
Right to liberty and free movement. If the right to life is the basis of society,
the right to liberty is the essence of human existence Man has not simply to live,
but to and living well means living a moral, virtuous and happy life.
live well
Man has a moral vocation to perform or do his duty m the social life This he
can do only when he has complete freedom to exercise hi.s faculties and to de-
termine the general conditions of his life It also implies that the movements of
the individual should not be restricted by any arbitrary exercise of authority
either by other individuals or by the
government “Mere life without movement
would be meaningless and without the exercise of human faculties it would not
rise above the levels of animals ” Since the right to liberty and free movement
arises from the fact that every man contributes something to the good of society,
slavery, in any form, is the antithesis ofliberty
his arresi is held illegal In the second place, the accused person can seek redress
for his arrest Redress for arrest means that a person who has been wrongly
arrested may sue the wrong-doer for damages or get him punished by a court of
law
The right to liberty and free movement is, however, not unlimited. A
government may impose many on freedom of movement of the
restrictions
18 Gilchrist, R ^
Principles of Political Science, p 139
,
19 The Constitution of United States does not specifically provide for any kind of
emergency In Britain there is no prerogative of the Crown to make a proclamation of
emergency Emergency powers are given to the executive by Parliament In India the
determination of emergency rests with the President and the Constitution authorises him to
suspend the operation of Fundamental Rights including the right to enforce them during
the operation of the Proclamation of Emergency Some of the Fundamental Rights as
contained in the Presidential Orders were suspended immediately after the declaration of
emergency when China attacked India in October 1962 and the war with Pakistan in 1965
and 1971 Rights were also suspended on the declaration of internal emergency in June
1975 The Constitution (forty-fourth) Amendment Act now provides that the power to
suspend the enforcement of Fundamental Rights shall not extend to the Right of life and
liberty under Article 21
\% PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
for extraordinary purposes and a resort to them should not be made m times of
peace.
The Rig^t to work. The right to work is implicit in the right to life, because
in a rationally organised society man must live on the reward of his labour It is,
accordingly, necessary that society should provide him with facilities to perform
his functions, and earn his living in order to maintain his life. If the State fails to
provide such an opportunity, it deprives him of all those means which make
possible the realisation of his personality A struggling and starving man is a
social decrepit It is now being increasingly recognised that the modem State
must guarantee the right of work to its citizens But it docs not mean the right to
some particular work If I become unemployed, I have not the nght to be
provided with an identical work “The right to work can mean no more than the
right to be occupied in some share of those goods and services” which society
needs 20
The right to work, also, implies that the worker must be paid adequate
wages for his labour He should be able to get enough of food, clothing, and
shelter, including some comforts If his wages are just sufficient to procure the
a solution for the second alternative Similarly, the State should intervene and see
that the workers get adequate wages consistent with a dcecoi standard of living
and, they are employed for reasonable hours of work, giving them ample leisure
to develop their minds
The Right to education. The right to education means that the State should
make adequate provision for educating its citizens Education sharpens intellect
equips individuals with the capacity to work and trains them m the art of
citizenship Citizenship has been defined “as the contribution of one’s instructed
judgment to the public good” Education is an indispensable condition to
free individualdevelopment and makes man fit for the tasks of citizenship Laski
says, “In the long run, power belongs to those who can formulate and grasp
ideas An uneducated individual can neither understand politics nor can he
become vigilant about his interests and consequently his actual participation in
the affairs of the State is generally negligibele Such a citizen is bound to be the
21. Ibui,p\\\
Ibid,
22. p 113
RELATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND STATE— RIGHTS 197
slave of others. He
have the opportunity to rise to the full stature of his
will not
personality. “He
go through life a stunted being whose impulses have never
will
been ordered by reason into creative experiment This means the failure of
democracy, for the people who are ultimate masters will not be able to exercise
their franchise intelligently or perform their other civic duties satisfactorily.
Hence, the democratic slogan is. “Educate the masters ” Apparently^ the right to
education is a civil right, but really, it is a political right as it safeguards them
Right to education does not, however, mean an identical intellectual
training for all citizens It only means provision for that type of education which
should give an equal opportunity to branch of knowledge for
all citizens in that
which they have an aptitude Then, there should be a compulsory minimum level
of education below which no one may fall, it he is to conform to the standard of a
good citi/en Every citizen should have at least as much education as may enable
him to weigh, judge, choose, and decide for himself “He must be made to feel
that this a world in which he can by the use of his
IS mind and will shape at once
”
outline and substance
The Right to property. For life to be worth living and an incentive for work,
It IS ( lainied, that every man should be free to use and enjoy his possessions, both
movable and immovable The right to property involves the right to the exclusive
use of one’s property, the right to alienate it bv gift or exchange during life, and
the right to bequeath
retention urge that property has an ethical basis and it is essential for the
realisation of the moral end of man It is the reward for ability and,
accordingly, it some form for the existence of man, his growth and
is necessary in
the development Locke held that “the supreme power cannot take from any man
any part of his property without his own consent For the preservation of property
being the end of government, and that for which men enter into society, it
necessarily supposes and requires that the people should have property It is
also maintained that since the man of property is protected from fear of
starvation, he can find adequate leisure to become an intellectual explorer and,
thus, create those conditions which contribute to the progress of mankind
Finally, property nurses the virutes of patriotism, love of one’s family, generosity,
inventiveness, and energy— all so essential for the progressive development of
society
But the scramble for wealth and the traditions that grew out of it led to
'n 114
who oppose the institution of private property as current, however, ]ustify its
retention to the extent needed for the development of human personality For
example, Laski is not altogether in favour of its abolition. 26 But he does not
conc.edc the right to property which is not the result of one’s own labour, or the
possession of which is against the social good, or which is not necessary to one’s
function in societyHe makes a clear distinction between owning and earning
and holds “Those whose property is the result of other man’s efforts are parasitic
upon society,” he asserted
Almost every State outside Russia recognises and guarantees the ownership
of pnvate property. In Soviet Russia it is only the right of personal property of
citizens which is recognised and protected and it embraces their income from
work and their savings, their dwelling houses and subsidiary household economy,
their household furniture and utensils and articles of personal use and conven>
lenoe But the attitude to property m ail countries has now changed with the
increasing emphasis on social rights It is limited by the considerations of social
justice and public welfare If society does not create sufficient wealth to enable it
to foot the bill of its expanding services, then it is obliged to take more of the
mcome of the wealthy, in the form of taxes The government may even resort to
the policy of nationalisation on the ground that social claims must supersede
individual claims Otherwise too, the right to property, like other civil rights, is
not absolute It is subject to limitations The laws of every State regulate the
ownership and transfer of private property The government may requisition
houses, buildings, sites and factories for public purposes, and even fix ceilings on
their holdings and ownership
It will, thus, be clear that the right to property, though all countnes, except
the Communist, would uphold, but on conditions which differ considerably
today from those that were considered normal even a couple of generations ago
Today, there are many conservatives in Britain, too, who support their belief in
the right to property on the grounds put forward in 1912 by Lord Hugh Cecil
“The simple consideration,” he wrote, “that it is wrong to inflict an injury upon
any man suffices to constitute a right to property where such property already
exists.”
The Right to contract. The right to contract means that every citizen may
work, live and freely < ontract on a basis of equality with others and with the same
opportunities as his fellows Contract is the essential basis of society It cements
business and social organisation The State which does not secure to its citizens
the right to contract cannot claim to be civilized and progressive The
Constitution of the United States of America prescribes that no State shall pass
“any law impairing the obligation of contracts ” A similar provision is made in
25 Tawncy, R H ,
Th< Acquisitive Society
26 Laski, H ,
A Grammar of Politics, Ch V
27 Ibtd,
p 184
RELATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND STATE— RIGHTS 199
government It implies that every individual should be tree to criticise the policy
pursued by the government The freedom to think as you will, and to speak as
you think, are indispensable means to the discovery and spread of political truth
But truth alone is no index for freedom of speech, and, as such, the right to
speech is also not absolute The interests of social order and respect foi the rights
of others require restraints on liberty oi expression The laws of the State penalise
utterances which tend no corrupt public morals, or defame individuals, incite
people to crime, or which spread sedition and endanger the foundations of
government established by law Such restrictions on the right of speech are not
intended to curtail individual liberty They are imposed to ensure the liberty of
others and safeguard the stability of the State There is some difference of opinion
as to the right of speech during war But it is generally admitted that every
citizen must subject himself :o greater restraints during national emergency
Many things that might be said in time of peace may act as a hindrance to war
effort and tend independence and sovereignty of the State
to jeopardize the
Utterances prejudicial to the safety of the State cannot, accordingly, be permitted
so long as the emergency lasts Laski, however, does not concede to government
the authority to restrict speech even during war He allows the people the right to
express their opinions about the policy of the government “No executive,’’
war
he says, “has a right to move on own way, whatever the opinion of its citizens.
its
Those opinions must be made known in order to affect its activities To penalise
them at a time when it is, above, all, urgent to perform the task of citizenship is
”
fatal to the moral foundation of the State
Freedom of speech is a valuable right Apart from its contribution as a
means to the development of social progress, the success of democracy depends
upon the right to speech Democracy is a government by criticism, clash of ideas
and conflict of opinions Out of this clash and conflict emerges the truth.
Criticism of government policy creates an enlightened public opinion It is, thus,
When
freedom of speech is allowed, government, too, possesses the means to
benefitfrom the expression of the views of the public It is a barometer of public
opinion and the government which stifles oublic opinion prepares for its
own destruction Laski has aptly summed up this point He says, “To allow a
man to say what he thinks is to give his personality the ohly ultimate channel of
full expression i^nd his citizenship the only means of moral adequacy To act
otherwise is to favour those who support the status quo, and thus either drive the
activities of men underground and, therefore, into a dangerous channel, or to
suppress experience not than any other to interpret publicly its
less entitled
meaning But Laski also urges that the citizen has the nght “to preach the
complete inadequacy of the social order He may demand its overthrow by armed
revolution ” He docs not accept the argument of “reasons of State” and that the
preaching of overthrowing the government by armed revolution would mean
anarchy in the State He says, “it is no answer to this view to urge that it is
coronation of disorder If views which imply violence have a sufficient hold upon
the State to disturb its foundations, there is something radically wrong with the
habits of the State It might be anarchy and, in fact, it is, but he argues, it does
not matter, for the peace m
which injustice and tyranny go unquestioned is
unworthy of existence This is an extreme view which no State can pemiit, not
even an advanced democracy, and everywhere “reasonable restrictions” are
imposed on the right to speech
The right to press means the right to publish what a man can lowfully speak
This right follows, ipso facto, from the right to speech It implies publication of
news, ideas, opinions and criticisms subject to the limitations which are imposed
on the freedom of speech The press plays a very important part in disseminating
news and \iews and, thus, helps to create an enlightened public opinion Milton
has cogently said, “Give me the liberty to know, to utter and to argue freely,
according to conscience above all liberties ” A free press is fearless and it is a very
powerful and effectne vehicle to ventilate popular grievances, to ciiticise the
government and the actions of its officials and, as such, a mighty check
policies of
on the tendency of the government to interfere with the rights of citizens Bdt
the press does not serve as a valuable instrument of demociacy when it is owned
and controlled by the rich and is commercialized “Democracy is a government
by talk, but when ‘money talks' demcxracy degenerates into plutocracy” It is,
accordingly, essential for the success of democracy that free discussion and free
criticism should flow fiom free press to help in shaping a genuine and responsible
public opinion
The Right to assembly and association. The right to assembly and to form
associations is implied in the right to speech This right, too, is an elementary
right of man and Maitland, are instinctive to
Asscx:iations, according to Gierke
man The pluralists even regard the State as an association There is no doubt
that the individual can impress his views only by acting with his fellows, and
there are so many objectives which he cannot achieve singly but only in
association with others It is, accordingly, necessary that citizens should be free to
form asociations and assemble very often to discuss and propagate their views In
2H I^skt, H ,
A (Grammar of Poiitia, pp 11819
29 Ibid
RELATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND STATE— RIGHTS 201
all matters of public interest and policy they should ^)e ."ree to publicly discuss
and express honest opinion It also includes the right of petition and protest.
But the right to association is limited by the necessities of the State So long
as States preserve their sovereign national character, we cannot accept the
proposition that the State is an association It is a sovereign State and it must
ensure continued existence If the object of any association is to overthrow the
its
existence
evolution of the State In the continuance of the State family hope and
is its
the cradle of civilisation The right to family is the most elementary right and
It implies the right to marriage, the nght against others in maintaining the
purity of marriage relations, the right to the custody and control of children, and
the right of inheritance B,ul the right of marriage and other family rights are to
be exercisc'd with due regard to the good of the community As Gilchrist says,
“I’he family state is a condition of the good life, but whereas in property the right
IS exercised in a thing, in the family state it is
exercised over a peison or persons,
which implies that the individual exercising family right must recognize that the
good of others is permanently and indefeasibly bound up with his own
to \riul( 2'’)
(1), H
tl Ain< le 2'} (2) (a), (h)
;>02 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
good.” The State may, therefore, restrict the right to family, if it is being used
in manner which is opposed to general good. The Hindu Code Law regulates
a
marriage and divorce and enforces certain obligations m the relations of husband
and wife and of parents, and children No State recognizes temporary marriage
Many may prohibit polygamy The minor in every State has no legal status. A
fixed age of majority is recognised by every State, though it vanes from State to
State
persons equal nghts and privileges in the protection of their civil liberties
Democracy can only exist and flourish in a society of equals The Constitution of
India makes social and civil equality the bedrock of Indian polity It guarantees
equality of all persons before the law ’’ prohibits discrimination on grounds of
religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth as between citizens, and abolishes
untouchability^^ on the one hand and titles on the other
The concept of equality of all persons before the law has a significant
bearing and it is one of the ingredients of what Dicey calls the Rule of Law The
Rule of Law means three things with Dicey It means, m the first place, the
absolute supremacy of law There should be nothing which may be characterised
asan arbitrary power and every action of government must be authorised by law
Then, there should be the supremacy of law and no one may be punished except
law which must be proved in a duly constituted court of
for definite breach of
law means equality before the law, that is, every citizen is subject to
Thirdly, it
the ordinary law of the land and has to stand trial in the same law courts
whatever his status or position in society The Rule of Law is no respecter of
persons It is not ‘a rule of men’, but a measure of liberty enjoyed by the people
Law should neither be arbitrary nor should it guarantee privilege or take account
of privilege Rich and poor, high and low must be equals before the law But the
judiciary must be independent and impartial if the Rule of Law can mean
anything real
POLITICAL RIGHTS
Political nghts are possessed by those persons whom the State permits to
share in the legal expression and administration of its sovereign power They give
an equal opportunity to the individual, if he is worthy of it, to take part in the
political affairs of his community and influence the policy of his government
Political rights consist in (1) the right to vote, (2) the right to be elected and to
represent the people, (3) the right to hold public offices, (4) the right to petition
for redress of gncvanccs, and (5) the right of criticising the government
The Right to Vote. By the right to vote we meaq^that every adult citizen has
the nght to express his opinion by casting a vote at the time of election what
penons he desires should undertake the task of government The right to vote is
32. Gilthnvt, R N ,
Principles of Politual Science,
p 150
33 Article 04
34 Article 15
35 Article 17
36. Article 18
RELATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND STATE— RIGHTS 203
the product of democracy. But even a democratic govcm.nent does not grant this
right to every citizen Aliens, bankrupts, paupers, certain criminals and minors
are often denied the right to vote Some States deprive their female population of
this rightBut neither sex nor property, neither race nor creed, neither religion
nor education should be the criterion for the grant of the right to vote.
“Whenever,” Laski says, “the body of voters is limited, the welfare realised
excludes that of the persons excluded To allow owners of property alone to
possess the right to franchise is undemocratic and it has proved disastrous to the
interests of those who do not own property Similarly, limiting the right to vote to
a certain caste, creed, colour or sex has meant creation of special privileges for
that class alone Even Mill’s argument that education should be the criterion of
the light to vote has no popular appeal The right to education, as said before, is
now regarded as one of the important basic rights and all democratic countries
have either made, or are endeavouring to make at least primary education free
and compulsory It is contended that the right to vote should be as wide as
possible and one man, one vote, ought to be the maxim of a democratic
government “Popular control means that all adults share the political power; to
say people are in law politically equal means at least that each adult has the vote
The suffrage is thus one entenon of democracy, to the extent that the suffrage is
less than universal, to that extent the system is less democratic, less under popular
”
(ontrol
another important political right In fact, the right to vote and the right to be
elected as a representative are twin-bom and essential for a democratic
government The responsibilities of representatives are enormous and difficult,
their honesty, integrity, broad outlook, and selfless patriotism Every State now
prescribes certain minimum qualifications which legislators ought to possess
“Absence of limitation,” in the opinion of Laski, “may give us a Younger Pitt,
descent, place of brith or any of them be ineligible for any office under the
State 1 his is the gift of democraev which gives equal right to all citizens
The poorest citizen is as eligible for the highest office in the State as the richest
This shows that even the will of an average citizen has channels of direct access to
legislative and
the sources of authority spreading over all public offices, executive,
mi), p 167
39 Article 16(1)
judicial To entrust the power to the mass of people means a more close and
stringent scrutiny of public administration But the 1973 Constitution of
Pakistan, as well as its predecessor, denied the right to non- Muslims to stand and
contest for the office of the President of the Islamic Republic In the United
States of America a naturalised citizen is debarred to become a President Such a
denial, debars a section of the community, from access to a public office and is an
undemocratic process
It does not, however, mean that academic professional and other like
qualifications suited and appropriate to the office to be held cannot and should
not be and enforced What it really means is that whatever
presenbed
qualifications are prescribed and whatever mode of appointment is adopted,
should be applicable to all alike and citizens should not be discriminated against
on grounds of birth, religion, race, caste or sex It is, indeed, imperative to
prescribe appropriate and specific qualifications to ensure an honest, efficient and
sound administration Merit alone should be the sole criterion for all
appointments In India, due to historical reasons an exception has been made in
the case of Scheduled Castes and Backward classes and Tribes by fixing a certain
percentage of representation for them Intrinsically, this exception violates the
basic principle of democracy But the object of such an exception is to safeguard
the interests of such castes and tribes, for the time being, as they had been all
through victims of the scxial highhandedness of the ‘classes and castes' who
ri garded them as ‘untouchables’ and denied to them even the elementary
i{ (juirenu nis ol life
The Right to petition. I’he nght to jx'tition entitles every citizen to send
petitions, either individually or collectively, to the competent authority, execu-
tive or legislative, for the redress of grievances In derncxracy, the rulers cannot
Ignore the legitimate grievances of the pc'ople, because they are the ultimate
sovereign The government must feel the pulse of the people and promptly
respond to their needs, otherwise it hazards its own existence No democratic
government can afford to forget that tomorrow is the day of election
The right to send petitions for the redress of grievances is an old right and
the people had bern practising it m ail the countries The classic^ai example is the
(irand Remonstrance, well-known in the (Constitutional History of England
Now the Rules of Business of the Legislative Assemblies in almost all countries
provide for the submission of such petitions The Question Hour itself is
essentially for the ventilation of the grievances of the [K'ople through their
representatives In Switzerland the nght ol petition takes the form cjf Initiative
and a specified number of voters, through a signed petition, c.an initiate
legislation either for the removal of certain evils in the existing law or providing
for a new law the need for whic h is felt urgently
’’
The Right <4“ criticising the government. “A soc lety that is able to discuss,
says Laski, “does not need to fight, and the greater the capacity to maintain
interest m discussion, the less danger there is of an inability to effect the
compromise's that maintain social peace” The government which providers
adequate opportunities to matters d its administraticm and policies is
criticise
government in which every adult citizen is equally free to express his views and
RELATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND STATE— RIGHTS 205
desires upon ail subjects in whatever way he wishes, and to influence the majority
of his fellow-citizcns to decide according to those views, and to influence those
desires ” The right of criticising and assailing its policies is beneficial for the
government, too, for it provides the government an opportunity to defend its
intentions and practices and to acquaint the political sovereign with what exactly
Its aims are
When John Stuart Mill made his historic statement that vigilance is the
price of democracy, his emphasis was on
and frank criticism of the policies of free
the government and its administration This is tantamount to controlling the
government so that it may not act irresponsibly Such control is more urgent today,
lor, the functions of the government are so much more extensive and touch the
very bones of individual lives But the right to criticise the government is possible
only in free and demtxralic Statts It cannot be obtained m countries governed
bv dictators or those under foreign rule
The Right of resist. It is ofun claimed that a citizen has the right to resist
authority of the State, if he is genuinely convinced that a particular law or
governmental action is against his moral sense of justice But resistance to such
laws of the State or governmental actions is only a moral right and not a legal
right, for no State can permit an action which amounts to a defiance of its
authority and may jeopardise even its own existence On the side of morality and
justice, it may, however, be conceded that if the majority of citizens really feel
and believe that the laws of the State or the actions the government are
tyrannical and are against the true interest of the people and obedience thereto
may have demoralizing and degenerating effects on them, they may resist against
such laws and authority and may even revolt We shall revert to this aspect of the
problem in the concluding part of this Chapter
The enforcement of Rights. Finally, every citizen must possess the right to
entorce his rights In the absence of such a right civil and political rights are
of the “prerogative writs” which have been called by Dicey “the bulwark of
English constitution” In the Constitutior of the United States of Amenca there
IS no specific provision empowering the Supreme Court to issue writs The
41 ifabbeas Corpus is intended to protect the citizen from an unlawful arrest and
detention, partu ularly at the order of the Executive
42 Mandamus is used to enforce the performance of a public duty by an official It is
exceeds jurisdiction
206 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
framers of the Constitution had assumed that the common law writs would be
available to the citizens, and, accordingly, they spiecifically prohibited against the
suspension of habeas corpus. ^
times and for all purposes Rights are of changing content and they must vary
with the wants of man and the conditions under which he lives Things that
appear fundamental to one age appear unnecessary to another Our standards of
values change and so do our methods of realization Take, for example, the right
to property Our interpretation of this right is exactly not the same as was put
upon It m the nineteenth century Even in countries like Britain and the United
States all political parties would uphold the right of the individual to possess
property, but on conditions which differ considerably today from those that were
considered normal, even a couple of generations ago The right of social welfare
has modified our conception of the existing rights and some of them may be
actually incompatible with them
If we compare the broad-based rights contained in the Universal Declaration
of Rights with those of earlier declarations that have been mentioned earlier, it
shall be clear that there are a number of rights which, today, are held to be
natural, but were not thought near about two centuries ago In the eighteenth
century rights were thought of in almost exclusively political terms The battle of
economic equality had hardly begun But most of the recent constitutions, which
became operative after the middle of the present century, have given due
importance to the social and economic rights, as well as their political
implications As rights are ol a changing content they cannot be catalogued
tightly The concept of natural
rights, which are held fundamental for the life of
man, is, has always been and must remain subjective Rights are ‘self-evident’
only, says Dorothy Pickles, “in their own time and place and, even then, only if
expressed in vague and general terms that, in practice, mean different things to
’’
different men
We cannot, therefore, have a rigid system of rights Our theory of rights
should be consistent with and in conformity to our individual, group and social
needs. Any theory of nghts which touches only one aspect of the problem is sure
to create friction The old theory of Individualism is a political anachronism now,
46 Article I, Sec 9 (2) It can, of course, be suspended while the public safety is
as it touches the individual alone. The good of man is not an isolated object to be
realized. It embraces the interests of the individual, interests of the group to
which he belongs, the interests of the community which embraces all those
groups and the humanity at large
The system of rights, as such, must be considered as a whole. Moreover,
Political Science deals with operative ideals These ideals are to be worked for by
man for the social good Social good can best be secured if there is proper
adjustment between the ideals of man and his institutions In case of disequili-
brium, there can be no moral development of man or realisation of his ideals
Rights, we may, then, conclude, are of a changing nature
and they change in
their content according to the needs of the individual and society As for the
present time, it is obvious that human reason has now become aware not only of
the rights of man as a human being and a civic person, but also of his rights as a
social person engaged m the process of production and consumption, and
especially his rights as a working person knitted in close ties with the humanity
at large
DUTIES
What is Duty? A duty is an obligation A man is said to have a duty in any
matter when he is under an obligation to do or not to do something It is
something we owe to others as social beings When we live together we must let
others live with us. This implies certain do’s and don’ts My right of living
involves my duty to my
fellow-men to allow them the same condition of life
What IS a right in regard to one’s self is a duty in regard to others They are two
aspects of the same thing or two sides of the same com If one looks at them from
one’s own point, they are rights If one looks at them from the standpoint of
others, they are duties
Correlation of Rights and Duties. It follows, then, that every right has a
corresponding obligation or duty Without duties there can be no rights A valid
claim IS both a right and a duty If society provides an individual with
opportunities to feel happy and be prosperous, it also imposes an obligation
upon him that he should allow others the same opportunities of happiness and
prospenty If I have a right to work and earn my living, it is my duty to recognize
the same right in others and concede to them those conditions in which they can
also enjoy their right to work and earn their living This is a simple, but the
primary rule of social conduct do unto others as you wish to be done by I can
enjoy my rights only if I respect the rights of others “A right,” says Hobhouse,
“is,no doubt, a species of claim What distinguishes it from other claims is that it
IS it is the duty of everyone to respect, and unless the distinction is
one that
admitted there is no reason for the use of the term Without corresponding
obligations the whole concept of rights becomes meaningless
Since my claim to nghts comes from the fact that I live with others and
share with them the pursuit of a common end— social good— it is the duty of the
State to see that I be a moral unit of society As the State acting through the
government, maintains and coordinates nghts, and helps to create that atmos-
phere in which man can seek to himself at his best, it is the duty of every citizen
to help the government in realizing the purpose for which the State came into
existence and continues to exist This means that a citizen owes a duty to the
State as organized in government
Before the advent of democratic government emphasis was only laid on the
“rights of man” and welfare Even
as a condition precedent for social progress
today, in which are despotically governed, the popular demand
countries,
remains the same. But in countries with popular governments the emphasis is on
the duties of a citizen and not merely on his rights Such duties the citizen owes
not to the Slate alone, but also to his family, neighbours, fcllow-citizens and to
society at large The success of democracy will, in practice, be determined by the
extent to which citizens are prepared to perform conscientiously the duties
required of them India amended her constitution in December 1976 to
incorporate a separate chapter (IV A) containing Fundamental Duties These
duties are unique inasmuch as they make a sharp departure from the normal
duties which a citizen owes to the State For example, to cherish the noble ideals
“which inspired our national struggle for freedom, to promote harmony and the
spirit of common brotherhood amongst all the people of India transcending
religious, linguistic and regional or sectional diversities, to renounce practices
derogatory to the dignity of women, to value and preserve the rich heritage of
our composite culture, to protect and improve the natural environment
including forests, lakes, rivers and wild life, and to have compassion for living
creatures, to develop scientific temper, humanism and the spinl of inquiry and
”
reform
Duties: Legal and Moral. Duties, like rights, are of two kinds moral and
legal A moral duty is that which is enjoined upon the people on moral grounds
It is true that moral duties form the basis of legal duties, but a moral duty may
not be supported by the laws of the State Its sanction is the moral opinion of the
community If there is a breach of moral duties there is nothing legally to punish
the wrongdoer, though it may entail social condemnation It is my moral duty to
help the poor, the needy and the sick, because as a moral agent of society I must
Those duties, which are enjoined on by the laws of the State and are
citizens
enforceable in courts, are known perform legal duties is
as legal duties Failure to
punishable It is my duty to obey the laws of the State, if I do not, I can be
punished accordingly
Positive and Negative Duties. Duties may further be divided into positive and
negative When a citizen exercises his rights in such a way as to maximise social
progress and welfare, he performs a positive duty Examples of a positive duty
are* obedience to the laws of the State, defence of the country, helping the State
m maintaining law and order, paying taxes and local rates, to honestly exercise
one’s vote, to perform one’s duties when elected to representative assemblies, etc
Positive duties aim at cooperation with government in realising the end of the
State.
When a citizen docs not do a thing which the law prohibits, he performs a
negative duty The law directs every citizen not to prevent others from exercising
their rights and when he obeys the law, as such, he performs a negative duty. A
negative duty implies obedience to don’ts as prescribed by law. But compulsion
RELATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND STATE— DUTIES 209
cannot go a longway towards making the citizen perform his duties. There must
bf spontaneity on his part and the will to do them fairly and honestly It is, under
the circumstances, necessary that laws must be the expression of the will of the
people so that they may obey them willingly and not for fear of punishment
Laski IS of the opinion that he has the right to resist Barker too holds the same
opinion, although he says that the mischief of obedience against the mischief of
resistance should be pioperly weighed We shall discuss this aspect of the problem
latcT in the Chapter
sphere of the State ever-expanding Taxes have been held in all countries to be
is
iK State all adult citi/cns, subjc'ct to ccitain ciualihcaiions. enjov the rii>ht to
govcinrnem A votei has to choose liclvveen one party and another The vote
should therefc^re, be exeicised w ith judgment, discretion, and rectitude There can
210 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
service and justify the trust the electorate has reposed in them
5 Assistance in the maintenance of law in order. It is the duty of citizens
to help the administration in the maintenance of law and order, the primary
function of the State The law imposes on citizens the obligation to inform the
authorities if an offence has been committed or is likely to be committed and to
render all possible assistance in the detection of crime The State can call upon its
citizens to render service in times of emergency and assist the government in
maintaining peace and order, and ensure the safety of the Slate
6 Other Duties. Similarly, it is the duty of citizens to serve as jurymen or
to act as assessors, whenever called upon to do so Citizens, also, owe a duty to the
State to render service as members of public committees, organizations, local
bodies, representative assemblies, etc ,
when required Finally, every utizen
should dev-elop the 'social conscience' and ‘public spirit’ He should place public
good above private interests and render social service, whenever the occasion
arises, as a willing worker Citizenship is active and a good citizen is
well-informed on all matters of public importance and he endeavours to arrive at
a balanced judgment on them That is why demcxrracy is perpetually faced with
the problem of deciding how to achieve a proper balance between rights and
duties The duties of citizen are, many and arduous and the State, as a matter of
reality, is what its citizen make it
the administration in maintaining law and order The positive duties, in fine, aim
at active cooperation of the citizens with the government for realising the end of
the State The end of the State and how it can be secured has ever been the
baffling problem of all times and with it has varied our conception of political
authority and obedience to the State he problem has assumed new dimensions
\
now for two obvious reasons and both arc the indircct results of the industrial
revolution which is now near the point of culmination The technological age or
“Urban Civilisation,” as Wilson calls it, has rendered the homogeneity of
standards of life and conduct impossible and the breakdown of the traditional
authority has tended to disrupt those types of scx:ial control that have been
invaluable to political authonty in the past Secondly, the activities of the
modem government have become so numerous and complex that they embrace
every aspect of the citizen’s life and at every step he is confronted with the
authority eff the State Paradoxical as it is, while our ideas of individual and
social welfare throw us more in the laps of the State, we have, at the same lime,
adopted a more critical attitude towards political authonty
Another, but familiar, theory of obedience is the belief in the fact that the
State provides a system of order, and people obey the State to ensure security to
life and property Hobbes, for example, thought that the guarantee of order by a
ruler constituted in itself a sufficient claim on the citizen’s obedience to his
authority But this is not exactly correct Though order is an essential
requirement of civilised life, yet there may be many people who would prefer to
risk their lives to obtain different conditions rather than to live them out in a
so-called peace which made life them not worth-living The real essence of
for
order, which the State is charged to maintain, is to cieate and sustain that
atmosphere in which every man should get an opportunity for the development
of his faculties so that all grow and expand to the best of their capacity and
ability It IS, therefore, not order for the sake of order that evokes obedience
d'here something higher and nobler with which the State
is is charged and that is
Religious belief and prejudices have also played their part in determining
people’s altitude to the problem of obedience In the earlier stages of the
development of the State, it was the “higher law” which enjoined that God had
commanded men through Revelation to obey “the powers that be” In the
seventeenth century many people held that it was part of man’s duty to God to
obey the Stale In Britain,for instance, Sir Robert Filmer argued that, since it
was natural for mankind to be ruled by Kings, it must have been so ordered by
God God, he said, had entrusted the right to govern to Adam and his
descendants Charles I had, therefore, a divine right to govern by virtue of his
direct descent from Adam
Here was the theory of Divine Right of Kings which
made obedience commands
of the King a religious duty The Kings
to the
regarded themselves as the breathing images of G(xl on earth The Theory of
Divine Right of Kings also made succession to the throne hereditary But when
Kings regarded themselves answerable to God alone for their actions and the
subjects had no right to question their authority, the virtuous qualities of
obedience as a matter of filial duty were lost The people revolted against the
despotism of the rulers Today, the theory of “higher law” does not find any
adequacy as a matter of political belief It must, however, be admitted that
Islamic law still exercises a dominant influence in matters of obedience in the
Muslim Slates and it is a great rallying force for political authority.
democratic answer that men should obey the State because was founded on
it
sovereign was absolute and subject to no conditions All subjects must obey
him meant conflict and war, the conditions
as disobedience to his authority
which, had made life “short, nasty and brutish” in the State of nature John
Locke, on the other hand, upheld the Revolution of 1688 and justified the reasons
for which Charles I had been beheaded He tiled to analyse the reasons why men
should obey the commands of the King, who had clearly been chosen not by God,
but by the people through the medium of a democratically elected Parliament
His reference was to William and Mary who became the occupants of the British
throne after the Revolution of 1688
Hume did not accept the theory of consent as the basis of obedience He
wrote, “obedience or subjection becomes so familiar that most men never make
”
an enquir)' about its origin or cause, more than about the principle of gravity
He argued that even if it were true that governnu nt must ultimately rest on the
consent of the people, it “usually means little more than the acquiescence of
inertia” His conclusion was that people odc\ the State as a matter of habit
Similaily, Di Johnson believed that obedience to authrotiy was not merely
necessan’ to maintain order, but something natural to mankind “Every man”, he
said, “is born consenting to some system ot government” Edmund Buikc was of
the opinion that men ought to obey the State as they knew it, because it
represented accumulated wisdom of generations, and the accumulated
the
wisdom must be presumed to be sounder than the reasoning of an
of the scKiety
individual The lonsinbution of customs and traditions was also cmpnasised
both b) John Austin and Sir Henry Maine I hey saw obedience to the State as
something customary and traditional, “defined and crystallized— almost hal-
”
lowed— bv law
But customs and traditions representing the accumulated wisdom of
generations will only be obeyed so long as we are convinced that they are g(x>d
customs and traditions which must be obeyed If the> represent the follies of the
generations, then the legitimacy of obedience to them disappears Karl Maix
advanced his own arguments about the idea of habitual obedience He held that
the people obeyed the Slate as a matter of habit, though a bad habit The
Capitalist State, he maintained, was a conspiracy of the few against the exploited
masses It was i\ranny “established by force and perpetuated by guile” The
exploited and oppressed masses obeyed the State onl) so long as they were
powerless to resist, “or because they were tricked by propaganda into believing
that they ought not to resist But emee they realised the fac ts of their oppressicm
and exploitation, they would unite to thiow off their chains” Thus, begins an
epoch, of scKial revolution Marx’s analysis was the most famous of all
revolutionary theories which explains social and political upheaval by bringing
forth the economic and technological elements in human relationships
(Umtract Theory was that the individual himself decided his political destiny.
Obedience was not divinely ordained, but was the result of man’s own choice and
determination and he agreed to obey for certain specific guarantees As long as
terms of the contract and conditions it prescribed were fulfilled, it was a “breach
of faith”, for either of the contracting parties, rulers and subjects, to deviate from
It
But the “breach of faith” theory was still no answer to the problem of
political obedience The idea of contract helped men to make the transition “It
was a bridge between the notion of an absolute ruler, responsible primarily, if not
exclusively, to God, and the conception, which was to be developed in the
nineteenth century, that Government ought to be responsible to the people
through the medium of a democratically elected Parliament Rousseau gave a
new meaning to the Contract Theory when he said, “The Government exists by
grace of the sovereign and its power can be resumed or divided at will by the
sovereign ” For Rousseau, the sovereign was the people, the sum of individuals
acting as a community The individual was himself an integral part of the
community and he had the same extent of control over the activities of the
community as the rest of his fellow citizens The contract according to Rousseau,
was between two aspects of the individual, “Each giving himself to all, gives
himself to nobexly” Men were at one and the same “a passive body of subjects
and an active body of sovereigns” Then, Rousseau introduced the concept of the
General Will Unlike Lcxrke, he put no faith in the will of the majority The
General Will was the real will which was also the will of the individual, and by
obeying the General Will he obeyed himself
The eighteenth and early ninctexmth centuries saw the emergence of two new
ideas in the body politic and they gave a new meaning to the problem of
obedience The first was the belief in human equality as enunciated by
the constitution-makers of both the American and French Revolutions The
American Declaration of Independence in 1776 declared, ”We hold these truths
to be self-evident that all men are created equal" In 1789, the French
Declaration of the Rights of Man affirmed that “Men are born and remain fiee
and equal” The Amencan Declaration also included the second idea Among
men’s fundamental and inalienable rights was included the right to the pursuit of
happiness Once men began to believe that they weie all equals and they had an
equal right to conditions which made life worth-li\ mg, they came to the
conclusion that they were equal participants in the affairs of the State and they
ought to have an equal right to determine what made them happy But one
man’s honey may be vinegar for another and, consequently, the happiness of
some may be secured at the cost of the unhappiness of others If so, who is to
decide which shall have priority, happiness of some or unhappiness of others ?
law could produce universal happiness Adam Smith, whose ideas dominated the
nineteenih-century thought, maintained that the economic system m which
individuals were all pursuing their own and often conflicting interests, would still
jiroduce, “by some beneficent law of God or nature, a happ) and harmonious
be found Since the perfect life was a rational and moral life, t-he rational man
would never think of disobeying the State In fact, he would consider it his moral
duty to accept political authority to enable him to attain perfect life This view,
which had come down the course of history, was expanded in the writings of
Hegel Hegel, the nineteenth-century German philosopher, assumed that the
evolution of scKiety was one of progress towards the good, and postulated the
ultimate attainment of an ideal system in which the rational man would be free,
individual Even Tnetschke, who regarded the State as power, did not hesitate to
purify It with moral purposes, and argued that all morally minded persons must
obey the State and accept its commands to guide their daily lives
Organic theories, whether their intention was democratic or autocratic, had
the common its own, that was
the beliel that a society possessed a personality of
different in some way Irom that of the individuals comprising it They believed
that, as Lindsay put it, “there is something which can be called a general will
because there is something which can be called a common mind When men
who are working together pool their experiences and share their difficulties, there
can and often does come out of their discussions a decision which is really the
decision of the society, which no individual could have come to of himself, and
which each yet recognises as more completely carrying out the purposes of society
than his own original suggestion”
The majority of the ninetecnth-century political thinkers, in Britain at any
rate, did not believe in the concept of the general will Jeremy Bcntham
elaborated a theory of obligation whuh human desires
assumed, not only that
did conflict, but that, as far as we knew, they always would do so. He believed
that the purpose of the government was to make men happy He also believed
53 As quoted in Camtt’s Morals and Pobtus, p 204
RELATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUAL AND STATE— DUTIES 215
that all men were equal and that they had, an equal right to decide for
themselves the kind of government which would bring them happiness. Since
individuals differed in their views, they would not all be able to have what they
wanted But if all the individual wisdom, each man counting for one, were added,
then the opinion expressed by the majority would represent the maximum
happiness attainable in the circumstances The purpose of the State, according to
Bentham, was to bring the maximum happiness or social utility and we obeyed
the State because it was in our interest to obey Utility, thus, became the
rationale of political happiness within the idea of majority rule
John Stuart Mill was right, but how could qualitative happiness be-
obtained^ The answer was that the State could work only through institutions
and human ingenuity had not so far devised any institution which was capable of
measuring qualiiativestandards And until we had found a way of translating the
qualitative differences into institutional terms, they must remain irrelevant for
political purposes The only practical way so far discovered was that each man
counts for one and all stood on a footing of equality and, therefore, had equal
oppori unities to make the best of themselves My voice counted in the same
way and with equal force as that of my neighbour and all had equal access
of us
to the facts which ought to influence our choice in electing our rulers and
approving their policy
But It cannot be denied that the majoniy rule and the theory of obedience to
Its authority had been the harbinger of all K.nds of social, economic and political
ills The cult of majority rule has often stimulated intolerance to the extent that
The psychological approach has its own explanation to offer in solving the
the knotty problem of obedience James Bryce dealt with the problem compre-
hensively and sought to explain that “inertia, deference, sympathy, tear and
reason were the outstanding motivations of obedience Though the psychologi-
cal approach is valuable in explaining the issue of obedience, it does not explain
why people should obey if the commands of the State do not find their approval
and fail to coincide with their moral judgment^ To put it m clear terms, should
not the individual strive for the abolition of those laws which are arbitrary and
55 Bryce, J ,
Studies in History and Jurisprudence, Essay IX
216 PRINCIPLES OF POIITICAL SCIENCE
have been imposed upon him by the tyrannical political authority, or are unjust
or are opposed to the interests of the community as a whole^ The tyranny of the
majority is worse than the tyranny of an individual and it is a serious challenge to
parliamentary demcx'racy
Here again, we come to thesame question with which we began this
discussion on political obedience Has the citizen, besides purely as a legal duty,
to obey the Stated The answer involves broader ethical considerations and it can
be treated logically with the end of the State The end of the State, we said
earlier, is to secure equity and justice for all citizens in order to realise the highest
Laski IS of the opinion that the State is to be judged by the moral test of
adequacy and “if I hold that its power is being exercised, not for the ends implied
in Its nature, but for the ends incompatible therewith, the civic outcome of such
perception is the duty of resistance
” In the beginning, it is the moral duty of all
right-thinking citizens that they should protest against all such unjust and
oppressive laws or actions of the State, which do not provide for the reasonable
satisfaction of their impulses, and adopt all legal and constitutional means to get
them repealed If their protest bears no fruit, they have the right to take the
extreme step of even resisting the government by breaking those laws “Nobody
need challenge the right to resist,” observes Srinivasan Sastri, “because
resistance to the State and that very moment it
may sometimes become a right
becomes a duty as well No one who cares for
citizenship and for the public
welfare can question the right of each citizen to judge for himself m the last
extremity When he has fought his fight and failed to undo a public wrong and he
feels in his conscience that he cannot acquiesce in it, nothing ought to keep him
from resistance if he thinks he ought to resist ” Resistance to laws and the
authority of the State is, accordinglv, a conflict between a citizen’s legal duties
and his conscience, and the latter is the most cherished quality of a citizen He is
an active participant in the affairs of the State and ever vigilant about his rights
and duties
Gandhi, uk), favoured resistance His mission in life was to moralise man and
society A moral man and a moral society could only be obtained when truth
stood arrayed against tyranny whether that tyranny was of the State or of the
individual Gandhi evolved a way of resisting evil through the organisation of
truth and non-violence, satyagraha, holding on to the truth The technique of
first in South Africa and later in India and at both places he admirably won his
non-violent battle
But disobedience to the laws of the State should not bt* wanton The decision
to resist must be taken after a deep consideration and due caution with the
conviction that the law to be resisted is immoral and socially harmful Those who
resort to resistance must also be sure of success in their venture It is, in the
opinion of MaCunn, “counsel not of cowardice but of prudence that resistance
without a reasonable prospect of success, though it may speak of much personal
heroism, is a political mistake and a public calamity ” Gandhi’s technique of
satyagraha was the weapon of the strongest and the bravest, the true man of God
who sought to conquer evil by truth and to resist physical force by taking
suffering on himself instead of inflicting suffering upon the opponent
Disobedience to the laws of the State shakes the very foundation of an
ordered government and when the authority of government is shaken, there
reigns nothing except confusion and chaos It is tantamount to rebellion against
the duly constituted authority of the State Laski says, “I ought not to resist if I
am convinced that the State is seeking, as best as it may, to play its part, and for
most that perception from what enquiry they undertake I ought not
will result
further to resist unless have reascmable grounds for the belief that the changes I
I
advoc ate are likely to result in the end I have in view ’’ The duty of resistance, as
such, IS not merely a question of caution, but one of supreme political wisdom It
goes without saying that it is the duly of a citizen to protest against the unjust
and oppressive laws of the State, but the form of protest, in the first instance,
must be constitutional and legal If the government deliberately brushes aside the
devices of constitutional protests or frustrates them and continues heedlessly its
c apricious policy, then, resort to resistance is the only but the extreme course left
Resistance, however, should be the medicine and not a daily bread, or, as Laski
puts It, “the right to disobedience is of course to be exercised at the margins of
political conduct No community could hope to fulhl its purpose if rebellion
became a settled habit of the population
’’
And one is not sure of the outcome of a
rebellion Even if it is successf^ul and the revolting forces are able to overthrow the
oppressive government and capture power, will the good which is likely to result
outweigh the harm which the revolution has brought in^ Historv can provide us
with innumerable examples of the fact that nothing is more unpredictable than
the course of a revolution The aftermath of revolution is usually marked by the
rise of a new autocracy In sum, revolutions seldom, if ever, fulfil their promises
Old tyrants are replaced by new and the freedom won by some is paid for by the
injustice visited on others
It IS, therefore, the dut\ of citizens to obey the laws of the State and res-
pect the duly constituted authority, provided its laws and functions are in
accord with the general opinion in the State and are based upon “justice”, as
Barker says, or “moral adequacy” as Laski suggests The State must rise with the
people and their aspiiations i’he people, tex), must give a fair chance to the
worth to the citizen body If the actions of the
policies of the State to prove their
government are unjust or iniquitous and encroach upon the rights of the
minorities, it is the dutv of citizens to protest against the high-handedness of
the majority all constitutional means to get them remedied. Since
and tap
democracy provides adequate means to seek redress, the spirit of resistance is of
less value than in a government unresponsive to the will of the people But if the
majority uses heedless coercion rather than a rational appeal, to obey and agree
to its policies, the duty to resist assumes a practical importance, irrespective of
the considerations of order It isboth a moral and a political sin to keep on
obeying when there is reason to disobey Oppression and exploitation, acx:ording
to Gandhi, are made possible by cooperation, willing or forced, of the oppressed
in their own exploitation or oppression through cupidity, ignorance or fear
218 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Eternal vigilance is the prime need to ensure liberty, and that is the essence of
obedience “Even the most despotic government,” Gandhi maintained, “cannot
stand except for the consent of the governed, which consent is often forcibly
procured by the despot. Immediately the subject ceases to fear the despotic force
his power is gone,” Laski held the view that the danger today is not in
disobedience but in obedience to the laws of government that arc tyrannical and
spell unbounded evil. But what about wilful disobedience, violent demonstra-
tions, protests verging on sabotage and ghcroes which now plague the political
life in India? Do they fulfil the canons of Gandhi’s disobedience or Laski’s
obedience^
SUGGESTED READINGS
Allen, G K Democracy and the Individual
Barker, E Principles of Social and PolitKal Theory, pp 136-72, 226-44
Barker, E Reflections on Government
Laski, H J ,
Liberty m the Modem State
1 Laski, H ,
A Grammar of Politico, p 143
2 Ibid,
219
220 PRrNClPI ES OF POLinCAl SCIFNCF
laws of the State and extent to which they help a citizen to develop all that is
good in him Liberty is, thus, a product of rights It thrives best where rights are
guaranteed to all without any distinction of sex, creed, colour or status in soc lety
to each other and offer their own explanations The Individualists assert that
sovereignty of the State embraces every phase of human life and at every step the
individual is required to obey its laws Laws restrict liberty and frustrate
initiative as they are of the nature of commands and prescribe a certain way of
life They hold that the State is a necessary evil and its functions are negatively
regulative or protective It should only maintain peace and order and leave the
individual alone, laissez taire, to manage his own affairs and develop freely
according to his and capacity The Anarchists are out to destroy the
own ability
State and establish in its place a stateless society where liberty will be supreme
They regard political authority, in any of its forms, as unnecessary and
undesirable “Liberty of man,” according to Bakunin, founder of scientific
Anarchism, “consists soley in this, that he (individual) obeys the laws of Nature,
because he has himself recognised them as such, and not because they have been
imposed upon him externally by any foreign will whatever, human or di\ me,
collective or individual ” The Syndicalists are similarly hostile to the State as its
laws and authority perpetuate the interests of the capitalist class of society The
Socialists, on the other hand, stand for maximization of the functions of the Slate
and justify its interference in order to promote social good
Apparently, there seems to be a fundamental contradiction between the
sovereignty of the State and the liberty of the individual as the more thert^ is of
the one, the less there is of the other But really it is not so The purpose of the
rights IS to enable men to livr, to enjoy life and to develop to the full
may differ m many ways for different individuals, may be summed up in one
word, liberty and it is the attainment of men’s ambition to be free to live their
own lives in their own way But it means moral freedom and not absence of
restraints on their fit^edom of action (llearly, men who live in society cannot be
free from restraints If they were, the result would be, not liberty, but licence,
anarchy and chaos Restraints are necessary in the interest of order and of the
harmonization, in so far as that is possible, of our diffemnt conceptions of liberty
As Hobhouse has put it, “the liberty of each must, on the principle of the
common good, be limited by the rights of all, in general, my rights are my
are your duties and duties arc nothing but restraints on unrestricted liberty Laws
are, accordingly, the conditions of liberty Laws do not curtail liberty, they
maintain and enhance it They create a condition in which every individual
1 Karl W 1)( utsc h, Politics and Government flow People Decide Their Fate, pp 3()-‘17
LIBERTY AND EQUALITY 221
IS the realization of liberty, for the law which punishes the murderer, protects and
defines the rights of men Reasonable restraints on freedom of action actually add
to happiness Certain laws of the State add to the creative faculties of man. Laws
limiting the hours of work are restraints on workers just as much as on employers
Originally, the workers bitterly opposed all such restraints But these restraints
save the workers from the temptation of injuring their health by excessive labour
and consequently add to their well-being The same is true of legislation
forbidding child labour and establishing compulsory education All such laws
were fiercely resisted by parents who did not want to lose money the child might
earn, if not forbidden to work or compulsorily sent to school They were also
condemned by well-meaning and sincere people as an interference with freedom
And so they were But these interferences aimed to secure a fuller life for the
children, and ultimately for the parents themselves It is also true of numerous
other measures The order established by sensible laws and conventions opens up
a number of possibilities which would not have existed otherwise TH Green has
)ustly said, “Much modern legislation interferes with freedom of contract, in
order to maintain the conditions without which a free exercise of the human
”
faculties is impossible
'Lhe laws of the Slate, in sum, are not a negation of liberty They arc the
medium of liberty It is, however, wrong to claim that every prohibition issued by
the State is justfied and adds to the liberty of the people If the prohibition goes
beyond what is necessary and frustrates the life of spiritual enrichment, itisan
invasion on the libery of man “VVhat each of us desires in life is room for our
personal initiative in the things that add to our moral stature What is destructive
of our freedom is a system of prohibitions which limits the initiative therein
implied “^Man is really not free, if he feels that he has no means to express his
opinion and impress his point of view upon those who exercise authority Free
expression ol opinion is allowed in a country with a democratic machinery of
government There is no liberty where the individual is subordinated to the will
of the whole community to merge his identity in it, or in an authoritarian State
which will leave its citizens free for certain things, but not for expression of
opinion in any way To enjoy true liberty neither freedom nor authority can be
absolute and complete “Freedom unrestrained by responsibility becomes mere
licence,” says Dewey, “responsibility unchecked by freedom becomes mere
arbitrary power The question, then, is not whether freedom and responsibility
shallbe united, but how they can be united and reconciled to the best advantage
”
This IS indeed the central problem of all political philosophy and practice
Freedom is, thus, all a matter of adjustment Sovereignty carried to the extreme
becomes tyranny and destroys liberty, and liberty carried to the extreme becomes
But the extent of liberty varies greatly from time to lime and place to place.
Conditions may be favourable to it or they may be most unfavourable The role
of the Slate in providing liberty also vanes greatly Nowadays,
it is widely felt
also come under the head welfare and welfare embraces the entire life of man. It
also means planning for the future to enhance the individual’s all rounded
personality and ensure the unbounded advancement of the society to which he
belongs. The problem of liberty has, accordingly, become more difficult than ever
before The enjoyment of liberty necessitates government with increased func-
tions and also increased powers As a result, the old problem of restraining
authority itself, and of the prevention of arbitrariness and corruption of power
becomes more serious now than ever before In short, the constitutional
democratic society must create and utilise authority with a view to the welfare of
all individuals in society, yetmust prevent that authority from “becoming a
it
KINDS OF LIBERTY
The term “liberty” has been used m a variety of senses and with a great
latitude of connotation Montesquieu said that “there is no word that admits of
more various significations, and has made more difierent impressions on the
human mind than that of liberty ” For a clear understanding of what liberty
stands for, we distinguish between the various meanings given to the term
men were equal Natural equality, thus, became the essential principle of Natural
Law and it conferred upon man certain inalienable rights The eighteenth-
century Encyclopedia stated, “Natural equality is that which exists between all
men by the very constitution of their nature It is founded upon the human
nature which is common to all men who are born, grow, live and die in the same
way.” Therefore, each must treat all others as equal to himself The consequence
IIBERTY AND EQUAIITY >23
of this IS •
first, that all men are naturally free, secondly, that we are to treat our
inferiors as by nature our equals,
no one may claim any particular right
thirdly,
above the rights of others unless he has acquired it This is the true meaning of
equality and if natural liberty confers such basic rights, which we may call
natural rights, it is beyond doubt acceptable But it is wrong to hold that natural
rights confer the right to absolute freedom Rights, as previously said, carry with
them corresponding obligations
relations of the individual through the laws of the StateThe adjustment of man’s
relation to his fellow-men was one of the chief purposes for which the State came
into being With the lapse of time, there was further efinement and the State
recognised the basic rights of man, made them definite and equally enjoyable by
all classes in the State, and assured to all protection against encroachments
Thus, “Definite law, sure enforcement and equality before the law,” as Gettell
”
says, “marked the advance of civil liberty of man to man
sometimes agreed to respect certain liberties it was done under the stress of
circumstances, and as soon as the stress was over unlimited and absolute exercise
of authority would be the rule With the advent of democracy a definr.e
distinction was made between the State and government and checks were placed
on the manner and extent of governmental action The principles that defined
and regulated the conduct of government, set a limit to its actions against the
individual, and protected the rights and privileges of the individual, constituted
exercised, and the general guarantees of civil liberties. The Bill of Rights, which
written constitutions asually contain, defines the sphere of civil liberties and
prescribes remedies m case of their infringement where the In a country,
fundamental law is unwritten, as in Britain, the organisation of the government,
the scope of its powers, the manner of their exercise and the guarantees of civil
liberties arc primarily the result of traditions, customs, usages and precedents or,
to be brief, conventions of the Constitution, as Dicey called them Fundamental
law or the constitution is, therefore, the surest guarantee of the protection of civil
liberty against the interfercnce of the government
Whatever be the nature of the constitution civil libert) will be at its greatest
under two conditions First, when the rights of private action arc clearly defined
in ample terms in order to cover the wudest possible range of such action, and,
secondly, when the defined rights are strictly enforced bv definite remedies which
can be applied as speedily and effectively as possible In Britain, the definition of
civil liberty is scanty or at anv rale scattered, but the remedies for the
enforcement of liberties are numerous and, above all, eflective The Ckinstitution
of the United States contains a Bill of Rights and it further provides that “no
”
person shall be deprived of his life, libertv or propertv without the proess of law
The Chapter on Fundamental Rights in the Indian Constitution is more
elaborate as compared with the Bill of Rights contained in any other existing
constitution of importance Another important feature of Fundamental Rights in
India IS that there is a special constitutional provision for their enforcement
Liberty, according to Professor Laski, “is never real unless the government
can be called to account, and it should always be called to account when it
invades rights ” In the United States any law or action of the national or State
government can be challenged in a court of law, if it amounts to depriving a man
There is no doctrine of the ‘security of the State’ in the United
of his civil liberty
States and the legislatuies cannot suspend or abridge an individual right on the
ground of the security of the State It is for the courts to decide and determine
whether there is a “clear and present danger” to the existence of the social order
c urtailment of c ivil Iibertv The Constitution of India, cm the other
so as to justify
hand, imposes direct limitations on Fundamental Rights (Courts cannot question
the propriety of legislaticm on the ground that it seeks to unduly restrict personal
liberty, once it has been established that it is within the competeme of the
legislature to make such a law or in any way to modify its effect The forty-second
amendment of the Constitution relcgatc^d fundamental rights to a position of
mfcnoritv b\ csiablishmg the primac'y of the l)lrect^c Pnnciphs of ilu Stale-
Policv, though recent judgment of the Supreme Court has nullified it
Constitution Rights in Britain are determined by customs and common law and
protected by impartial and independent tribunals and the Rule of Law which
involves absence of arbitrary power and privileges
not the many constitutional devices, but “what the people will stand,” and what
they will stand depends ultimately upon the outlook of the community. An
intelligent community understands the social need of freedom It docs not fear
healthy and honest criticism, in fact, it knows
government is to be that if
men will, on the whole, use their freedom in a way which is not, in the long run,
—
detenmental to the real interests of society criticism being one of these But
beyond this it is difficult to go, nothing will make up for an illiberal public
outlook and a judiciary that will yield to every pressure either of the government
”
or of opinion
1 The right of citizens to vote and to elect their representatives But all citizens
do not enjoy the nght to vote Political expediency demands that some
proportion of the population of the Slate be denied this nght In general,
aliens, lunatics, children, and in some countries even women, are excluded
from the right to vote, although the modern tendency is to extend this right
5. Laski, H ,
A Grammar of Politics, p 146
226 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
political rights possessed by the people, that is, the share of governing authority
which the State confers upon certain of its inhabitants Political liberty is also the
necessary complement of civil liberty In the absence of political liberty, civil
liberty is only an illusion
one should have equal acefts to education But the system of education which
provides separate institutions for the children of the rich and the poor is to be
highly deprecated, as it trains the former to habits of authority and the latter to
habits of deference Such a division of attitude amongst citizens can never
produce political freedom Those who are consciously trained as a privileged class
will be imbued with the spirit of governing others who are trained to submit to
^
their authority
The second condition of political liberty is the presence of an honest and free
press The press disseminates information and knowledge For the enjoyment of
political liberty it is news supplied by the press should be
essential that the
honest, and unbiased, so that both the electors and the
straightforward,
representatives may have truthful matenal to rely upon and decide issues But
this IS not the real fact Our press skilfully omits relevant facts and deliberately
perverts news When facts are deliberately perverted and reason is choked, our
judgment will be unrelated to truth A people deprived of reliable news are
deprived of the verv basis of freedom “For, to exercise one’s judgment in a
miasma of distortion is ultimatelv to go disastrously astray
Economic Liberty. It has been justly said that economic liberty must
precede political liberty Liberty is meaningless when hunger, starvation, and
destitution stare at aman at every step Nor can there be any liberty, when there
ISa constant fear of unemployment and “insufficiency which, perhaps more than
any other inadequacies, sap the whole strenght of personality ”‘^Thc problem of
the tummv and shelter is, undoubtedlv, the foremost
creation of that structure of society wherein there is sufficiency for all before there
IS superfluity for the few In such a society there is no class domination The
worker is not merely the seller of labour and recipient of orders, but a producer of
services who finds in his work scope for the enrichment of his personality
6 Ibid, p 154
7 Ibid,
p 147
8 Ibid,
p 148
9 Ibid
LIBERTY AND EQUALITY 227
“Without these freedoms, or, at least, access to tht n, men are hardly less truly
slaves than when they were exposed for purchase and sale
a free nation and enjoys national liberty It is always a free nation which allows to
Its people real and maximum liberty National liberty is, thus, the foundation of
civil, political and economic liberty
EQUALITY
Meaning of Equality. The popular meaning of the term equality is that all
men are equal and all should be entitled to identity of treatment and income
Those who subscribe to this meaning of equality, assert that all men are born
equal and nature has willed them to remain so This natural equality of man was
practically recognized in the Declaration of the Rights of Man (1789) issued by
the National Assembly of France It said “Men are bom, and always continue,
free and equal in respect of their nghts ” A similar statement is found in the
American Declaration of Independence “We hold these truths to be self-evident
that all men are created equal ” But nature has not created all men equal
Inequality is an inescapable, natural fact and it has to be accepted by society
Nature has endowed men with different capacities and so long as they differ in
their wants, needs, and capacities in satisfying them, equality in its popular sense
IS inconceivable Equality does not even imply identity of reward for effort The
statement, then, that all men are equal is as erroneous as that the surface of the
earth is level
10 Ibid
,
those stKial and political privileges to which others are entitled My vote in the
election of the representatives is any other I
as valuable and potential as that of
can also become the recipient of any office of the State for which 1 may bt
eligible To refuse any man access to authority is a complete denial of his
freedom, because, “unless I enjoy the same access to power as others, I live in an
atmosphere of contingent frustration One who lives in an atmosphere of
any inspiration
frustration has neither in life nor any incentive for it He accepts
his place in society, which accident of birth has given him, ''*s a permanent
condition of his life It is in this way that the faculty of creaturness is lost and
men or a class of men become “animate tools”, which Aristotle described as the
characteristic of the natural slave There can be no equality in a society where a
few are masters and the rest are slaves The principle of equality, accordingly,
moans that w hatever conditions are guaranteed to me, in the form of rights, shall
also, in the same measure, be guaranteed to others, and that whatever rights arc
given to others shall also be given to me The chief characteristic of a right is its
cquaiitarian basis
Equality, like liberty, has a positive connotation as well In this sense, it
12 I-aski, H ,
A (grammar of Politics, p n3
13 Ibid
p 21
14 Ibid p 151
LIBERTY AND EQUALITY 229
either according to their rank or wealth, their political opinions or their religious
beliefs, or if laws arc passed to benefit one class of people at the expense of
another Equality implies that all citizens should be treated alike in the matter of
possession of rights Its basis is equalitarian
implies democracy and adult suffrage But political equality is never real unless it
IS accompanied by economic equality If there are glaring contrasts in the
distribution of wealth, the political life of the country will be manned by those
who have means to foot the election expenses and get themselves elected.
the
When wealth becomes the only criterion for the enjoyment of political rights,
political equality is not possible In such a society sonr.c are born to rule and
others are born to be ruled This is not a democratic ideal, because democracy
rests upon the foundation of the equality of men, irrespective of their station in
15 Cole, G D H ,
Guide to Modern Politico, p 488
230 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAl SCIENCE
himself What the doctrine of natural equality means is that none of those
inequalities is to be recognised by law as creating inequalities in rights The law
must treat all alike, keep all doors open to all, admit of no official predominance
due to anything else but the capacity shown by objective proofs which all may try
to offer It also means that law should work at reducing those inequalities, rather
than perpetuating them, by providing those social and economic opportunities
that equalise chances Natural equality in this context may be to some extent an
ideal rather than an immediate reality, but, the ideal must be taken as both
desirable and realisable, as a guide for immediate practice
5 Economic Equality. There is nothing like absolute economic equality as
Bryce interprets it He said economic equality is “the attempt to expunge all
Economic equality involves sufficiency for all to satisfy their primary needs I
have no right to eat cake, as Laski puts it, “if my neighbour, because of that right,
is compelled to go without bread ” Any social organisation which allows some to
starve quietly and others to have abundance denies to man what enables him to
be a man It produces a society of social decrepits Such a society of unequals,
according to Mathew Arnold, “materializes our upper class, vulganzes our
middle class, brutalizes our lower ” If we want a society of social equals, we can
hope to build it only on a foundation of economic equality The State should,
accordingly, guarantee to all citizens access to the means of satisfying their
primary needs By assuring each man a minimum of sufficiency, the State
guarantees to him all those things without which life is meaningless This
amounts to protecting the weak and limiting the power of the strong
Economic equality, then, means equality to the margin of sufficiency
Beyond the margin of sufficiency inequality is justified, provided it is capable of
explanation in terms of social good “Once urgency is satisfied superfluity
becomes a problem of so fixing the return to service that each man can perform
his function with the maximum return to society as a whole Equality, thus, is
a “problem of proportions ” It implies a certain levelling process in order to
reduce the excessive inequalities of existing fortunes, or to eliminate unnatural
inequalities In a society where every man has an opportunity to satisfy his
primary needs, no one’s personality suffers frustration to the private benefit of
others This is what justice means Where ther6 are great inequalities of fortune,
there is always inequality of treatment and opportunity. It is not possible for
men, says Cole, to be socially or politically equal as long as there exist among
lb Solatu, R H ,
An Introduction io Politics, p 144
1 7 Laski, H ,
A Grammar of Politics, p 159
18 Ibul,
p 159
LIBERTY AND EQUALITY 231
them differences of wealth and income so great as to olvidc them into distinct
economic classes “with widely differing opportunities in childhood to become
healthy, educated, travelled and used to regard the world as a place made to suit
their convenience The slum child is not so healthy as the child whose parents can
afford to give him the privileges of good food and sunlight In the schools, the
children of the poorest classes lag behind those who come from better equipped
homes Secondly, education is still a privilege reserved for a minority selected
mainly on economic grounds And there is a wider difference, for the most part,
between the few who are taught from childhood the arts of command and the
many whose lessons are intended to inculcate rather the duties of obedience and
respect for their betters The real roots of social and political inequality are
mainly economic ’" Economic equality, as explained above, is a panacea for our
social and political ills But can we obtain an equality of the communistic
concept'^ It IS hazardous to conjecture about it It is not obtainable even in the
Soviet Russia of our times, or in any other Communist country
moral freedom, and equality is essential to it, for without equality, the pnee of
liberty for me might be the denial of liberty for you Liberty and equality both go
together m claims to fundamental nghts But the two have -not always and
everywhere been claimed with equal fervour On the whole, the Anglo-Saxons
have seemed to place more emphasis on liberty, while the French have alwavs
sought, hrst and foremost, to secure recognition of the principle of equality This
difference of emphasis may be explained as the result of different political
evolutions or of different national characteristics It is also possible to explain it
by saying that, in reality, one or the other has to be chosen, because the two
demands are really incompatible, that, as Lord Action said, “the passion for
”
equality maices vain the hope of freedom
20 A<(()rding to Baiker the pioblem of ctonomu equality art twofold “It is partly a
nialtri of stains It is partly a matter of property and income ” Barker, E, Principles of Sonal
both what constitutes their freedom and also the means which they will employ
to achieve their end Gk)od means must be adopted for a good end and for the
attainment of liberty a considerable measure of equality is necessary Unres-
trained freedom for every individual to satisfy his appetite for wealth and power
is not the condition of liberty. Whenever and wherever such a freedom has existed
it resulted in the degeneration of the social order Great inequalities make
impossible the attainment of freedom for the less fortunate Those who are
wealthy and possess the means to control the government constitute a class of
vested interests and they use their authonty and privileges for perpetuating
inequalities This hampers the freedom of those who arc deprived of the
opportunities they need for their self-expression and self-development Freedom
means security and security demands the removal of those inequalities that place
theweak at the mercy c£ the strong Equality, which aims to end this glaring
contrast, is, therefore, the true basis of liberty
political glory A society in which there exist gross inequalities in property can
assure neither civil nor political liberty Liberty consists in reciprocity, or, as
Anstotle has said, friendship There can be no friendship, that is, fellow-feeling,
among people having unequal standards of living, education and culture ‘if
libertymeans the power of expansion in human spirit, it is rarely presented save
equals Where there are rich and poor, educated and uneducated,
in a society of
we find always masters and servants " i here can be no liberty for servants who
are ever recipients of orders
21 Tawncy, R H ,
Equalttji,
p 245
IJBERTY AND EQUALITY 233
incompatible with liberty. What he found incompatible was “the passion for
equality.” And if the equahtarian communities, utopian or communist, have
been found unworkable and subjected to criticism, it is because equality is
regarded as an end rather than a means to an end If equality becomes a passion
instead of an instrument, then liberty may be diminished by equahtarian
measures as Marxism suggests
SAFEGUARDS OF LIBERTY
It follows that liberty exists and thnvcs m a democratic State and the
citizens of a democratic State are thinking human
beings fully conscious of their
rights and duties A citizen of a democratic Stale makes an equal contribution
that country has proved to be the unfailing guardian of the rights of the people It
implies independence and impartiality of the judiciary and existence of the Rule
(>! L<iw It the people can sc'cure spcecic and impaitial [usticf and all aie equal
betoK law and the same law is applicable to all and there is nothing which can bc‘
animosity with the latter There must be, on both sides, moderation and the spirit
Liski HJ ,
d (iftimmat of PolitHs, p 104
234 PRINCIPLES OF POUTICAl SCIENCE
of give and take, and agreement to differ, which is really a form of unity “Our
political machinery,” once said Lord Balfour, “supposes a people so fundamcntal-
Iv at one that they can afford to bicker ” The spirit of democracy is infinitely
Freedom, according to Laski, cannot be achieved for the mass of men in the
each should be entrusted to different personnel, and each branch should perform
distinct functions within the sphere of powers assigned to it There are two views,
modem and about the analysis of the doctrine Without going into
traditional,
the relative merits of the two, it can be safely said that the doctrine of Separation
of Powers has become more important today than at any other time The core of
the modem problem of government is to find a synthesis between the need for the
welfare State and the need for freedom The Welfare
State means concentration
of power and ascendancy of the executive over the legislative branch This
development is alarming unless controlling and balancing devices are properly
developed Separation of the organs of government and responsibility and
responsiveness of the government coupled with an independent and impartial
judiciary arc the much needed checks to irresponsible cxere ise* of power
The party system is another safety-valve In a parliamentary system of
government the alteration of political parties is a great restraint on the vagaries of
the government The party in office is fully conscious that tomorrow is the day of
election and they shall have to face the electorate and answer for their acts of
omission and commission Then, there is the party in ofiposition to remind the
government of vulnerability of its position and the weakness of its policies
Lapses of the government are the Opposition’s opportunities and it is always on
the look out to fish loopholes in the transactions of the government to expose and
plague it. Opposition of today is tomorrow s government Then, there is the free
press to ventilate grievances, offer views and comments and even bring to light
hidden secrets of public importance. No
government can afford to remain
oblivious for long of the comments and views expressed in the editorials and
views of well-meaning persons on the national scene appearing in the press, not
even letters to the editor which find a good space in every newspaper.
LIBERTY AND EQUALITY 235
Responsible opposition and free press are indeed the bulwark of liberty of the
people “A government”, says Laski, “that is compelled to explain itself under
cross-examination will do its best to avoid the grounds of complaint Nothing
” ^
makes responsible government so sure
Finally, liberty can best be secured and preserved when the action of the
State IS unbiased It means that the machinery of the State should move
promptly and impartially neither to the advantage of some nor to the
disadvantage of others This ideal, however, is not always possible to be realised
But let It be, once again, repeated that the price of liberty is eternal vigilance and
the secret of liberty is courage If people are vigilant and jealous of their rights,
they will not submit to any illegal interference and biased action of the State If
people have the courage to sacrifice and bear all consequences for the vindication
of their rights, there will be the least violation of their liberty The freedom-
loving spirit of the people, therefore, is the best safeguard of liberty, that is,
liberty exists in the mind and soul of men, or not “There are nations,”
at all
wrote De Tocqueville, “which have tirelessly pursued freedom through every kind
of peril and hardship They loved it, not for its material benefits; they regarded
freedom itself as a gift so precious and so necessary, that no other could console
them for the loss of everything else I attempt no analysis of that great emotion
for those who cannot feel it It enters of its own accord into the generous hearts
God has prepared to receive it, it fills them, them, but to the meaner
it inspires
mind which has never felt it, it is past finding out ” Various constitutional
devices to safeguard liberty are only the external aspects of freedom Love for
Liski H I
i'inliiu itnliii) ni I nuhni//
p 1 }<)
SUGGESTED READINGS
Barker, E Principles of Social and Political Theory, pp 130-67
Barker, E, Reflections on (jocernmenl, Chaps, I, II
enforceable by the machinery of the State backed by the authority of its sovereign
power Whatever is ntjt so enforceable is not law Laws of the State are
applicable to all without exception in identical circumstances There c^n only be
one body of law within the State
We, then, come to the following conclusions First, the general conditions of
human activity which the State prescribes for its members arc called laws
Sex^ondly, a law is law, if it is enacted by a proper law-making authority Thirdly,
law is definite and precise, reference can be made to it, chapter and verse
Fourthly, there can be only one body of law within the State Law is universal in
scope and it is applicable to all without exception in identical circumstances
Finally, laws are enforced by the authority of the State and their violation is
followed by penalties politically determined and applied Once the law has
definitely and finally spoken, there is no appeal except to force A law is,
therefore, known by its finality and manner of enforcement.
236
RELATION BETWEEN THE INDIVIDUAL AND THE STATE— LAW 237
also seems to accord with the citizen’s everyday experience Let us illustrate it
Under the authority of the C’onstitution, Parliament of India makes the law of
income-tax and provides that disobedience to its commands shall be punished by
the fine or imprisonment or both Under it by the
the authority given to
Municipal Act, the Municipal Committee, say, of Patiala, prohibits the parking
of c.ars and other vehicles in certain congested areas and prescribes the
punishment for violation of its bye-law Both these cases answer to the Austmian
formula
Austin’s dcKtrme has been subjected to unsparing attacks His critics ask,
that Austin was a lawyer and his theory is a legal theory. He discovers in the
State a person or body of persons which, in the last resort, has the dc jure right to
issue commands and fix punishment for violation of such commands “But he
does not claim that legal right is tantamount to actual power, that form and
substance are the same ” He is not oblivious that the electorate, when one exists,
does impose limitations on the legal sovereign. In fact, he points out that
‘
m any
State, even when the government is autocratic, the sovereign is restrained by the
defer to ‘the principles and maxims’ held by the
opinions of the people and must
1
bulk of them or by the most influential portion.”* The mam defect of Austin was,
as Sait says, that “he erred in thinking of the influence of masses as negative
rather than positive ” Law must be the expression of the will of the people, if it
can adequately serve its purpose Moreover, the Analytical School makes law
rigid. It IS the letter of the law which must be followed and there is nothing to
lubricate its application It also breeds conservatism, as it docs not cater to the
needs of the people and the times Nor does it run into the past to establish its
natural evolution Gettcll has correctly said that “Analytical jurists tend to
regard the law as static rather than progressive, and they are not interested in its
executed It is not the deliberate creation of the law-maker, but the result of the
slow development of society through centuries The function of the State is not to
create law, but to realise and enforce it Lc[^islation can be effective only when it
1 Coker, F W ,
Recent Political Thought, p 503
2 Gettcll, R G ,
Introduction to Political Science,
p 179
3 The Story of Ijiw, p 27
RELATION BETWEEN THE INDIVIDUAL AND THE STATE —LAW 239
School have always considered law as an abstraction and based it upon abstract
ethical principles of justice A law, as such, is removed from objectivity whereas it
worth living All of us are conscious of these rules of life which enable society to
4 l^ski, HJ ,
Grammar of Politics, p 51
PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Krabbe explains law according to the source from which it springs It is the
sum total of all those rules, general or particular, written or unwritten, “which
spring from men’s feeling or sense of right ” He holds that law is above and, in
origin, independent of the State He rejects the idea of State sovereignty and the
only theory which he is willing to recognize is the sovereignty of law Krabbe
defines law as “the expression df one of the many judgments of value which we
human beings make, by virtue of our disposition and nature.” Law is, therefore,
what IS justand good from our standard of value and judgment It is not a matter
of external legal authority, but an internal human matter It is obeyed, because it
IS just and good and not because of fear of punishment which its disobedience
law which has, as its icsults, the maximum possible satisfaction of desire, and no
”
law save a good law is, except in a formal sense, entitled to obedience as such
He, thus, puts the source of law where it most tnily belongs—in the individual
consenting mind
Jurists of the Scx-iological School hold divergent \ieus on many points, but
all believe that law is the product ol social forces <Tnd should serve social needs
They do not concern themselves with the abstract theories, but judge the law bv
us results and find its sanction in the social needs that it serves “The legal
imperatises of anv state”, savs Laski, “must always be conceived if they are to be
capable of justification, in terms of the end it seeks to seive, they are so to say, a
permanent essay in the conditional mood” without any resers'ation, the
Sociologists attack the idea of a sovereign state as the creator of law It is possible,
they point out, to conceive of a State in which there is law and no State, but it is
laws in order to achieve the sex tally desirable ends Gettel has cogently summed
up what and explain He says, “In
the different Schcxils of Jurisprudence claim
contrast to the analytical who found the sanction of law in the command
jurist,
of the State, to the philosophical jurists, who found its sanction in its inherent
justice, and to the historical jurist, who found its sanction in established habits
and custom, the scx'iological jurist finds the sanction of law in the social needs
and interests that it servs **
Laski, H I ,
IfUrodiKlion io FulUia,
p 45
(idle I, R (; , Introduction to Pithtual Sciemc,
p 181
RELATION BETWEEN THE INDIVIDUAL AND TOE SIATE -LAW 241
principles of social justice or the result of habits and customs or the social needs it
serves. It is, on the contrary, merely an expression of the will of the State, the
expression of the materia) form ol life in that State, and in a class society it
There an element of truth in what Marx says, but it is not the whole truth.
is
The Marxian view of law does not accept other refinements connected with the
State and law Moreover, law for Marx is a vehicle for destroying Capitalism and
constructing Socialism As soon as it achieves its purpose the State “withers
away” We
do not accept this conclusion For us, the State is the life-breath of
human existence and whatever shape a government may take, the State shall ever
endure Its laws hold society together for the promotion and achievement of the
all-round happiness of man
Conclusion. Our conclusion regarding the nature of law is related to the
rational needs of man in the State No single theory adequately explains the
concept of law There is what each School of Jurisprudence
substantial truth in
advocates Law is not entirely a command human supenor
of the determinate
and based upon force Nor can the sovereign command and enforce anything
which IS repugnant to the will of the community It would be also wrong to say
that all law finds its origin in the customary behaviour of the people and the
sovereign can command and enforce nothing which is not acceptable to the
masses A customary law is stationary and it does not cater to the needs of the
people and the realities of human life Its source is the antiquated past and
out-moded customs If law is to really serve its purpose, it must be a progressive
and expanding force and able to adjust i.'clf according to the social, moral,
religious and economic needs of the people The Jurists of all Schools now
generally regard law as the instrument of human welfare They consider not only
what the laws are, but also what effects they have produced in the past, how they
operate today, and how they may be improved by deliberate human effort.
What a law may order and what it may prohibit is what appears to us just and
unjust, good and bad But if law is to be obeyed by all, there must be some
compulsion it Compulsion has two aspects, physical and ethical
behind
compulsion The physical compulsion is to be found in the organised force of
government But the root of obedience to law is not coercion, it is the will to obey.
It cannot, however, be denied that law takes the form of an imperative.^ It is an
imperative in the sense that it must be obeyed by all and in order that it must be
obeyed by all, it should be accompanied by physical compulsion Even the
pluralists admit the compulsive nature of law, provided it coincides with the
7 Maciver, R. M ,
The Modem StaU, p 21
PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
sense of the term But when the State recognizes these customary rules as binding,
they acquire the status of law No State can afford to ignore the customs of the
land, not even conquerors who impose new legal systems on defeated countries If
it does, the people who follow these customs will revolt against the authority of
the State “In the great book of law”, says Maciver, “the State merely writes new
sentences and here and there scratches out an old one
book was Much ot the
never written by the State at all, and by all of it the State itself is bound, save as
It modifies the code from generation to generation The State can no more
reconstitute at any time the law as a whole than a man can remake his
body ”'‘’The common law ofEngland consists mainly of customs and the courts
take due cognizance of it Customary law is also an integral part of the legal
framework in India
Religion. In the primitive community custom was law and law was
religion Law and religion were so inextricably mixed up that the rules of life had
a religious sanction The institution of, first, the magician and, then, the
pricst-king, m the early stages of the development of the State, is a clear
8 . Ibtd.pm
9 Woodrow Wilson, The State, pp 69-70
10 Maciver, R. M ,
The Modem State, p 478
RELATION BETWEEN THE INDIVIDUAL AND THE STATE— LAW 243
the proper carrying out of certain religious formulas”" The most influential
basis of the Hindu Law in India is the code of Manu The Mohammedan Law
derives itself from the Koran and now forms the basis of
the Shariat Islamic law
the legal system of the Islamic Republic of Iran and Pakistan is replacing the
prevailing laws by those ordained by the Koran and evolving an Islamic
Jurisprudence President Zia*ul-Haq recently promulgated an ordinance replac-
ing the Wealth tax and agncultuie produce laws by Zakat and Usnr Religion,
Iliiis IS an important, and in some the only source of law, in Muslim countiies
3 Judicial Decisions. Gettel says that the State “arose not as the creator of
law, but as the interpreter and enforcer of customs When men live in society
disputes are sure to arise In primitive society disputed points were referred to the
wisest men in the community and and made
their decisions were accepted
precedents for similar cases When became more complex and
social organisation
tribes intermixed either for the purpose ol tiade or matrimony, conflict of
customs became moie usual At that time the necessity was felt to supplement
custom by interpretation Whenever custom failed to give a just solution or was
obviously not suited to the case the dispute was decided according to common-
sense Such decisions became judicial precedents In the beginning they were oral
and unwritten and passed from generation to generation by tradition But in
order to make them more definite they were later reduced to writing In Britain,
before the rise of Parliament, judges went on circuit and were responsible for
evolving uniformity in the law By comparing decisions and by basing new
dec isions on preceding ones, they developed the Common law
This was not a characteristic only of early law In our own times a judge,
while applying the law, interprets it, and in doing so he modifies or explains it
claboiate the existing law and make itclear where it is ambiguous In this pro-
cess they express their opinions as to what the law ought to be and its effect on
society On and the present law, they are able to arrive at
the basis of the past
general principles which may guide future legislation and indicate in broad lines
the gaps that need filling in The opinions of the commentators are not decisions.
They aie only arguments When these arguments are repeatedly recognized, they
amount to accepted decisions To sum up “The commentator, by collecting,
1 1Woodrow Wilson, The State, p 71 “In early Rome, pontiff and judge were one
and jurispnidcnce was rerumedivmarun atque hamanarum notitia Religious observance was an
integral part of that serial order which it was incumbent on the state to maintain and
defend ” MacIver, R M ,
The Modem State, p 101
12 Gettel, R G ,
Introduction to Political Science, p, 171
244 PRINCIW.Eh OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
comparing, and logically arranging principles, customs, decisions and laws, lays
down guiding principles for possible cases He shows the omissions and deduces
principles to govern them.”
not provide any relief, principles of equity are applied and cases are decided
according to commonsense or fairness Moreover, positive law, with the lapse of
time, becomes unsuitable for new and changed social conditions To make it
suitable, either the law should be changed by the law-making authority, or there
should be some informal method of changing it Equity is an informal method
of making new law or altering old law, depending on intrinsic fairness or equality
of treatment Thus, equity is intended to provide relief where the existing law
affords none It aims at securing equality or |ustire and it isbased on what earlier
writers used to describe as the law of nature, that is, law guided by reason
The Henry Maine, is open
interference of equity with law, according to Sir
and avowed Equity not only supplements law, but it also makes law flexible. It
IS an mformal method of making new law and altenng the old one Equity, too, is
a kind of judge-made law. But there is one important difference between the two.
In case-law, the judge interprets the existing law In equity, he adds to the law
what is missing therein and creates a new one in order to make it suitable for the
changed conditions. Equity, in bnef, includes such principles as the following —
“Equity will not suffer a wrong to be without a remedy
He who seeks equity must do equity
Delay defeats equity
Equality is equity
”
Equity looks to the intent rather than to form
Legislation is, now, the most prolific and direct source of law Law is
regarded as the expression of the will of the people and the will of the people is
formulation
Woodrow Wilson has beautifully expressed his views on the process of the
development of law. He says, “Custom is the earliest fountain of law but religion
18 a contemporary, an equally prolific, and in the same stages of national
13 Maine, H ,
Ancunt Law, p 28
RELATION BETWEEN THE INDIVIDUAL AND THE STATE— LAW 245
people The former is called the Constitutional Law and the latter the
Ordinary Law.
Constitutional Law. Constitutional Law is fundamentally distinct from
Ordinary Law According to Dicey it includes “all rules which directly or
indirectly affect the distribution or the exercise of power in the State”, and which
“are enforced by the courts” Constitutional Law defines the organisation of the
State, determines the functions exercised by different departments of govern-
ment, and establishes the relationship between the rulers and the ruled.
Constitutional Law may be either written or unwritten It may be the result of
the deliberate effort of a body— like the Constituent Assembly especially
convened for the purpose— or it may be the product of history and may consist
largely in a mass of customs, usages, and judicial decisions, as in Britain Since
the whole of the Constitutional Law cannot be unwritten, a part of it may consist
of laws passed by the Legislative Assembly of the country and enacted from time
to time
Ordinary Law. The State is both the child and the parent of law The
constitutional and the ordinary laws have different characters and have different
sanctions Ordinary law is made and enforced by the competent authorities of the
State, and it determines the relations of the citizens to the State and to one
another The courts take cognizance of this law alone, apply it in deciding cases
of dispute, and the government enforces obedience to their decisions
Ordinary Law may, for proper comprehension, be divided into Public Law
and Private Law
made by the State for and on behalf of the community It determines, “within its
range,” as Mclver says, “not so much the order d* the State as the order of
society ” The State punishes the offender against it, using, if necessary, the force
of Its authority
Public Law may further be sub-dividcd into Administrative Law and General
Law Administrative Law defines in detail the manner in which the government
through Its vanous organs exercises the powers that are conferred upon it by the
Constitutional Law In the narrower sense, it is that part of Public Law which
fixes the organization and determines the competence of organs that administer
the law, and indicates to the individual remedies for the violation of his
rights*^ There prevail two systems to deal with cases arising between private
14 Gcttd, R G ,
IntroducUon to Political Science, pp 184-85
246 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
individuals and officers of the government acting in their official capacity. One is,
enjoyment of his nghts. In Pnvate Law, sometimes termed civil law, the parties
concerned are private persons and the State is the arbiter The Stale, however,
does not regulate all the relations among persons, but only those which m its
The following table has been borrowed from Macivei It shows the
classification of the types of law
POLITICAL LAW
1 I
CONSTITUTIONAL ORDINARY
Determining the organic Determining the relations of
character of the State citizens and association of
citizens with the Stale and
one another
PUBLIC PRIVATE
Determining the relation Determining the relation
of citizens to the State of citizens to one another
I 1
ADMINISTRATIVE GENERAL
Determining the relation Determining the relation of
of officials to the State private citizens to the State
opinion arc of such social importance as to need legal regulation, for example,
laws concerning property, contract, marriage, and torts. This is how Holland
distinguishes Private Law from Public Law. “In Private Law,” he says, “the
parties concerned are private individuals above and between whom stands the
State as an impartial arbiter In Public Law also the State is present as an arbiter,
although It is at the same time one of the parties interested.”
Municipal Law is an ancient term which means the law of a particular State
and Public Law and Private Law, combined together, arc called Municipal Law,
though we prefer to call it National Law In contrast to the Municipal or
National Law there is also a body of rules which regulate relations between States
and It IS called International Law We shall deal with this kind d* law in the
following Chapter
the promotion df general welfare and moral perfection of man in society. It exists
for attaining those moral values which enable man to make the best of himself. In
simple words, every State endeavours to promote those physical and social
conditions which are necessary for the expression and development of a free
moral personality The actions of the State have, accordingly, an integral
connection with the moral end of man and an ideal system of law would
probably embody and enforce the highest ethical standards So intimate is the
connection between the two that ancient writers confused law with morality.
Distinction between Law and Morality. But a definite line of demarcation
can be drawn between the two Law and morality differ from one amothcr m
content, sanction and definiteness Morality embraces the whole life of man, his
thoughts and motives as well as his actions Law is concerned only with the
outward acts of man and has nothing to do with his thoughts and motives; it is
But, if I inflict an injury on the person of some one in a fit of anger or abuse and
defame him publicly, through spoken or written words, my action is against the
law of the State and 1 can be punished for a breach of the law
Law is enforced by the government and its disobedience is visited with
punishment Behind it is the sanction of force. The violation of a rule of morality,
on the other hand, does not mean physical punishment, although it may mean
social disapprobation,which may be severer in consequences than even physical
punishment. Moral condemnation may socially damn a person, but it docs not
mean physical punishment The sanction behind morality is that of public
censure Law is, thus, a matter of force and morality is the subject of conscience,
A law remains a law, whether we like it or not It is law even if it is immoral and
we have to obey it.
Law is universal in character. There can only be one body of law within the
State and applicable to all, without exception, in identical circumstances.
Morality is individual and it differs from man to man. My morality differs from
my the imperative of the individual’s heart or his conscience The
s(Mi’s; it is
ethical appeal is always to the individual’s own sense of what is right or wrong
and, in the last resort, to his sense of what good and evil This sense of right or
is
wrong may appear to be “the product of custom and social training, but as a
principle of conduct it is the ‘self-legislating’ of a responsible person, choosing in
the consciousness of his own liberty the means and ends of welfare i*' Again, law
with chapter and verse given, because of its universality Morality is characterised
by a certain amount of vagueness and uncertainty because of its individuality, it
may even differ from man to man
Moral laws prescribe absolute standards of nght or wrong, justice and
injustice.But law follows standards of expediency What a law prohibits may not
be an immoral act Driving on the right is a social danger and is prohibited by
law. But It is not immoral, though it is illegal There are many things which may
be immoral and yet not To
on the race-course or to play poker in a
illegal bet
club may be immoral, but neither of the two
is illegal There is, thus, a legal
conscience as well as a moral conscience, and they do not always coincide I'he
State makes some laws which are based upon expediency and convenience rather
than on the standards of morality Likewise, laws of the State may take no
cognizance of moral rights The State guarantees only the enjoyment of civil
nghts It IS my moral duty to support and serve my parents, since parents possess
a moral right to demand this much consideration from their children If I am not
alive to my moral duty and prove an undutiful son, the laws of the State cannot
force me to become dutiful There is nothing to coerce me legally
It will, thus, be clear that law does not and cannot cover all the ground of
morality. “To turn all moral obligations into legal obligations would be to
destroy morality Nor can the State dictate morality, for State-dictated
morality is no morality For example, a law may be enacted ordering every
citizen to go cither to a gurdwara or a mosque or a mandir every morning If I
disobey the law, I can be forced to obey it But it does not mean become a
that I
moral man by going to a religious place Morality is the subject of conscience and
a matter of conviction It cannot be forced upon anyone
Affinity between Law and Morality. These are some glanng points of
difference between law and morality Nevertheless, there is a close connection
between the two, as the State is founded on the minds of the citizens, who are
moral agents^** A bad means a bad State since its laws do not mould and
citizen
shape him to be a good citizen “The best State,” according to Plato, “is that
which is nearest in virtue to the individual If any part ol the body politic suffers,
the whole body suffers.” This organic view of the State was the essence of Greek
political philosophy Modem political thought also believes that the individual
and the State are inherently connected, both act and react upon each other Man
can be at his best only within the State, without the State he is nothing It is a
natural and rational institution Its purposes are moral and the laws of the State
18 Maciver, R M ,
T/if Modern State, p 55
19 Ihtd, p 157
20 Gilchnst, R N ,
Principles of Political Science,
p 172
RELATION BETWEEN THE INDIVIDUAL AND THE S’* ATE— LAW 249
set the standard of morality. As an Indian adage goes ^as the King so are the
subjects Similarly, ideas of right and wrong, which represent the ethical
standards of the people, affect the laws of the State, in their turn, and its actions.
The State, thus, performs a direct function in relation to morality
and it
takes two forms, positive and negative The positive function of the State is to
make laws which are conducive to the general happiness and are in accordance
with the moral beliefs and sentiments of all sections of the community. For
instance, untouchability is prohibited by the Constitution and in pursuance of
this prohibition the Government of India has enacted legislation making its
practice a penal offence. It is a moral sin to differentiate between man and man
simply because of accident of birth Similarly, it adds to the moral stature of men
and society, if the laws of the State make drinking a penal offence When the
State repeals a bad law either by itself or as a result of public protest, it performs
a negative function Since our standards of nght and wrong change, so laws too
must change in conformity to such changes Suttee and Thugee were declared
illegal acts as they did not accord with our changed standards of virtues or values.
So close IS the affinity between law and morality that “the margin between
the illegal and the immoral is not always clear
“ The illegality of today may
become the immorality of tomorrow and vice versa. “Wc regard the State,” as
Maciver has said, “as the condition of morality The State and law continually
affect both public opinion and actions, in its turn law reflects public opinion and
thus acts as the index of moral progress ”’2 Sometimes laws precede the public
demand, and are made before their utility has been fully grasped The Hindu
Marriage Law in India was enacted at a time when public opinion in its favour
was not well advanced In fact, there was violent opposition to it, though its
social value could not be denied In the last analysis the sanction behind both law
and morality is public opinion
Law and Public Opinion. If law is to be the expression of the will of the
people. must conform to public opinion If public opinion demands the repeal
It
or enactment of any law the Government and for that matter the legislature
cannot afford to brush aside the demand for long The representatives of the
people, who make the legislature, know that they have ultimately to appeal to the
electorate after the expiry of their legal term of office If their actions are not
approved by the electors at the general election, theije is no chance of their
But this is not the entire appraisal of the relationship between law and
public opinion If the relationship between the two is to be really organic, then,
law should precede as well as succeed public opinion or, as Dr P. S Muhar puts
it, “law should be not only firmly rooted in public opinion but should be a little
ahead of it
” PS Muhar aptly cites the example of the law abolishing suttee in
21 YATHA RAJA TATHa PRAIA
22 Maciver R M The Modern State, pp
,
153-54
23 “Public Opinion . Its Nature, Limitations and Conditions for Expression.”
Bulletin of the Institute of Public Administration, Patna University, September 24, 1956.
250 PRINCIPLES OF POLITIGAL SCIENCE
India an^says, “If Lord William Bentinck had taken only public opinion for his
guide whitn he abolished suttee in 1835, he would have had to wait much longer
for his great social reform.” Law must also be normative, if the State is to be the
ideal of the aspirations of its people.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Allen, C K l.<aw in the Making
Amos, S Science of Politics, Chap XII
Bodenhcimcr, E Jurisprudence The Philosophy and Method of Law
Brown, JW The Austmian Theory of Law
Bryce, J Studiei in History andJunspruderue, Nos II, XI-XVI
Cohen, Morris Law and the Social Order
External aspect of the State. PohiKal Science deals not only with the internal
organisation ol the Stale, but with its external relations as well Every State is,
sovereignty is unlimited over all persons and associations within its territorial
limits Nevertheless, no State can have an independent and secluded existence
All Stales are banded together in a variety of ways Mutual intercourse between
them IS primarily due to certain natural causes Nature has not willed man to be
self-sufficient Dependence is his very psychology What is true of man is also
true oi States, for it is the people who make the State and the State exists for the
people If mutual intercourse between States is not recognised and established,
The relations between States demand their regulation in the same way as
man subjects himself to certain rules of conduct m his dealings with his
fellow -citizens 2 In the beginning, the rules of conduct between States were
rudimentai 7 and not uniform in character Now there is an increasing tendency
to conform them to a definite code of conduct Uniformity and definiteness are
necessitated by the greater economic and social interdependence of peoples oi
nations Without such rules there would be confusion and chaos and all causes of
disputes would have to be settled by the arbitrament of war
International Law. The pnnciples and rules which States observe in their
dealings with one another are called International Law International Law is
defined as the system which orders the relations between States and governs their
relations with one another It binds them to mutually agreed and recognised
principles and rules governing the rights of the States m relation to one another
and presenbes a procedure by which those rights can be protected and, m the
event of violation, redressed Sovereign States are subject of Inicrnational Law
and scope extends to the acquisition and meaning of Statehood, the rules and
Its
251
252 PRINCIPLES OF political SCIENCE
of war. The law of Statehood deals with the legal personality of the
State and its rights, duties and privileges. The
and procedures of peaceful
rules
international intercourse include the law of diplomacy, the law of treaties and the
law of pacific settlement of international disputes. The law of war deals initially
with the legal concepts of belligerency and neutrality In addition, the law of war
covers rules for the conduct of waifare relating to population, prisoners of war,
prohibition of certain weapons, and similar matters.
But how far these principles, which constitute the content of International
Law, are binding on the States and how do we reconcile such regulations with the
sovereignty of the State are important questions to decide German writers, for
example, Hegel, Jcllinek, and Trictschke, while admitting that Stales are bound
in honour and good faith by the terms of international law and treaty
obligations, maintain that they are not legal obligations The States, they
contend, voluntarily subject themselves to international obligations, and there is
nothing to force their obedience Tnetschke upholds the right of every State to
declare war and to repudiate its treaties Hitler, too, declared unequivocally that
treaties were nothing more than mere scraps of paper The sanction of
international law, they say, is auto-limitation which can be withdrawn at the will
of the State. “The subject of international law,” says Tnetschke, “being
sovereign States subject to no legal superior, they are the judges in the last
analysis of their own rights and of their obligations to other States ”
apply to it the phrase Law is to some extent mislead ing,”^ Similarly, Lord
Coleridge observed in The Queen v. Keyn (1876) “Strictly speaking interna-
:
kept m mind Law implies a law-giver, and a tribunal capable of enforcing it and
coercing its transgressors But there is no common law-giver to sovereign States,
and no tribunal has the power to bind them by decree or coerce them if they
irans gross.”
But modem writers accept international Law as law in the real sense of the
term They regard Austin’s theory of sovereignty in its international relations as
“not only a legal fiction but a baneful and dangerous dogma which ought to be
abandoned, and that notion should be expunged from the literature of
international law ” It is asserted that sovereignty of the State does not imply that
the States cannot mutually agree to follow certain rules of conduct for common
safetyand well-being Chief Justice Marshall, of the United States Supreme
Court, recognized the absolute and exclusive authority of the State over all
persons and things within its territory But he admitted that considerations of
mutual benefit and advantage in practice made necessary “a relaxation of that
absolute and complete jurisdiction which sovereignty is said to confer ’’‘i
Law is
not always the command of a determinate human superior There are various
other sources of law too No one can and the
ignore the influence of customs
common law Common Nor do
law does not emanate from the legislature
customs Moreover, law must adjust itself to the social needs of the community.
International Law is the result of the expienence of ages, and its rules have been
evolved and accepted as governing the conduct of States in times of war and
peace
People do not obey laws merely for tear of punishment Even in the presence
of the coercive authority of the State positive laws are disobeyed every day by
scores of people Violation of laws docs not mean that they lose their significance
as laws The sanction of all laws goes back to public opinion The sanction of
International Law, too, has the same basis as the s£uiction of ordinary law It is
3 As quoted in Garner J W ,
Poltltcal Science and Government, p 193
4 Sc hoone" Exchange \ Me Fadaon {18\2)
L>)4 l‘RIN( !!*l I S OF l‘()l ITIC‘ \I s{ II N( E
material a^rounds, though not on these alone, they value the friendship of their
fellows, above all, they realise that grossly illegal conduct may inflame foreign
opinion and lead to the vicarious enforcement of their obligations ” Even if it is
admitted that absence of authority to enforce its orders is the weakest point in the
nature of International Law, and States have very often flouted its prescriptions
by their wilful actions, still, absence of sufficient authority to enforce the
provisions of International Law oi its deliberate violation by some States does not
mean that it ceases to be law real and proper As a matter of fact, even the
ordinary statute law is obeyed chiefly because of social sanctions operating
through public opinion and, where these are absent or weak, is honoured more in
authoritiesand precedents are quoted as in courts of law Finally, there are courts
in every country which try prize cases in accordance with the provisions of
International Law Sir Henry Maine and othen have shown that there have been
systems of law which were enforced independently of the State or its courts of
law
World opinion is now veering round the point that the individual ma) be
given an international status by accepting him as a subject of Inteniational Law-
and consequently make his rights enforceable against his own government The
United Nations Declaration of Human Rights may be considered the harbinger
of such a move and if it succeeds, at no distant date an international bill of rights
will take concrete shape Lauterpacht says in this regard, “As a result of Charter
of United Nations as well as other changes m International Law— the individual
has acquired a status and a stature which has transformed him from an object of
international compassion into a subject of international rights ” This apart, the
Nuremberg trial and punishment of Germans guilty of international enmes, has
given a new dimension to the nature and scope of International Law
International criminal law has now emerged as an effective instrument to punish
those guilty of heinous international crimes
The only baffling point in this context is that although all civilised States
have accepted rules of International Law as binding upon them, yet they are
enforced by every State according to its own moral standard or convenience And
the moral standard of every State is influenced by the economic and political
tendencies of the world as a whole and the expediency of the State concerned
Some States make a bid for world power and they enforce the principles of
International Law according to their own convenience If all the States were to
pledge themselves scrupulously to the accepted principles of International Law
and adhere to its ideals, much international hostility can be avoided and the
controversy whether International Law is a law or not becomes futile
First Period— To the beginning of the Roman Empire. India knew much of
International Law when the rest of the world was in a state of barbarism. In the
post-Vedic period there existed a regular code according to which wars were
declared and fought, treaties and alliances negotiated and concluded, and
ambassadors accredited In the European countries among the earliest peoples,
about whom History gives us authentic information, there were no mutual laims i
and duties except between the communities which were bound to one another by
bonds of common descent and common language There was perpetual hostility
6 InUmatwml Law, p 14
2^6 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
between tribes alien to one another, and “war was declared without ceremony
and carried on without mercy.” ’The Greeks even regarded their neighbours as
“barbarians” to whom they owed no duties. The vanquished were rendered slaves
and Aristotle too supported the institution of slavery. The real contribution of the
Greeks was the Maritime Code, that is, rules governing inter-state commerce.
They also, in a rudimentary way, recognised “the law of mankind”, which
established a vague system of the protection of envoys, obligations of alliances and
sanctity This contribution of the Greeks, though negligible, is
of treaties
regarded by Gilchrist as tangible, which helped the development of International
Law^
I'he Romans, too, before they became an Empire, occupied the same
isolated position as the Greeks But in the early period of Rome’s Republican
History there existed laws called jus fetiale The jus fetiale contained precepts
about war and peace and was enforced by a semi-religious college But the real
contribution of Rome in the development of International Law was the jus
gentium or law of nations The jus gentium was a code of regulations applied to
the dcalmgs of citi/ens belonging to different nations It took its name, most
probably, from the fact that its rules were presumed to consist of principles of
conduct common to the laws of all nations.
8 Gilchrist, R N ,
PrmcipUi of Political Scunce, p 178
REI AT IONS BETWFFN STATES 257
Here is the modern idea of the State, sovereign both in its external and
internal aspects, and it is on this basis that modern International Law has
developed Grotius built on the universally accepted theory of the law of
his thesis
a souiec of international law The first and the most prominent among them
was Hugo Grotius His bcK>k, On the Law of War and Peace, exercised enormous
influenc'con the external dealings of ail the States Then follows a long list of able
lawyers, like Byn Ker Shock, Wolf, Vattel, Kent, Wheaton, Manning, Woolscy,
Westlake, Lawrence and Hall who are usually recognised as authorities on
International Law, and statesmen’of all times have accepted their opinion as
authorities It must be noted that the mere opinion of any individual writer has,
by no binding force. Nevertheless, the opinions of eminent jurists carry a
Itself,
great forceand it is customary to cite them as authorities Kent says, “In cases
where the principal jurists agree, the presumption will be very great in favour of
258 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
the solidity of their maxims; and no civilised nation that does not arrogantly set
all ordinary law and justice at defiance will venture to disregard the uniform
sense of the established writers on International Law.”
Treaties, Alliances and Conventions. Treaties, conventions and alliances,
either for commercial or political purposes, form an important source of
International Law Treaties are compacts entered into by States, wherein the
cdntracting States agree to dbserve given rules of conduct in their intercourse
with one another They arc concluded either m
accordance with the existing rules
of International Law, or some new rules mutually agreed upon, modifying the
previous ones When most of the States become parties to such a treaty,
convention or alliance, they tend to create an International Law The most
important treaties that form sources of International Law deal with questions of
territory, like the treaties of Westphalia (1648), Utrecht (1713), Pans (1763), or
the transfer of sovereign nghts, as the treaties of Varsailles (1783), and Pans
(1856), or conduct to be observed during war by both belligerent and neutral
countries The examples of the latter are the Geneva Convention (1864) and the
Brussels Conference (1890)
Municipal Law. In the Municipal Law of every State may be found germs
of International Law The Municipal Law of every country regulates the
questions of citizenship and naturalisation, neutrality, tariffs, extradition,
diplomatic and consular services, etc All these subjects are of international
interest and the decisions on these questions art cited as precedents in
these threads
Charter also contains a similar provision The prouncements of the Court are
treated by nations as authoritative, and are taken as correct interpretation of the
present state of International Law Though the Court does not regard itself as
bound by precedent, in fact it considerably relies on its own prior judgments and
opinions
RELATIONS BETWEEN STATES 259
tional usage Often such opinions are regarded as confidential, but the United
States, Britain and other countries with democratic governments publish a
greater part of their foreign correspondence Instructions issued by the States for
the guidance of their foreign service representatives and to commanders of armed
growth of International Law The French Marine
forces arc also valuable in the
Ordinance of 1861 formed the basis of Prize law The “Instructions for the
Guidance of the Armies of the United States in the Field” (1863) exercised a great
influence in adopting more humane methods of warfare
officials designated by the State to represent it are distinctly acts of the State, for
which the State is held responsible
The area of State jurisdiction extends to the area in which the national laws
of a State have effect and embraces its whole territory, except where it has
extended immunity to diplomats of other countries. The State controls the seas,
“territorial waters” for three miles off its coasts and ail ships within those waters
fall in Its general province, save for crimes committed on board the ship. Foreign
ships in ports have only limited immunity. Rivers flowing through or between
more than one Lawrence or Rhine, are not open to the ships
State, such as the St.
of all States Some of these intematicmal rivers, like the Danube, have been
2(S0 PRINCIPI ES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
International Private Law deals with the rights and obligations involved when
individuals claim in one State rights acquired under the laws of another These
rules cover the validity of foreign marriages and divorces, wills, contracts, etc But
the Nuremberg trials of Germans, after the Second World War, in which
individuals were held to account for actions of States, indicate that individuals
are accountable to International Law
The scope of International Law, therefore, extends to equal and sovereign
States in no way subordinate to any other All stand on a footing of equality so
far as their status of statehood is concerned “No principle of law is more
universally acknowledged,” said Chief Justice Marshall, “than the perfect
equality of nations Russia and Geneva have equal rights It results from this
equality that no one can nghtfully impose a rule on another ” In outlining the
scope and dnision of the relations among States, distinction should be made
between the normal rights and obligations that exist in times of peace and the
exceptional rights and obligations that exist in times of war The first are called
the laws of peace and the second the rules of war The rules of war necessitate
consideration of relations between actual belligerents, and the relations between
the belligerents and neutrals A more comprehensive division of the contents of
International Law is
The laws of peace embrace the nghts and obligations concerning the
independence and equality of the States They also include a discussion of the
territorial limits of jurisdiction, the relation of a State to the adjacent waters of its
coast and other allied problems With this are connected the jurisdiction and
responsibility of a State with reference to its citizens living within the State or
abroad, rules governing aliens and principles of naturalisation Finally, there are
the rules of intercourse of States These cover the rights and duties of officials
attached to foreign offices, organization and procedures of international confer-
as the State itself In the ancient past these contacts and relationships had been
regional rather than world-wide, because communications were imperfect and
the scramble for the inadequate and inelastic means of sustenance were keen A
new era opened with the progress of modem science and its application to
industry and transport The nineteenth century revolutionised the relations of
peoples It rapidly made of the world a single economic whole followed by
international intellectual co-operation International economic and intellectual
interdependence and co-operation naturally brought about an extension of
governmental co-operation During the present century the process has, in spite of
forebodings and setbacks, developed by leaps and bounds and now inter-State
relations are at the core of the problem of international politics
foremost to dely the rational demands of international amitv If there had been
no major war since the World II, there had been quite a good number of minor
wars and tensions and conflicts are the order of the day making wav for cold or
hot war
Attempts have been made, from time to time, to evolve a scheme of an ideal
society harmony and chances of
wherein should reign perfect mter-State
irritants, conflicts and war should not exist anv more But no one has ever
suggested why should tension and conflicts take place and States go to war at all,
what are the basic factors that determine the international behaviour and
attitudes of the States, and whv whould they vary' from time to time These issues
determine the foreign policy of a State and a band of intellectuals of
international relations have made it a specialised area of their study and
investigations They have adopted scientific tools of analytical study to interpret
the facts of international politics,examine and analvse the forces and piessures
that shape the foreign policy of a state and changes it involves from time to time
Their approach is not utopian, as in the past but objective and matter of fact
They deal with bare realities and not idealism and as Carr says, it is a
\cnous and critical analytical thought about international problems
Hobhouse, I^ T ,
Liberalism, p p 43-44
10 C F Dry den, “Art thou a statesman
••
”
And canst not be a hypocrite Impossible
! 1 Carr H ,
—the Twenty Years of ihsis, 1919-1939, p 9
262 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
But they do not go to war always History is full of examples when disputes
between contending States had been settled by the mediation of a third party
During the mediaeval period and early modem times, when the theory of a
common superior still persisted, disputes were very often referred to the Pope by
the contesting parties for his arbitration. There was no international organisation
which could provide machinery for an amicable settlement of international
disputes These conditions continued till the nineteenth century By that time
warfare had become highly mechanised and a costly venture. War also brought
about untold misery not only for the belligerent States, but for the neutral
It meant dislocation of their economy, for the countries of the
countries as well
world had become, after the industrial revolution, inter-dependent hnanciall)
and commercially A strong premium, accordingly, was put on any method of
settling quarrels without actual war began to be
International arbitration
resorted to even w'^hen questions of great magnitude were involved Between the
United States and Great Britain arbitration was repeatedly employed especially
boundary lines as in 1827 and 1846
for the rectification of The most important
arbitrationwas with respect to the Alabama case which ended in the aw^ard of a
compensation of $15,500,000 to the United States It is estimated that in the
nineteenth century over a hundred important cases were decided through the
medium of arbitration
A further development in international relations can fx* seen in the attempt
to constitute a permanent tribunal for the settlement of disputes and conclusion
o.' treaties between vanous States, binding them to refer their disputes to this
tnbunal A
conference was convened at The Hague in 1899 and u was agreed to
establish a permanent court of arbitration Although it w'as not obligators upon
the signatory' powers to refer their disputes to the Court of \rbitration,
nevertheless the Court “offered standing facilities for peaceful settlement verv
difficult to bring into being duiing the strained relations occasioned by the acute
international controversy” Betw'een 1899 and 1912 eleven States referred their
disputes to the Court of Arbitration and its decisions were accepted by the parties
concerned
The Second Hague Conference met in 1907, and as many as 44 Stales
participated m it This conference considered the desirability of revising the
system of arbitration adopted in 1899 But it primarily concerned itself with the
consideration of the rules of war The conference, led by Great Britain, attempted
to create an International Prize Court of Appeal A special conference consisting
of the chief European powers, and the United States and Japan met in London in
The First Hague Conference was hailed as “the parliament of mankind” and
was popularly designated as the Peace Conference According to the Intcmation*
12 Ii was with regard to the north-east boundary lines in 1827 and to the boundaries
on the Pacific Cast in 1846 The award made in 1827 by the King of the Netherlands was,
however, rejected by the United Stales
RELATIONS BETWEEN STATES 263
al Peace Bureau of Berne, 133 treaties were concluded during the ten years
following the first Peace Conference, the contracting ^>artics having pledged to
n Russia joined as late as 1934 Germany and the other Slate allied to u during the
war were not atlowcd to be members at first, but most of them latex became members.
264 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
withdraw from the membership unless two years’ notice to that effect had been
given, and it had fulfilled all its international obligations under the Covenant
There were four organs of the League The Assembly was the supreme body
and It consisted of the representatives of the vanous member-States including the
Dominions of the British Commonwealth and India Each State could send not
more than three representatives, but it was entitled to only one vote. The
functions of the Assembly embraced any matter within the sphere of action of the
League or affecting the peace of the world All decisions of the Assembly were to
be unanimous. Unanimity was insisted on in order to prevent dissension among
sovereign States who, was apprehended, might act by commanding a bare
it
majority m a way repugnant to some of them The As.sembly adopted, the budget
of the League, approved the work of the Council, Secretariat and other organs,
and adopted draft conventions to be referred to the member-States for
ratification
To and expedite the work of the League, a smaller body, called the
facilitate
Council, was formed Originally,it was to contain five permanent members from
the United States, Great Britain, France, Italy and Japan, and four non-
permanent members elected annually by the Assembly Since the United States
had not joined the League, it was not rt‘presented in the C’ountil wIikH
contained eight members m all, four permanent and four non-{x*rmanent I Ik
C’ouncil normally met three or four times in a year but could be summoned as
often as necessarv if emergency required The C'ouncil was competent to deal
with all matters concerning the sphere of action of the League or affecting the
peace of the world Its decisums, like those of the Assembly were to be
unanimous, except for a few minor matters expressly specified m the Covenant
I he Council thus, acted a.s a commission of mcpiiry and conciliation in any
dispute referred to it, and to recommend action to enlorce the obligations of the
(.o\c nant
when she was admitted to the League This increased the permanent seats to five and the
non-permanent seats were increased to nine In 1933, a tenth non-permanent seat was
created for three years In 1936, it was continued for another three years and an eleventh
seat was added for three years
RELATIONS BETWEEN STATES 265
The Covenant
of the League of Nations included important clauses relating
to futureand existing treaties, and conditions of labour Ai. International Labour
Organisation— an autonomous body within the League— was created in order to
secure and maintain fair and humane conditions of labour throughout the world.
The International Labour Organisation consisted d* the International Labour
Conference, a representative body of delegates of governments, employers and
workers meeting at least once a year at Geneva Besides this, there was the
International Labour Office controlled by a governing body
in case of any dispute likely to lead to a rupture, the matter was required to be
submitted either to arbitration or to inquiry by the Council In no case a resort to
war was to be made until three months after the award by the arbitrators or the
report by the Counc il ’
In case a State went to war by violating its pledges, the
other member-States were to break off diplomatic and other intercourse with it
year it succeeded in the mediation of Mosul oil fields dispute The Permanent
Court of International Justice at The Hague decided 27 cases and handed down
die same number of advisory opinions The reputation of the Court for
impartiality was so great that its decisions were respiectfully accepted by the
contending States and, thus, the League, on many occasions, saved countries
from international rupture
the Causes of War. The members of the League recognized
Removal of
that the maintenance of peace required reduction of national armaments to the
lower point consistent with national safety, and enforcement of common action
on international obligations The Council of the League of Nations was
empowered to formulate plans for the reduction of armaments for consideration
and action by Governments of the member-States It was, also, empowered to
advise how the evil effects of the manufacture by private enterprise of munitions
and weapons of war could be prevented But the Disarmament Conferences, held
from 1925 onwards, failed Perhaps those who advocated disarmament were the
first to arm themselves Conquests of small States, the policy of colonial
I") Article 10
lb Article 11
17 Article 12
1 8 Article 8
26b PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
In graver matters the League, thus, failed miserably. Japan was the first to
violate the sanctity of thesolemn commitments by invading Manchuria in 1931.
Till that lime the authority of the League of Nations had been impressive
Mussolini was the next to follow Japan The Ducc pounced upon Ethiopia in
1935. In the meantime Hitler was militarising Rhineland and driving Germany
forward (mi the road of conquest After resigning from the membership of the
League, Germany denounced the Locarno Treaty in 1936 and conquered Austria
in 1937 The ineffectiveness of the League was further demonstrated by
Germany’s conquest of Czechoslovakia Then came the subjugation of Poland
both by Germany and Russia in September 1939
Organisation of International Cooperation. The activities of the League in
this sphere were really appreciable The International Labour Organisation had
become a recognized source of information about labour conditions The
League’s financial section presided over the successful rehabilitation of Austria,
Hungary and Greece, administenng large loans in each case The League’s
world-wide fight against opium traffic was historic Similarly, the work of the
Transit and Communication Section of the League was admirable Its work on
intellectual cooperation could not be dismissed as negligible
and social forces in the post-war period Hunger more land and craze for new
for
markets became a mama with every country, particularly with Germany, Italy,
and Japan Economic nationalism and, thus, a plea for self-sufficiency, under-
mined the very basis of the League, that is, international goodwill and
cooperation In spite of its best efforts, the World Economic Conference,
convened under the auspices of the League of Nations in 1927, could not solve the
so-called insoluble problem of tariffs It had its political repercussions, for
economic retribution is always destructive in its results
Immediately after World War 1 an unbridgeable gulf was created in the
economic outlook of the States. This was due to the new political ideologies
professed by them Nationalism in its narrow sense did no longer remain the
slogan of pseudo-politicians only, it had become the accepted policy of every
State. Democracy gave way to concentration of authority in every country,
including the citadels of democracy— United United Kingdom and
States,
France The economic depression of 1931, and the maldistnbution of gold further
aggravated the world problem and consequently there ensued an economic
tug-of-war between the major countries. This created suspicions and distrust
which ultimately culminated in war preparations, another major addition to the
already existing vicious circle The cumulative effect of all these forces was that
the superstructure of international brotherhood, so cherishingly envisaged in the
Ijeague of Nations, toppled down
The League of Nations waned. Hie deliberations of the
prestige of the
Assembly and the Council became a mere farce. The promoters of war preached
RELATIONS BETWEEN STATES 267
across the world on September 3, 1939, tolling the death-knell of the League.
Some suggested the idea of reviving the League of Nations by strengthening its
powers and membership But the United States devised a new plan which was
of America on October 7, 1944 The five powers agre<*l to submit the proposals
for the structure of the future world organisation to all the United Nations
Governments, and to the peoples of all countries for their study and discussion
The Dumbarton Oaks Plan contained two important proposals The first was
about the creation of an agency called the Security Council, consisting of eleven
members, entrusted with the responsibility of preventing future war Second, the
member-States of the new organisation were required to place armed forces at the
disposal of the Security Council in its task of preventing war and suppressing acts
of aggression
The Plan was fully discussed by all the allied countries Comments and
constructive criticisms came from several governments The Allied Nations gave
disposal of the Security Council Extensive press and radio discussions were
arranged so as to enable the people to judge for themselves the merits of the new
plan But the Dumbarton Oaks proposals had yet to decide about the voting
procedure in the Security Council This was done at Yalta, in the Crimea, where
Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin met in conference On it was
February 11, 1945,
Charter would come into force when the Governments of China, France, Great
Britain, the USSR the United States of America,
and a majority of the other
signatory States had ratified and deposited notifications to that effect with the
it
State Department of the United States of America On October 24, 1945, this
condition was fulfilled and the United Nations Organisation came into being
Thus, “four years of planning and the hope of many years had materialized in an
international organisation designed to end war and promote peace, justice and
”
better living for all mankind
United Nations Charter. The United Nations Charter contains 1 1 1 articles
RELATIONS BETWEEN STATES 269
embodying the purposes and principles of the United Nations, and the organs
through which its will is expressed and manifested The Preamble expresses the
inspirationand guiding spirit of the United Nations. It begins with “We the .
to maintain peace and security, to ensure that armed forces shall not be used,
except in the common interest, and to employ international machinery for the
social and economic betterment of all peoples
Purposes and Principles of the United Nations. Obviously the urgent and
fundamental needs of the peoples are freedom from war and from fear of war
The first purpose of the United Nations is defined as the maintenance of
international peace and security The organisation is to employ all peaceful
means to prevent or remove threats to peace and suppress acts of aggression and
other breac hes of peace It is required to adjust or settle m accordance with justice
and international law, international disputes and situations which may lead to
conflict To achieve these results, the United Nations was required to take
effective measures The second aim of the United Nations is to adopt means to
develop friendly relations among the peoples of all nations so as to cement the ties
economic, social, cultural and humanitarian character This is the third purpose
of the United Nations Closely connected with it is the object of promoting and
( IK ouragiiig basic human rights and freedoms foi all peoples without distincoon
of race, sex, language or religion Finally, the United Nations, as the principal
world organisation, shall work as a centre for harmonising national action in
order to achieve these common ends This is desenbed as the fourth purpose of
the United Nations
The above four purposes are the cause and object of the Charter to which the
member-States collectively and severally subsenbe The Charter, then, defines the
basic principles on which the United Nations Organisation is based. These
principles are the seven general obligations which bind member-countries and
the United Nations Organisation as a whole The seven obligations arc
members,
Its
2 Each member-Statc shall fulfil its obligations under the Charter in good
laith,
3 All member-States shall settle disputes by peaceful
means and m such a
The General Assembly. The General Assembly is the largest of all the
organs of the United Nations This is the great deliberative body of the
Organisation which discusses every matter within the scope of the Chapter. It
all the member-States, now numbering one hundred and fifty-two
consists of
Though each member- State may send up to five representatives to participate in
Its deliberations, yet member-States have only one vote each. Important
questions specified in the Charter —
maintenance of peace and security, the
election of members to other organs, the admission, suspension or expulsion of
member-States, matters relating to trusteeship, and budgetary questions— are
decided by two-thirds majority of the members present and voting All other
questions are decided by a simple majority of those voting. The Assembly itself,
and voting by simple majonty, may add new categories of questions which are to
be decided by a two-thirds majority Normally, the Assembly has to meet in
regular session once every year, in September, 2* but special sessions may be
convened at the request of the Security Council, or by a majority of the
member-States. The President is elected by the General Assembly for each
session It also elects seven Vice-Presidents and appoints six Working Commit-
tees —(1) Political and Security, (2) Economic and Financial, (3) Social,
to the member-States direct But there is one limitation which the Charter
places on the powers of the General Assembly While the Security Council is
dealing with any dispute or situation, the General Assembly may not take up
that matter for consideration and make recommendations on the subject unless
the Security Council requests it to do so The Secretary-General informs
the Assembly of any matters concerning peace and security which are being
dealt with by the Security Council As soon as the Security Council has ceased
to deal with these matters, the Secretary-General informs the Assembly
weight of public opinion m the world to bear upon the members of the United
Nations In particular, the right of discussion and accommodation comprises
questions of cooperation in the maintenance of international peace and security,
including disputes brought before the Assembly, as well as the principles
governing disarmament and regulation of armaments ITie Assembly may call
the United Nations and establish subsidiary organs necessary tor the perfor-
mance of Its functions The General Assembly is given wide power to initiate
studies for the purpose of promoting international cooperation in political,
economic, sck lal. cultural, educational and health matters The studies so
initiated should include the encouragement of the progressive development and
ccxlification of Iniematicmal Law and realization of human rights and funda-
mental freedoms for all, without distinction of race, sex, language oi religion It,
also, has the power to consider principles governing disarmament and the
regulation of armaments and make recommendations
promoting intemalionai cooperation in economic, social, cultuial,
In
educ:ational and health matters, the General Assembly works mainly through
the Economic and ScKial Council The Council itself is the principal organ of
the United Nations but it acts under the authority of the General Assembly
Finally, the General Assembly considers and approves the budget of the United
Nations, and decides on the share of expenses to be borne by each member-Statc
non- permanent members. The expanded 15- member Secrrity Council took office
on January 1, 1%6, in terms of the amendments to the United Nations Charter,
which were approved by the General Assembly in 1963, and which became
effective on September after being ratified
1, Under the terms
1965,
of expansion non -permanent seats go to Afro -Asians (three
five of the ten
Africans and two Asians), two to West Europe and others, and two to Latin
America The ten non -permanent members are elected by the General
Assembly for a period of two years The retiring member- State is not eligible
for re-election immediately after the expiration of its term in order to enable
other States to take their term at membership of the Security Council
The Charter provides for a continuous session of the Security Council and
every member- State, which is represented on the Council, is required to
maintain a delegate Headquarters of the United Nations The Council
at the
must meet at least once every two weeks or as often as is necessary The Charter
permits the Council to hold its meetings at any place other than the
Headquarters if that would facilitate the work of the Council Each member of
the Council has one vote and on matters of a procedural nature, votes of nine
members are now necessary for a decision On ^substantive matters”, too, the
affirmative majority of the nine members, as against seven before 1 January,
1%6, IS required, but the affirmative majority of nine vo^es must include the
concurring votes of all the permanent members Any decision to impose
sanctions, either economic or military, must be taken with the concurrence of
the five permanent members even if one of them is a party to the dispute which
IS before the Council It means that any permanent member by disagreeing with
the majority, can veto the proposition This process of obtaining concurring
voles of all permanent members is known as the unanimity of the “Big Five”
I hcK IS, however, one exception to this rule When the Sccuritv Council is
Only the members participate and vote in the proceedings of the Security
Council, but m certain circumstances countries not represented on the Council
and even countries not members of the United Nations may participate m the
proceedings without the right of voting This may happen, whenever thr
first,
Council considers that the interests of any particular member-State are specially
affected in the discussion of any question Secondly, if a member is a party to a
participate in the discussion without a vote Even States which are not members
of the United Nations may be invited to participate in the discussion of any
dispute to which they are a party on just conditions to be laid dowm by the
f^ouncil The Security Council elects its own President and that office rotates
month by month among members
IFic position and authority of the Security Council is the most important.
The Charier confers on the Security Council the primary responsibility of
maintaining international peace and security It further lays down that if
member -Stales are parties to a dispute which is likely to endanger peace, they
2 ') India t(X)k a leading part in securing the amendment to the Charter in 1963 For
d number of years, the Afro- Asians, w’ho during the past decade had berume the majority of
the UN membcrslup, had been seeking expansion to provide greater representation for
ihcmscives, but were repeatedly baulked through various objections
274 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
must seek a solution by all possible* peaceful means. If they fail to settle their dis-
putes by negotiations, inquiries, mediation, consultation, judicial settlement or
by other peaceful means, it is the duty of the Security Council to call upon the
The Council is further empowered to investigate
parties to settle their disputes.
any situation which may cause international fnction or dispute in order to
determine whether the situation is likely to endanger peace and security of the
world. Apart from the Security Council’s own initiative, it is open to any one of
the member -States to draw the attention of the Security Council or the General
Assembly to such a situation or dispute Even a non -member State of the
United Nations can bnng any dispute to which it is a party to the notice of the
Security Council or the General Assembly, provided it accepts beforehand the
obligation of a peaceful settlement under the terms of the Charter The
Secretary -General may likewise bnng to the attention of the Security Council
any matter which, in his opinion, threatens the maintenance of international
peace or security
If, in the opinion of the Security Council, continuance of such a dispute is
the situation Every member- State is pledged, vide Article 43, to supply to the
Council on its call such military forces as are needed to meet the situation The
Security Council maintains a Military Staff Committee to assist and advise it on
all Its military requirements including the employment and command of the
armed forces placed at the disposal of the Council and on the regulation of
armaments and disarmaments This Committee consists of the Chiefs of Staff
(or their representatives) of the permanent members— China, France, the
United Kingdom, the U S S R. and the U S A
In order to enable the United Nations to take urgent military measures,
member-States are required to immediately make available their national
air-force contingents for combined international action. The Security Council is
required to make the plans for the application of armed forces, with the
of the Military Staff Committee and the Charter requires the
assistance
members of the United Nations to join in affording mutual assistance in carrying
out the measures decided upon by the Sccunty Council
The other functions of the Security Council arc to recommend the
admission of new members to the General Assembly; to recommend to the
General Assembly the suspension of the rights and pnvilcges of any member-
State against whomit is taking preventive or enforcement action, to recommend
the United Nations with respect to Trust areas classih 'd as “Strategic” are
exercised by the Security Council It votes simultaneously, but independently of
the General Assembly
in the election of the Judges of the International Court of
Justice Whena party to a case fails to carry out a judgment of the Court, the
Security Council may, on the appeal of the other party, make recommendations
or decide upon measures to be taken to give effect to the judgment. The Atomic
Energy Commission, set up m 1946, reports to the Security Council and receives
directions from it on matters affecting the maintenance of peace and security.
Finally, the Secretary- General is appointed by the General Assembly on the
recommendation of the Security Council
The Economic and (ECOSOC). The most striking feature
Social Council
of the Charter is the emphasison the constructive tasks of peace. But the
it lays
authors of the Charter were also aware “that economic and social maladjust-
ments arc often the diseases of which war is the final symptom and they
envisaged peace not merely as a period of non -shooting but as the zestful
pursuit of the common good of all mankind ” This purpose of the United
Nations finds a prominent place in the Preamble of the Charter which proclaims
that the peoples of the United Nations are determined “to promote social
progress and better standards of life in larger freedom ” Article 1 states that it is
vote and all decisions are taken by a simple majonty of those present and voting
The Council is required to invite any member of the United Nations to
participate, without a vote, in its deliberations on any question which is of
particular interest to that member It may also make arrangements for
representatives of international specialised agencies to participate, without a
vote, in the activities of the Council and its discussions The Council elects its
own President for one year and meets at least three times in a year
For the realization of its purposes the Economic and Social Council performs
the following special functions
It makes and initiates studies and reports on all matters within its scope
(1)
either directly or through an expert commission
—
(2) After its investigations are complete the Council makes its recommenda-
tions to the General Assembly or to the member-States or the specialised
agencies
(3) The Council may also submit draft conventions to the General Assembly
which are sent, after ratification, to the member-States for their acceptance
and implementation
(4) The Council makes arrangements with the member-States to obtain their
reports on the steps taken to give effect to its recommendations, and to
communicate its observations to the General Assembly
(5) The Council is entrusted with the duty of submitting information to the
Security Council whenever demanded and assist in the discharge of
Its functions
7’he aims of the trusteeship system arc fourfold (i) to further international
obligation, and the nature or extent of the reparation to be made for wrongs
suffered by a State
Several nations have signed the so-called “Optional Clause”
by which they have agreed that the Court may try all cases or cases relating to
specified subjects, which may arise in future But most countries have specified a
limited number of subjects on which they will accept jurisdiction Once a case
has been brought before the Court, the parties to the dispute must abide by its
decision Should any party to a case before the Court fail to perform its
obligation under a judgment of the Court, the other party may bring the matter
before the Sc'cuntv Council The Security Council is empowered by the Charter
to make rc'cornmcndations or decide upon measures to be taken to give effect to
the judgment
I’he C'ourl consists of fifU‘en members elected independently by the General
Assembly and the Security Council The Judges should be persons of high moral
character and possess qualifications required in their respective countries for the
higliest judicial offices or they should be Juris Consults of recognised ability in
International Law No two of the Judges may be nationals of the same State The
normal term of Judges is nine years, although, in the first election, five Judges
were chosen for a term of three years, five for six years and the other five for the
full nine-year term The Judges elect from among themselves the President of
the Court for a term of three years The Court is permanently in session, except
during judicial vacations A quorum of nine Judges is necessary to hear a case
the
and decisions arc by majority of the Judges present If the votes are equal,
all
President has a casting vote Where there is on the Court a Judge of the
nationality of one party to a dispute and none of the other,
the other party is
tions framed by the General Assembly The mam consideration in the selection of
the personnel of the Seerctanat and the conditions of service is the highest
standard of efficiency, competence and integrity But the Charter also provides
that due regard shall be paid to the importance of recruiting the staff” on as wide
a geographical basis as possible The Secretariat has nine departments, each
under an Assistant Secretary-General They are Security Council Affairs,
Economic Affairs, Social Affairs, Information from Non-
Trusteeship and
Self-Goveming Temtones, Public Information, Legal Problems, Conferences
and General Services, Administrative and Financial Services, and Technical
Assistance Administration
the duty of the Secretary-General and his staff to help implement those decisions
by continuous administrative action To sum up, it is the Seerctanat that keeps
the machinery of the United Nations going and on its efficiency depends a great
deal of the effectiveness of the Organisation.
RELATIONS BETWEEN STATES 279
Specialised Agencies. Besides the six organs descn->cd above, there are
fourteen specialised agencies of the United Nations which deal with specific
international problems Three were established before World War 11 The :
and supervises the work of the office of the various ILO Committees and other
bodies
Food and Agriculture Organization. The Food and Agriculture Organiza-
tion came into being in October 1945, with a view to collecting, analysing,
interpreting and disseminating information relating to nutrition, food and
agriculture The founder nations of FAO expressed the wish to raise levels of
nutrition and standards of living, to improve production and distribution of
agricultural products and to better the conditions of rural population To help
members reach there goals, FAO provides an intelligence service, Uicluding not
only facts and figures relating to nutrition, agriculture, forestry and fisheries, but
also appraisals and forecasts of production, distribution and consumption in
these fields, promotes national and international action to improve production,
marketing, processing and distribution of the products of agriculture (including
fisheries and forestry), conservation of natural resources, and credit and
the policy-making body, in which each member-State has one vote Associate
members have the right to attend and to take part in the discussions, but without
the ri§^t to vote The Conference normally meets biennially Between sessions of
the Conference, the Council supervises the work of the FAO, reviews the world
food and agricultural makes recommendations to member-
situation and
governments, and to international bodies, on measures to improve the situation
The Council consLsts of thirty-one member-governments elected by the Confer-
ence
U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. The United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Agricultural Organization (UNESCO) grew
out of the International Intellectual Cooperation Organization of the League of
Nations Its in the words of the Preamble to its own
aims can best be described
which declares that “since war begins in the minds of men, it is in
constitution,
the minds of men that the defences of peace must be constructed ” And in the
articles of its constitution it is provided that “the purpose of the organisation is to
contnbute and security by promoting collaboration among the nations
to peace
through education, science and culture in order to further universal respect for
and for the human rights and fundamental freedoms
justice, for the rule of law,
which are affirmed for the people of the world without distinction of sex,
language or religion by the Charter of the United Nations ” The UNESCO, in
brief, aims at promoting international peace and security through education,
science and culture and thereby to further universal respect for justice, rule of
human nghts, and fundamental freedoms for all the peoples It is not
law,
mneemed with the task of solving any urgent political problems, as the Security
':C0^ncil and the General Assembly do, but it is to take positive steps to promote
and international understanding through a sustained educational cam-
paign of the new philosophy of humanism It is, thus, dedicated to fostering an
awareness of the intellectual and moral solidanty of mankind
UNESCO’s bncf discription It strives to
activities arc so varied as to defy a
and scholars, to conduct the study of
increase international exchange of students
social problems likely to create national and international tensions, and to
provide technical assistance for the economic and political development of
RELATIONS BETWEEN STATES 281
undeveloped areas How significant it is, is evident from tue tact that States are
requesting more technical assistance from UNESCO
than it has funds to supply.
The habit on the part of many countries of turning to an international agency for
help can hardly fail to develop intemational-mindedness
UNESCO has also devised means to lessen illiteracy m the world and has
liberally assisted in the rebuilding of educational systems in the developing
countries It has periodically arranged holding of seminars and conferences to
standardize knowledge by pooling scholarship It has also published illuminating
reports of such deliberations and discussions, which add to a common under-
standing of the international problems in the field of education
Director
ways
The mam organs of WHO are
World Health Assembly, the Executive
the
Board, six regional committees and the secretariatThe World Health Assembly
is the supreme governing body It meets each year and is composed of delegations
uniting together to achieve the basic aims of the United Nations. Moreover, the
Charter of the United Nations, as one writer puts it, is more realistic in so far as it
places the responsibility for security where power lies. The Security Council is
vested with the primary responsibility of maintaining world peace and security.
The Charter clearly specifies how and every member
these powers are to be used
of the United Nations is and carry out the decisions of the
jiJedged to accept
Security Council The decisions of the Secunty Council are not made to remain a
mere threat It may call upon the member-States to break off diplomatic relations
with an offending State or declare a blockade or use economic sanctions against
It Should the Council consider that these measures are inadequate, it may take
all military action required by the situation. Every member of the United
Nations is pledged by Article 43 to supply it on its call, with the armed forces, the
assistance and the facilities it requires, including right of passage
peace Eternal vigilance and prompt action may well mean the difference
between security and disaster and, by the rules of procedure, the Security Council
meets as often as is necessary, and at least once every two weeks The Charter also
permits the Council hold its meetings at any place other than the
to
Headquarters, if would facilitate the Council’s work The Council is
that
empowered to investigate, on its own initiative, any situation which may, in its
opinion, cause international fnction or dispute The Charter also allows any
party to a dispute, any other member-State or the Secretary-General, to bring to
the attention of the Security Council any actual or potential breach of peace, for
collective action by it Furthermore, unlike the League of Nations, the Charter of
the United Nations improved the piospects of collective action by requiring a 7-4
majority prior to January 1966, and 9-6 now, instead of a unanimous decision
decolonization and the rise of one Asian and Afncan country after another to
independence The process of decolonization can be said to have begun after
World War 1 when the Turkish and German Colonies were made mandates of the
League of Nations But except in the case of “A” class mandates there was no
obligation placed on the mandatory powers to develop their charges with the
eventual objective of making them fully independent After the United Nations
came into being new trusteeship agreements were signed in 1945 and 1946 for all
the mandates that had survived Worid War II By 1961, all the
hitherto trust
When the founding fathers signed the Charter the United Nations consisted of 50
members, of whom only nine came from Asia and Africa Today, the United
Nations consists of one hundred and fifty-two members, of whom the Afro-Asians
command a comfortable majority. The Afro-Asians have also succeeded in
securing amendments to the Charter, for the expansion of the Security Council
and the Economic and Social Council
The record of the United Nations in keeping peace and avoiding conflicts, if
physical presence between the Arabs and the Israelis in the Palestine conflict and
contributed significantly to the liberation of Indonesia and to the ending of the
Grcek-Albanian conflict It maintains a ceasefire in Kashmir despite heavy odds
The Tashkent Declaration, which enabled the USSR to persuade India and
Pakistan to abide by the resolution of the Security Council, was a great step
forward in dealing with a cntical situation, which, but for the initiative of the
United Nations would have certainly led to a large-scale war The United
Nations can also claim to have brought about a cease-fire in the Arab-Israeli war
in June 1967 It intervened effectively in the Suez crisis, prevented the collapse
and disintegration of the Congo and calmed the civil strife in Cyprus for keeping
peace between the Greek and the Turkish Cypiiots But the remarkable
achievement of the United Nations is claritv of its role which the world body has
lately recognised The rapiditv with which United Nations opinion solidified in
favour of the view that issues as Farakka are best left to bilateral negotiations is
indicative of the fact that the United Nations is now less exploitable as a means
by which to whip up support from one case against another in a bilateral dispute
In spite of this credit side, there are certain senous defects in the scheme of
the Unite Nations The attitude of the victors to the defeated powers was exactly
the as it had been after World War I The smaller States and even the large
same
ones, which are militarily and economically less advanced, still suspect the
United Nations as a mere tool in the hands of the Big Powers The United
Nations is based on the sovereign equality of nations, but, as Field Marshal
Smuts, one of the outstanding statesmen at the San Francisco Conference,
observed, “equality of status does not mean equality of functions” 7’he war-time
alliesand the promoters of the United Nations are divided into two power blocs
and engaged in a constant cold war Possession of atomic weapons by both blocks
with a systematic race in stockpiling and other such developments, make the
people at large believe that it is a mockery of the United Nations In his Tenth
Annual Report of the United Nations, the then Secretary-General, Dag
Hammarskjold, observed that the actual establishment of an agreed international
system for the control and reduction of armaments and armed forces “can take
place only in an atmosphere of confidence, trust and understanding among the
nations, an atmosphere which has not yet come into being ” When vital
questions remain unresolved, it is natural that the common man may think of the
United Nations as an organisation of ‘Disunited Nations’
'There are old jealousiesand ideological diflTcrences between the “Big Five” and
this we witness every day in the proceedings of the General Assembly and the
Security Council. Past, but not forgotten, differences still exist between the USSR
and the United Kingdom. Disguised economic rivalries persist between the
United Kingdom and the United States, and during the recent times with the
waning of Britain's political and economic prestige the inward ^ulf has widened,
RELATIONS BETWEEN STATES 285
The differences between the USSR and the United States are
irreconcilable,
though fluctuating and without any sense of prediction With the open rupture
between the USSR and China the situation is still more intriguing. Then, there
could not be any unanimity on the Japanese Peace Treaty, and the
Peace Treaty itself was a mere show of power politics The most regrettable part
of the entire transaction has been that the settlement of peace terms with
Germany is still in abeyance, and one bloc is determined to rearm Western
Germany and make it a member of the Western European Union, while the other
has made East Germany its own stronghold with Berlin as the spark point in the
entire German problem It appears as if Germany would remain permanently
divided into two hostile zones and under two hostile influences unless the
Germans themselves determine otherwise But how can they do so under the
existing conditions^
Five Great Powers— the United States, the United Kingdom, the Soviet
Union, France and China— were given permanent seats on the Security Council
and the right of veto, because the authors of the United Nations Charter felt that
they were in a position to make an exceptional contnbution to the maintenance
of international peace and security But it has been maintained that the
procedure of voting in the Security Council was designed to shield the “Big Five”
against their own sms On all substantive matters the affirmative majority of
seven originally, and nine members now is required The majonty must include
the concurring votes of all the five permanent members"'lt
means that one of the
“Big Five” can vitiate the decisions and discussions of the Security Council at any
stage It also means that a friendly State to any of the five powers can make the
decisions of the Security Council ineffective This indirect veto may be used and
It has been used for expediency rather than justice
The provision of coeix ive action against aggressive Slates was really intended
to coerce the smaller States The Big Pow’ers may themselves disturb internation-
al and repudiate the principles which they enjoin and even force upon
p(‘acc
In more than three decades of its life the United Nations should ha\e
come .of age The fact that in some respects this has not yet happened can be
ascribed directly to its membei -States* shortcomings “If the first two decades of
Its life were periods of foundation and growth, the third, w^hich should have been
2b Informally, it has now been agreed that when a permanent member fails to vote,
nations, but on all of them U. Thant believed that the ineffectiveness of the
United Nations resulted from the “non-support ive attitudes and patterns of
behavious on the part of many national governments In his message on the
United Nations Day 1970, he urged, “It is time for governments to make a fresh
start and to lift themselves again to the same high level, if not a higher level, of
vision and determination as that of the authors of the Charter We must give the
Charter a real chance at least We must pass from words to deeds.”
A is finance, the inadequacy of which could cnpple
very disquieting feature
the United Nations and more particularly its various agencies, concerned with a
multiplicity of welfare and development activities Not long ago President Nixon
told Congress that “the time has come for a large dose of realism and candour in
U.S. policy towards the United Nations” and that “we have reached a point at
which it is no service to the idea of the United Nations and no contribution to its
future to blink at its limitations ” When the United Nations began its career, its
membership was 51 Today it has grown to 152 The United Nations now feels
that it has neither the political leverage nor the manoeuvrability it desires in ttie
world body The entry ot the People’s Republic of China into the United Nations
in October 1971, and the drumming of the Taiwan from the world body was
considered by the United Slates the “high-handedness of the poor and smaller
member-States who formed
the noisy majority” Both the administration and
Congress felt and the United States took retaliatory measures by cutting
insulted
contributions to all the World Organization bodies To withhold contributions
for political reasons is against the spirit of the United Nations Charter Even
There have been complaints of “lopsided and bloc voting” and arbitrary
procedures and soon, there was a reflection of the fear that the majority among
152 member-nations belonged to the Third World and by definition, are hostile
to the West There is not much truth in it Except on such issues as colonialism,
racism, nationalism or a fairer economic deal for the underdeveloped, the Third
World does not, and cannot, speak with one voice and it is not necessary it
should. New Delhi has deprecated blocs within the United Nations or outside it
However, this is not the same thing as excluding the right to canvass support for
a point of view on an issue the repercussions of which could be far-reaching
The fact is that the major Powers have no alternative but to adjust to an
oiganisation with a majonty of the newly emergent States whose dominant
interest is their rapid development and whose attitudes are coloured accordingly
The majority, on its part, also has no choice except to accept that the big Powers
are an integral and essential part of the United Nations with special respunsibli-
ties for keeping the peace and fostering development This two-way recognition is
27 Leon Gorden Kcr (Ed ), The United Nations m International Politics, p 186
28 UN Monihlf Chronule, 7, 9 (October 1970), iii
RELATIONS BETWEEN STATES 287
not been able to play a significant role in the past as we as in most of the crises
’
that had hit the world in recent years In the case of Vietnam and Czechoslovakia
the United Nations was immobilized because of the unwillingness of a
majority
of the member-States to incur the displeasure of the super-powers. It
had been
completely ineffective in dealing with troubles in which the supper-powers were
not involved Nigeria was ravaged by a civil war without the United Nations
being able to do anything about it The sanctions approved by it against the
recislregime in Rhodesia were violated openly not only by South Africa and
Portugal but also by private businessmen from West Germany, France, Italy,
Japan and so on. This is not all The United Nations has failed to mobilise
support among rich nations for assisting the
development of poor and predomin-
antly agricultural countries on a sustained and sufficiently generous basis B.R
Bhagat, India’s representative at the 23rd Assembly of the United Nations,
pointed out in his address that all under-developed countries were disappointed
with the results of the second UNCTAD Conference that was held in New Delhi
in the winter of 1967 Nor was any effort made to remove or dimmish such
disappointments The affluent nations render only lip-service They meet at
regular intervals, discuss and disperse to think and resolve This repeat
performance continues ceaselessly with the same obvious results
The United Nations’ failures are, indeed, many But they are the collective
failures of the United Nations’ members It is altogether cynical to say, as some
high personages in France and elsewhere are often tempted to say, that the
United Nations has lost its usefulness Even if the Great Powers, just two in
number, no moie need the world organisation, countries like India certainly do
But they, too, will not, because a country which leaves the world organization
today will find itself in bleak isolation Isolationism is not a practical proposition
in the modem world Trygve Lie, the first United Nations Secretary General, in
his first report to the General Assembly, said, “The United Nations is no stronger
than the collective will of the nations that support it Of itself it can do nothing
It IS a machinery through which the nations can cooperate It can be used and
developed in the light of its activities and experience, to the untold benefit of
the conscience of mankind, and the public opinion in the world, m the General
provides a forum for arguing together and quarrelling together, it provides a vent
“The greatest need today is to blunt the edge of conflicts among the nations, not
to sharpen them If properly used, the United Nations can serve a diplomacy of
reconciliation better than any other instruments available to the member-States.
288 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
SUGGESTED READINGS
Bentwich & Martin Charter of the United Nations
Bricrly, J L The Law of Nations, Chaps 1 -II
Momson, H S and others The League and the Future of the Collective System
Naomi Rosenbaum (Ed ) Readings on the International Politics
Oppienheim, L International Lau\ Vols I, II
Sidvkick, H Elements of Politics, Ohaeps, XV'-XX'^III
Schuman, F L International Politics
Sharp, W
R and Kirk, G Contemporary International Politics
Lnited Nations Handbook oj the United Nations and the Specialised Agencies
United Nations Year Book oj the United Nations
United Nations These Rights and Freedoms
Westlake, J International Iaiu
Willoughb\ , WW
Fundamental Concepts of Public Law, Chaps XVI, XMI
Ka>, David \ The Sen Salions in the United Nations
PART II
THE ORGANISATION OF
THE STATE
CHAPTER XII
There can be no forms of State All States are alike m their nature and all
—
combine the same essential elments population, territory, organisation and
unity or sovereignty Differences in population and territory do not make any
difference in their status of Statehood A distinction is sometimes made between a
City-State, a nation-State, and a world empire But this distinction has no
practical value in Political Science, for the classification of States on the basis of
territory and population is a mere historical descnption, and a fallacy coming
down from Aristotle’s time when no distinction was made between the State and
government To classify States on the basis of unity or sovereignty is also
impossible All States are sovereign and all sovereign States are equal It is,
But States do differ in their organisation The organisation of the State is its
government and it is through the instrument of the government that the State
formulates, expresses, and realises its purposes The purpose of every State is the
same, the well-being of its people, and the form of government is the expression of
the way in which the purpose of the State is to be realised This involves the
problem ol determining in whose hands is vested the legal authority of the
State, to what extent is actual use made of it, what are the instrumentalities or
organs employed in its use, and what and proceduie are followed by such
rules
organs in performing their functions^ These differences are wide from State to
State and matter a good deal in differentiating the organisation of one State from
another The form of government is, therefore, the actual basis of division
TRADITIONAL CLASSIFICATIONS
Aristotle’s Classification. The traditional classifications of government
follow the course set by Aristotle Aristotle, however, was not original He
borrowed from Plato as Plato had borrowed from Socrates Aristotle based his
( 1) the number of persons who exercise supreme power, that is, the location of
sovereignty within the State, and
between the “normal’’ and “perverted” forms of the State, basing his conclusions
291
292 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SaENCE
on the ends which the rulers sought to serve. By a normal State, Aristotle meant
one guided and ruled by law and justice. The ruler or the rulers in such a State
always aim at the good of the community as a whole. By perverted State, he
meant, one guided and ruled by the selfish and capricious, without law and
without restraint The ruler or the rulers in such a State were selfish and he or
they exercised power vested in them for his or their own b.mefits rather than for
the benefits of the community as a whole
Monarchy, Aristocracy and Polity were, according to Aristotle, normal
forms of the State In their perverted form they became Tyranny, Oligarchy and
Democracy Tyranny was the degenerated form of Monarchy, Oligarchy the
degenerated form of Aristocracy and Democracy the degenerated form ol Polity
For Anstotle, Monarchy was the best, and Tyranny the worst Tyranny placed in
the hands of the king, arbitrary control over the lives and fortunes of the citizens
and all affairs of the State were directed to his own gocxl In Oligarchy, the
wealthy few ruled for selfish ends and they used their powers and privileges for
the oppression of the common people Democracy meant rule of the mob and in a
democratic State the interests of none were safe as there would be confusion all
round
Although Anstotle held that Monarchy, the rule of a true and good king,
would be the best, yet, at the same time, he recognized certain practical
difficulties in attaining the best He, therefore, concluded that Polity was the
best, a democratic form of government with constitutional guarantees, as a
student of Political Science would now define it Anstotle pointed out that if
Polity were to disintegrate into its perverted form the result would not be so bad
as the perverted forms of Monarchy and Aristocracy, namely, Tyranny and
Oligarchy
Aristotle's classification may be stated in the following tabular form
Normal Perverted
Rule by one Monarchy Tyranny
Rule by Few Aristocracy Oligarchy
Rule by Many Polity Democracy
Two points about this classification descr\'e attention First, Anstotle draws
a clear distinction between anstocracy and oligarchy, whereas modem usage does
not between the two and we often use them synonymously
differentiate
Secondly, democracy for Anstotle had not the same meaning as it has for us He
regarded it as a perverted form, a mob rule, whereas we regard democracy as the
best form of government The perverted form of democracy, according to the
modem use, is mobocracy or ochlocracy Moreover, modem Sociologists have
clearly shown that there is no government of the many All governments are
really governments of the few, or, in fact, oligarchies' Nowhere in the world do
the people or even a substantial number of them rule In all States the exercise of
government is left to a few hands, while the determination of policy is actually in
the hands of a yet smaller minority, the political leaders The Cabinet in Bntain
IS the supreme directing authority, “the magnet of policy”, as Barker calls it, and
and direction of cabinet policy rests still in a few hands, the inner cabinet The
Executive power in the United States of America is vested in the President. He
1 Maclvcr, R M ,
The Web of Government, p 149
FORMS OF GOVERNMENT 293
has his ‘cabinet,’ but the role of the ‘cabinet’ is simply advisory. The policy flows
from the President, though it may be influenced by the advice tendered by the
’
‘cabinet
Cycle of Aristotle’s political change. Like his teacher Plato, Aristotle, too,
subjected his forms of the State to cyclic political changes. Anstotlc did not
merely classify the various forms of the State He even marked out how in the
course of history one form of the State had given place to another Just as the
wheels of a cycle revolve, so do the forms of the State. His cycle of political
change starts from monarchy The first State, he says, was monarchic and the
king governed his people with love and justice, dedicating himself to their service.
In course of time, kings forgot their duty to the people With the degeneration of
the character and aims of the monarchs, it became Tyranny when government
was no longer directed towards the public good But a tyrannical government
could not continue for long. The people ultimately revolted and succeeded in
overthrowing the rule of the tyrant and replaced it by a government of the few
talented persons, who were guided by the ideas of the common good
Aristocracy, a government of the few for the welfare of the people, took the place
of monarchy With the lapse of time, the best few also degenerated. The ideals of
public spirit which inspired them in the beginning, disappeared Anstocracy
lapsed into Oligarchy But the people could not for long tolerate a government
the aim of which was the benefit of the ruling class alone When the opportunity
came, citizens as a whole made a successful revolt against such authority and
established a Polity, the supreme power being vested in the hands of a large
proportion of the population and it was used by them for the common good
When Polity became pre verted it was substituted by Democracy
Democrcy, according to .Aristotle’s terminology, was a rule by the mob
which had always been an intolerable confusion There was neither certainty nor
stability It was at this stage that some powerful warrior-statesman, imbued with
the spirit of service for the common-weal, came to the forefront and took the reign
of government in his own hands Monarchy was, again, established and, thus,
revolved Aristotle’s cycle of political change “The first governments,” says
Aristotle, “were kingships, probably for this reason, because of old, when cities
were small, men of eminent virtue were few They were made kings because they
were benefactors, and benefits can only be bestowed by gcx)d men But when
many persons equal in merit arose, no longer enduring the preeminence of one,
they desired to have acommonwealth and set up a constitution The ruling class
scKin deteriorated and enriched themselves out of the public treasury, riches
became the path to honour, and so obligarchies naturally grew up These passed
into tyrannies, and tyrannies into demcKracies for love of gain in the ruling
classes was always tending to diminish their number, and so to strengthen the
masses, who in the end set upon their number, and so to strengthen the masses,
who in the end set upon their masters and established democracies
Criticism of Aristotle’s Classification. Such is Aristotle’s classification The
cycle of political change given by him is fully corroborated by the history of the
Grct'k City-States in the centuries preceding the Peloponesian war Recent his-
our own times and it reminds us of various coups d’etat, the most recent being
one led by CJeneral Naguib in Egypt, Brigadier Kassem in Iraq, General Ayub in
few or the many Burgess has rightly said that Aristotle’s classification is organic
or spiritual rather than numencal
But Aristotle’s classification does not include and explain modern forms of
government like constitutional Monarchy, Unitary, and Federal governments of
Parliamentary and Presidential types The City-States of Aristotle, as Seeley says,
do not fit in with modern ‘country-States ’
Perhaps Aristotle could not
conceive, at the time when he flourished, the various forms into which a
government might develop Nor do we use Democracy in the same sense in which
Aristotle used it Aristotle’s classification into Monarchies, Aristocracies, and
Polities is also not satisfactory according to our forms of division If we accept his
classification, are we to class Great Britain as a Monarchy or a Democracy and
how IS It to be differentiated from the government of the United States'* Finally,
.Aristotle definitely distinguished between Aristocracy and democracy (polity)
But the attempt to distinguish between the two is futile in our times, for it is not
easy to find out where one ends and the other begins
War when Demcxracy merged othen, except for subject countries, colonies,
I,
and Theocracies. Theocracy is that form of government where the supreme power
IS attributed to God, or to a god, or to some other superhuman being, or to an
Idea The men who exercise authority are deputies or viceiegents of God or a god
Theocracy, according to Bluntschli, is a normal form of government, but when it
becomes perverted it is known as idolocracy Such a classification, however, seems
quite fallacious The modern political scientist separates religion from politics
and he does not bnng God into his division of forms of government His task is to
l(x:ate sovereign power and it rests, for all intents and purposes, either in one
person or body of persons But exceptions still there are as in the case of the
Islamic Republic of Iran and the Muslim Arab countries Revival of Muslim
fundamentalism aims to establish a government governed by the laws of Islam
strictly in conformity to the prescriptions of the Koran Some traces of
democratic institutions may seem to exist, but the structure is entirely theocratic.
Mamot’s next basis is that of a rigid and a flexible constitution In the third
place, his basis of classification is the relation between the executive and the
legislature When the executive is superior to the legislature, the form of
government is Despotic If the executive is coordinate in power with the
legislature, the type of government is Presidential If the executive is subordinate
to the legislature, as in the United Kingdom, the form of government is
Parliamentary orUalimet
l^acock’s classification. Stephen Leacock's c lassification is almost similar
to the one given by Marnot He, however, does not attempt to include in his
(lassification ail the historical forms which have appeared in the evolution of the
brought into existence the union of hitherto sovereign States for purposes of
national unity The component states of the federation enjoy juridicial status
and corporate personality and are autonomous, except in a few enumerated
subjects which are of common national interest Subjects which concern the
nation as a whole fall within the jurisdiction of the national or federal
government Residuary powers, those which neither belong to the federal
government nor to the State governments, rest with the constituent States The
fathers of the Canadian Constitution were not wedded to the narrow ideas of a
Federation.They adopted federation as a device for bringing together diverse
elements and to solve administrative and economic problems which confronted
the country then The Provinces were, accordingly, given certain enumerated
powers, leaving the rest, together with some over-nding powers, for the Central
Government Lord Haldane would not describe Canada as a Federation and
Professor Wheare calls it a “quasi-federal constitution " But in actual practice the
unitary elements in Canada have now become obsolete or are being worked in a
manner as to nullify the unitary effects United States, on the other hand, has a
federal constitution as well as a federal government, though the process of
centralization there is now assuming alarming proportions
two human beings, whatever likeness there may be And, like a human being, no
government remains the same Change is at work all the time and more so in this
atomic age of ours The needs of man and his environments have become so
numerous and complex that no mechanism of government can claim perfection
and consequently finality The atomic age needs revolutionary changes and a
dynamic mechanism of government to suit the purposes to be realised Could
anyone visualise a decade or so before that planning would become a democratic
plea for the realization of the well-being of men within the framework of a
capitalistic structure of society^
my p(X)r are happy, neither ignorance nor distress is to be found among them, my
jails are empty of prisoners, my streets of beggars, the aged are not in want, the
taxes are not oppressive, — whenthose things are said, then may that country
boast of Its government ” The primary purpose of every State is the same and
every government is charged by the community with the double task of
maintaining what Maclver calls “an established code of living and of adjusting
this order to new conditions and emergency needs
’’
It does not matter what the
head of the State is called We shall assign to a particular government proper
plat'c and label by knowing what it actually does in realising the purpose
entrusted to its charge the well-being of the people Well-being and
298 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
MONARCHY
Absolute Monarchy. Monarchy represents that form of government where
the soursc of all political to be found in a supreme ruler All the
authority is
CH’gans and Government are agents of this ruler for the purpose of
officers of
carrying out his will All acts of Government are his acts and derive their validity
from his sanction All laws are his commands, though they may have been
formulated by one of his agents As the bearer of sovereignty, his authority is
supreme, unlimited, and self-determined, both as regards the extent to, and the
manner in, which it shall m fact be exercised Louis XIV of France expressed this
idea in the famous phrase “L’c’tat, e’est moi,” (I am the State), what he really
meant was “I am the Government and what I say goes ” This is absolute
Monarchy
The institution of Monarchy is a product of history and it has grown as a
part of the evolution of the State In the early stages of the development of the
State the Monarchical system was the most beneficial, for
it was characterised by
In the beginning, the Monarch was elected and, then, the institution became
hereditary and it is now the normal type, wherever it exists. The early Roman
kings were elected The mediaeval kings were both hereditary and elected * A
4 Sabine, A History of Political Theory,
pp 210-11,
FORMS OF GOVERNMENT— MONARCHY 299
king may be elected in our own times. Nadir Shah, the father of the last ruler of
Afghanistan, Zahir Shah, was an elected king. But it is not a normal feature and
ail monarchies are now hereditary A hereditary king enjoys a life-long tenure
and the office passes to his heirs according to the law of primogeniture.
Absolute Monarchy has existed both in the East and in the West up to very
recent times In the East, the leading example of a government of this character
was that of Japan In the eighties of the last century, japan decided to abolish her
old system of government and to establish in its place one corresponding to
modern political ideas as represented by the existing governments of Europe and
America But even the new Constitution (1889) established a type of absolute
monarchy Article of the Constitution clearly stated that “the Empire of Japan
1
shall be reigned over and governed by a line of Emperors unbroken for ages
The despotic king always claimed that he got his authority direct from God,
that he was God’s vitcregent on earth, that he ruled by divine right, and that he
was answerable to none except God This belief m the divine right of the kings to
mle prevailed in all countries In China the Emperor was desenbed as the “Son of
Heaven” and he claimed to rule by virtue of the mandate that he had received
from Heaven Referring to FLurope and Britain, Bryce says, “from the fifth to
sixteenth century whoever asked what was the source of legal sovereignty and
what the moral claim of the sovereign to obedience of subjects would have been
answered that God has appointed certain powers to govern the world and that it
would be a sin to resist His ordinance ” The king was, accordingly, free from all
human limitations He was accountable to God alone and not to his subjects.
Some kings, no doubt, took high view of their duties and governed well and yet
they were subject to no restraints, except the law of God
uncivilised {people who had emerged out of barbarism John Stuart Mill rightly
said, “Despotism is a legitimate mode of government for dealing with barbanans,
provided the end be their improvement and the means be justified by actually
effecting that end ” Absolute Monarchy possesses the ments of strength, vigour,
energy of action, promptness of decision, unity of counsel, continuity and
consistency of policy Undivided counsel, promptness of decision and a consistent
policy are the essential requisites of a good and efficient administration,
purpose in the State. A sagacious king having sturdy commonsense can easily
secure the best advice and actsupon it with confidence His policy is more stable
and consistent than the shifting policy of the assembly in a democratic
government An assembly is usually guided by sentiments an^ is swayed by the
arguments of the politicians. Moreover, a Monarch generally takes a very high
view of his duties. He is free to select his officials according to his own pleasure
and make them work according to his directions. As the officials can be held to
strict accountability, they run the administration to the best of their ability and
capacity The absolute Monarchies of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
says Bryce, “saw many reforms in European countries, which no force less than
that of a strong monarchy would have carried through
Defects of Absolute Monarchy. But no man is fit enough to exercise
absolute power A despot crushes his subjects to the earth and leaves them
nothing they can call their own Even a good
despot teaches his subjects to mind
their own and to leave everything else to the government
private interests
Absolute government is a government by one single person and he administers
according to his own good sense of what can be good and right for his subjects
And history tells us that the good of the subjects has really meant the interests of
the ruler himself He has never cherished the interests of the subjects If he docs,
his absolutism disappears Moreover, a good king, under a system of hereditarv
monarchy, is a sheer chance or accident There is no guarantee that an able,
capable and benevolent ruler must always succeed to the throne History tells us
that imbeciles andhave been the rule whereas the statesmen and sage rulers
fools
have been the exceptions “A hereditary ruler,” says Leaccx:k, “seems on the face
”
of things as absurd as the hereditary mathematician or hereditary poet laureate
5 Bryce, J ,
Modem Demoaactes, Vol II,
p 536
FORMS UF UUVEKNMENT — ARISTOCRACY JOl
President, as in India, is elected for a number of years and after the expiry of his
term of office, if not re-elected, he joins the ranb of th#* ordinary citizens of the
State. But both the constitutional King, under a limited Monarchy, and the
President of a Republic, exercise authority as ordained by the constitution. They
cannot go beyond it In a limited Monarchy the authority of the King is nominal.
The real functionaries are his ministers who are elected members of the
legislature and belong to the majority party. They remain in office as long as they
can command a majority in and retain the confidence of the legislature They
cannot be dismissed by the King at his pleasure Nor can they be chosen at
random Britain is a typical example of a constitutional Monarchy where the
King or Queen reigns but does not rule.
Uses of limited Monarchy. The very fact that the authority of the
Monarch is limited goes to show that in essence it is a democratic form of
Government The King in Britain, as Bagehot remarks, has the nght to be
consulted, the nght to encourage, and the right to warn, beyond this he cannot
go He does not exercise any real authonty The actual government is earned on
by ministers who represent the majonty party in the legislature. The legislature
renews its mandate after every four or hve years when General Elections arc held
Limited Monarchy, therefore, gives the people the real opportunity to actively
participate in public affairs and elect administrators who rule the country
according to their behest It is the people who, in the last resort, are the ultimate
sovereigns
The days of absolute Monarchy are over Now even King Ibn Saud of
Saudi Arabia, who was the solitary example of an absolute Monarch, was
ultimately replaced by Pnnee Feisal as a result of the decision taken by the
Council of Ministers and the Consultative Assembly The powers of Kings, in all
countries where Monarchy persists, have been limited either by the prescriptions
of a written constitution or by fundamental conventions which form the basis of
the constitution In Iran,Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlvi was the nation symbol 1
and powers vested in him were really exercised by his council of ministers.
Constitutional monarchy is the only wav now to maintain the hereditary
principle and royal dignity A limited Monarchy, according to Woodrow Wilson,
“is one whose powers have been adapted to the interests of the people and to the
ARISTOCRACY
Meaning of Aristocracy. Originally, Aristocracy meant that form of
302 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Government which was conducted by the best men of the community and was
guided in the exercise of authority and functions by the most virtuous principles
powerful than the rest, and this class enjoy’s certain special privileges which are
denied to other classes Jellinek accordingly, concludes that it is an enor to define
ArisfiH racv merelv as a government the bv few
the few. The majonty party forms the government and its leaders man the
administration. The majority party, together with the minority in the legislature,
enact laws. The masses simply elect their representatives and leave the rest to the
actual administrators till they are called upon to elect the rulers again The line
rUKMS Ul* UUV eKNMKNl — ARISTOCRACY 303
between Aristocracy and Democracy is, therefore, difficult to draw. But it must
be remembered that Aristocracy places no confidence in t^'c ability of the masses.
It IS a government of the select few, may it be the “aristocracy of breeding”, or
emphasises quality and not quantity It assumes that some are better fitted to
govern than others They govern as they arc the best and the cnterion of their
being best is the moral and intellectual superiority which they possess over others
“It IS the overlasting privilege,” says Carlyle, “of the foolish to be governed by the
wise ” Aristocracy, thus, gives to the community a ruling class which can be
trusted to administer public affairs with complete integrity and honour, because
they possess a great position independent of politics These individuals have
powers of perception usually denied to others They can see an order in human
affairs and they can discern major trends that are obscure to the generality of
have inherited high traditions of public service, they would naturally avoid rash
and radical political experiments Moreover, stability is one of the foremost
requirements of a gotxi government and stability demands “conservative
innovation ” Violent changes involving suppression oi institutions, which bccoipe
venerable with age, agitate popular feeling and, as such, endanger the stability of
government “It is, therefore, of the greatest importance in social and political
progress that the principle of progress or liberalism should always be joined to the
principle of stability or conservatism Anstocracy serves the desired purpose It
6. Garner, J W ,
Pohtual Scume and Oooemmfnt, p 231
304 PRlNaPLES OP POLITICAL SCIENCE
allows only slow change and there is no complete break with the past. Aristocracy
isa reservoir which conserves experience and transmits wisdom to the present as
well as to the future. Conscrvativcncss and continuity are the two essential
conditions of stability and Montesquieu said “moderation” is the chief principle
of Aristocracy
Cabinet Government is in essence Aristocracy Those who constitute the
Ministry arc party leaders According to Laski, the essential contribution of
7 Laski, H ,
Parliamentmy Oovemment tn England, p 286
8 Article 80, clauses (1), (2) and (3)
FORMS OF GOVFRNMENT —DEMOCRACY 305
for passive dumb-dnven creatures and not for politically awakened and acme
should not be the criterion for elevating a
citizens. Similarly, property, like birth,
person to rule Governing power cannot be wisely restricted to persons who, either
by accident of birth, are bom in rich families or to whom some freak of fortune
has brought riches Such fortunate persons, when in power, devise all means, sane
or insane, to perpetuate their own interests, reducing the masses to a pitiable
plight
DEMOCRACY
Meaning of Democracy. The term democracy is derived from the Greek
words, demos and kratos, the former meaning the people and the latter power.
Democracy, thus, means power of the people It is now regarded as a form of
government in which the people rule themselves either directly, or indirectly
through their representatives I)efinitions of democracy, as a form of government,
arc various But like many other definitions in Political Science, they differ in
their content and application The Greeks meant by it the Government by many
and Aristotle considered it as a perverted do form of government Modem writers
not regard democracy as a perverted form of government was for What Polity
Aristotle democracy is for us Nor do they employ the mere numcncal
consideration to designate it so Their emphasis is that in democracy all persons,
who are fit to perform the duties of citizens, should have a share m the direction
t)l and their will should ultiinatels prevail Seele\ means b\ it “a
the State
government in which ever>' one has a share " Dicey defines democracy as that
form of government in which the governing body is a comparatively large
fraction of the entire nation Bryce accepts the definition of Herodotus and says
that demcKracy denotes that form of government in which the ruling power of
the Stale is members of the community as a whole He adds,
largely vested in the
“This means communities which act by voting, that rule belongs to the
in
majority, as no other method has been found for determining peaceably and
legally what is to be declared the will of the community which is not
unanimous
Maclver says, “Democracy is not a way of governing, whether by majority or
otherwise, but primarily a way of determining who shall govern and broadly, to
what ends This involves a freedom of choice m electing the rulers and the
I onsent of the electors that those who receive the mandate should alone rule. It
9 Seelcv, J R ,
Introdurlion lo PoiiUcal Science^
p 324
10 Bryce, J ,
Vol
p 20 I,
1 1 Maciver, R M ,
The Web of Government, p 198
1
means that demcx:racy has a popular base and it hinges upon the consent of the
governed
But the mere consent of the people is not enough to make a government
democratic. The people ought to be, to use the words of Plato, their own
“watch-dogs” The consent of the people must be real, active and effective in
order to make it a genuine democracy Eternal vigilance is the very life of
democracy, if democracy can really claim, in the words of President Abraham
Lincoln, to be a government of the people, by the people, and for the people
Government is, of course, always of the people, but it need not be government by
the people Monarchies and Aristocracies are governments of the people but not
by the people A government by the people means that people either directly or
through their representatives govern themselves, and their will remains supreme
on all questions of social direction and policy of the government
albws every qualified citizen to express an opinion on affairs of the State But it
cannot secure that every man’s opinion shall influence the actions of the State
All citizens cannot be made to agree on all questions of impiortance Moreover, all
citizens cannot have a voice in determining the policy of the government Even
the most ardent democrat will not vote for lunatics, cnminals or infants
Participation is always limited by age, and frequently by sex, as it is only recently
that women have been given the franchise in many leading countries, and in
many they have not yet received it In many States the suffrage is restricted to
those who possess a certain amount of property, and in most cases a certain
minimum of literacy and education is required Therefore, democracy does not
mean participation by all the people Whenever we speak of government by the
people or the will of the people, we mean the will of the majority for the time
being
There are two reasons for the will of the majority to prevail First, they are
on the whole more likely to be right than the minority The majority, when
considered as a collectivity, possess a wisdom of their own that may be superior to
that of any minority For one thing, it has been pointed out that there may be
several minority groups in thecommunity, each of which claims to be superior to
and profoundly uiscr to the otlur Quite fiequently om mmoritv ma\ dash in a
serious way with the other on what constitutes rational causes of action By
allowing the majority to govern, the problem of deciding which of various
minorities is “really” superior is avoided Secondly, a majority in most cases is
physically stronger than a minority Unless the majority grossly abuses its power,
it IS minonty to submit to its will, lest the majority should resort to
politic for the
12 Bryce, J ,
Modem Democracies, p viu
13 Ibid, p 26
14 Sidgwick, The Elements of Politics, p 61
FORMS OF GOVERNMENT-DEMOCRACY 307
not subjected to oppression by majority and that their case has been properly
heard. When we admit that under a democratic government there is political
equality, we mean thereby that opportunity is provided to all citizens “to pass
judgment freely and frequently on the work of the political engineers whose
decisions affect their lives It is then only that a government can be by the
people A democratic government cannot please everybody any more than a
Monarchical or an Aristocratic government But the former concedes to every
and association These rights are integral
citizen the rights of speech, publication
to democracy because they make possible free discussion and the continuou.s
participation of the people in the government A government by the people must,
accordingly, mean a government by discussion and criticism— discussion of
competing ideas, “leading to a compromise in which all the ideas are reconciled
and which can be accepted by all because it bears the imprint of ail
Rights of minority, as those of majority, are, thus, embedded m the basic
democratic elements of freedom, equality, and rationality When men deliberate
collectively the goodness and rationality rise to their heights For, in the course of
discussion they exchange facts and ideas and also come to appreciate the interests
and opinions of others In this way the majority emerges with a sense of what its
direction of the State so that each man may have an identical opportunity to
grow and expand to the best of his capacity, and there is no man or group of men
who will exploit the weakness of others Democracy does not differentiate
b<*tween man and man It raises the common man high on the pedestal of serial
and political glory and this is the meaning of a government for the people
For a democratic government there must be a democratic society A
democratic government aims at justice and happiness Justice, because no man or
class or group will be strong enough to wrong otliers, happiness because each
man judging what is for his good, will have every chance of pursuing it “The
best
’’
principles of liberty and equality are justified by the results they yield Here
liberty and equality have a reference to the well-known dictum of Kant “So act
itswider meaning, as a form of society, is the main reason for its being subjected
to severe criticism ‘‘Democracy”, writes Sir Stafford Cnpps, “is a system o(
government in which every adult citizen is equally free to express his views and
desires upon all subjects in whatever way he wishes, and to influence the majority
of his fellow-citizens to decide according to those views, and to influence those
desires ” It means that uniformity of belief or action is neither necessary nor
democracy Truth only comes by the clash of opinion with opinion
desirable in
and every has something of value to contribute and he must not be
citizen
hindered from bringing it forward Democracy is, thus, rooted in equality and
can be found in a democratic society in which all enjoy equal rights and
privileges without any barriers of class distinctions
“A democratic society,” says Wolf, “is a society of free, equal, active and
intelligent citizens, each man choosing his own way of life for himself and willing
that others should choose theirs ” The brotherhood of man is the basis of a
democratic society and all its members stand equal in the common fraternity
Birth, wealth, caste, or creed do not determine the status of man A society
riddled with social and economic inequalities cannot be called a democratic
society Social and economic inequalities bnng inequalities of treatment and
right Where a common man isnot as good a factor of society as another, true
citizenship cannot be secured and a democratic government cannot succeed in
such an undemocratic society.
The Communists give a new meaning to democracy They deny the need for
a democratic government, but emphasise the necessity of a democratic State and
a democratic State to them is only a socialist State with the dictatorship of the
proletariatThey ndicule the western system of democracy with its economic and
social inequalities and regard the toleration of mmontics, which is the life-blood
of democracy, as a show of hypocrisy, because for them the existence of minorities
does not help the abolition of privileges It is only in a socialist society which is
classless, they assert, that there are no exploiters and no exploited All the
people arc toilers no antagonism among them But the
and, there exists
Communists and theirs is not a democratic State. They
are really not democrats
permit the existence of only one party, the Communist, and difference of opinion
with regard to the socialist structure of society is not allowed to prevail. All must
be ideologically committed Communists and imbued with a socialist
away" and gives place to a Communist society. This may be democracy, but not
as we understand it. According to our conception, democracy is not hostile to the
State. It is the best form of government and a permanent feature of the State in
which equal opportunity is provided to every man, iircspectivc of the opinion he
FORMS OF GOVERNMENT—democracy 309
building with pews, pulpit and spire.” Democracy, according to Barker, is a mode
of spirit, an attitude of mind of those who profess it, and only those who profess it
can practise it There is synchronisation of thoughts and actions and this is the
essence of democracy
Direct Democracy. When the people themselves directly express their will
on public affairs, the is called pure or direct democracy The
type of government
people formulate and express their will in a mass meeting and they assemble for
this purpose as often as required In the small City-States of ancient Greece and
Rome all adult male citizens were expected to meet together in the As-
—
sembly the Ecclesia of Athens, the Commitia of Rome Pure democrar\ had not
been confined to the ancient world Its surviving relics are found today in the
Swiss landsgemeinde or popular legislature There were twenty-six landsgemein-
den in the middle of the eighteenth century, today, there are only five, and one of
them has been confined On a Sunday in April or May the
to elective functions
adult male citizens in theCanton assemble to consider in full open-air meetings
the governmental affairs of the Canton At such meetings new laws are agreed
upon and old laws changed, taxes levied, budgets adopted and officials chosen
But pure or direct democracy can e.xist and function only in small States
with a limited, homogeneous population where people can conveniently meet
and deliberate together In large and complex societies, when the number of the
people IS too large and the area of the State is too extensive, direct democracy is
impracticable Even the Swiss landsgemeinde is cantonal and nowhere is it
associated with the national government This institution has been commended
by some writers with great enthusiasm, but a close acquaintance with its actual
v\oiking pnxluces a verv different cfiect “It would be naive,” savs Rappard, a
Swiss scholar, “to believe that even a small community of a few thousand
well-trained citizens could, under the complex conditions of the twentieth
century, effectively govern itself by means of such an ephemeral legislative
assembly One might as well expect a football crowd, assembled for a few hours
in a stadium, to make itself responsible for the establishment of an academic
”
curriculum or for the drafting of a measure of social insurance
now assumes the form of the referendum and the popular
Direct democracy
and they have long been familiar in Switzerland and the United States
initiative,
After the First World War they made an appearance in Germany, Latvia,
Estonia, Ireland and even in Soviet Russia. They were deleted from the Irish
Constitution in 1928, and were lying dormant for thirteen years in German>
\ 0 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
when riiiler struck down the Weimer Constitution The 1936 Constitution of
USSR empowered the Presidium to submit, on its own initiative, legislative
measures and other important matters to popular vote and hold a referendum
The 1977 Constitution abolished it, but substitutes that referendum may be
invoked as a both the Houses fail to reach agreement on a legislative
last resort if
measure for the second time after its reference to the Conciliation committee In
USA direct legislation is obtainable only in eleven States, most of them in the
west Popular, or direct legislation, as Sait remarks, “is little more than a fad
outside of Switzerland, where unique conditions prevail “ In Switzerland direct
legislation has a natural growth, or, as Bryce says, it is “racy of the soil “ There
are institutions which, like plants, flourish only on their hillside and under their
“
ow’n sunshine
resides in the electorate and its exercise, which is by the elected representatives
Hobhouse says, “Democracy means or may mean, two things which, though
allied in idea, are not necessarily found together in practice, viz direct ,
participation of the mass of ordinary citizens in the public life of the community,
(ii) ultimate popular sovereignty
’’
The voters elect the representatives for a
number of years and after the expiry of their term, they report back to their
masters, the electors The electors judge them by their deeds and determine
whether or not they should repose their trust in them for the next term If they
prefer to discontinue with them, they would do so by electing new representa-
tives Representative democracy guarantees, in other terms, a general harmony of
purpose between government and the governed by reconciling effective authority
and political freedom
It must, however, be noted that voters who have returned their repre-
sentatives in a majority and placed them in office to make and run
a policy
the government, must not exert undue pressure, penonal or regional, on them for
the fulfilments of their own ends To pressunze them for gaming personal and
selfish advantages and benefits is a democratic sin which deserves no condonation
for It demoralises the citizens and detracts democratic ideals A degree of pressure
is permissible to remind representatives of their constituents’ sentiments, but it
must not get out of hand The law-makers and administrators have to be able to
give reasoned consideration to policies and programmes, and they cannot be
stampeded by regional or group clamour of the moment Indeed, if superior men
arc selected for office, then they should be allowed to exercise their knowledge
and intelligence in an atmosphere of calm and objectivity
After World War I a good deal of dissatisfaction was expressed against the
18 Sait, E M ,
Political Institutions, A Preface,
p 432
19 Bryce, J Modem
,
Democracies, Vol. 1, pp 453-454
FORMS OF GOVFRNMFNT— DFMO RACY 311
REQUISITES OF DEMOCRACY
Democracy, in its broader sense means, faith in the common man and seeks
to give assurance to all people mhabiting the State that have equal
all
opportunity to achieve their goals as they come to envisage them, and to provide
positive means for this purpose A genuine democracy is an active, growing,
progressive force responsive to the u ill of the people and animated bv the ideals of
mutual service and public welfare It involves the presence of a democratic idea
among the people, and a democratic idea, according to ^vor Brown, means —
1 An The people should not only imbibe the will to have
“action of will”
democracy, but the power to retain it as well They should be fully conscious of
their political nghts and duties as vigilance is the price of democracy The
citizens should not be silent spectators, simply watching the game of politics. Nor
does It mean mere submission or acquiescence on their part Democracy demands
from the common man rational conduct and active participation in the affairs of
government Democratic government is government by criticism. The people
should have the courage to protest against and criticize the injustice and tyranny
of the government “To be articulate is its very life, to be dumb its demise ” It is
only the Will of the people to action which can save them from the tyranny of the
rulers The become masters when citizens are passive They become their
rulers
servants when and uphold their right that they are the ma.sters
citizens assert
The successful working of democracy depends upon the intelligence, interest,
public spirit and civic sense of its citizens, the sense of ‘public spirit’ and ‘socipl
consciousness’, in brief
porlitical rights independently and freely. The rich become a class of vested
there can be neither liberty, nor fraternity nor rationality Democracy is the
product of. liberty, equality and fraternity and all these three make for
rationality
20 Burns, C D ,
The Meaning of Democracy, Chap XIII.’
21 See Chap IX
312 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICM SCIFNCF
racy involves the rule of the majority and submission of the nimonty or
minorities to the decisions of the majority. The majority should not be prompted
in its public actions by sectional interests and ruthlessly disregard the interest of
minorities and frustrate their aspirations. A rational majority is the prerequisite
of tolerance and tolerance is the basis of democracy. Exactly, the same rational
role the minority is expected to play. It must not act in an irresponsible manner
and play a constructive role in opposing and proposing to the party in office It
must not always suspect the bona Tides of the majority and remain at perpetual
political animosity with it There should prevail a sense of give and take, the
habit of tolerance and spirit of compromise The more there are cleavages and
party squabbles in society the more difficult it is to make democracy operative
arid enthuse democratic spirit among citizens The differences in majority and
minority opinion prove beneficial only when they are directed towards the
common good and are free from partisan considerations Each party should have
full and fair opportunity to express its opinion and influence government’s policy
by reasoning and persuasion But once the decision has been taken, it is the duty
it and perform the well-recognised functions of
of the minoriiv parties to abide by
a responsible opposition This is true resignation and true service, the real
meaning of fellowship A democratic system envisages alteration in government
and both the victors and the vanquished should accept that at some future date
their positions ma\ be reversed and, as such, there should be wide agreement on
the benefits of pla> mg the game of politics according to rules
most unevenly distributed and one class of people is out to exploit the rest,
the sine qua non of a democratic government and its sutet'ss essentially depends
upon and power o( discrimination the common man
the ability, character
possesses. Democracy becomes a show aifair if he exhibits a sheep-like behaviour
— a crowd mind^ in public aflairs
rational Vigilance, wisdom, intellect, commonsense and honesty are the virtues
which citizens must possess and all such qualities flow from the gift of education.
President Lincoln said “You can fool part of the people all the time, and all the
people part of the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time ” If
citizens are educated and they have the courage to be critical of the government
this befooling business becomes infinitely difficult Those who follow Bentham’s
maxim* “While I will obey punctually, I will censure freely” are the true citizens
of a democratic polity They and to
possess the powers of discrimination to obey
criticize They do not belong to an uncritical herd This
means that there should
be a free and fearless mass media of communication which should serve as a
popular forum of educating and shaping public opinion The press, most
importantly, should be a jealous guardian of the rights and liberties of the people,
if democracy is to be a government of the people, foi the people and by the
people
APPRAISAL OF DEMOCRACY
Defects of Democracy. But tiu aNumipiions ol dcnu)crdt\ aic too idealistic
and difficult to be realised Democracy demands from the people
in practical lite
equal and that one man is as good as another, whatever his real worth He votes
and is eligible for office on a level with them all But, it is an irrational and
impracticable dogma, the critics maintain They assert that men are manifestly
not equal. Physically and mentally they differ widely from one another. Votes
arc, then, counted and not weighed Counting of votes determines a majority and
the decisions will have -to be those of the majority, no matter what the margin
may be and howsoever superior wisdom and better judgment the minority may
claim Faguet considers democracy as a hopeless rule of ignorance He makes
democracy synonymous with incompetence, as it is a government by amateurs, or
as another theorist has put it “government by fools ” Lccky characterised it as
“the government of the poorest, the most ignorant, the most incapable, who arc
necessarily the most numerous ” The representatives assume the responsibility of
governing the State not because they arc able and possess specialized knowledge
in administration, but only as they command a majority “A youth must pass,”
remarked Sir Sydney Low, “an examination in Arithmetic before he can hold a
second class clerkship in the Treasury but a Chancellor of the Exchequer may be
a middle-aged man of the world who has forgotten what little he ever learnt
about figures at Eton or Oxford and is innocently anxious to know the meaning of
those little dots " The inefficiency of a democratic government is essentially
reflected in its policies, especially those relating to defence and foreign relations,
which are weak and vacillating A government which depends for its existence
upon the uncertain passions of unthinking people (as it happend in many States
of India after the Fourth General Elections in 1967) and is never sure ol its life
cannot afford to undertake a sound and long-term policy Nor can it ensure
efficiency as it lives and thrives on nepotism Offices are distributed by corrupting
the representatives, w ho coquette with the electors to ensure their berth
Nazi- ism and Fascism were the two serious critics of democracy before
World War II Those associated with these doctrines charactensed democracy as
incompetent and inefficient in dealing with serious economic problems Hitler
Party system is indisficnsable for democracy But the manner in which party
system actually works in modem democracies deprives countries of the services
of some of their best citizens Political parties encourage hollowness and
insecunty, create clcav^cs in the life of the nation, debase normal standards and
distnbute the “spoils” ^^Election propaganda misguides and miscducatcs people.
Moral considerations arc subordinated in order to secure the largest number of
votesPeople vote for the party and not for the candidate The representative
owes responsibility
to the party on whose ticket he contested the election and he
The most militant and systematic of the contemporary attacks upon the
democratic system comes from the Marxists Democracy, they hold, is the
political system of a class society and it reflects the interests and wishes of the
bourgeois or the dominant class, the propertied class who own productive
property So long as class society endures, exploitation of the working class will
continue unabated Maxism concedes that capitalist democracy is a ‘real’
democracy for the rich, but is only a sham for the poor
The ethical value ol democracy is also seriously questioned. Its critics assert
ised and popularised” before they can make an appeal to the people. Questions
arc not discussed dispassionately T hey arc discussed in such a manner as to catch
a nefarious device, because strangulates thought
votes And catching of votes is it
25 Asirvatham, E ,
Political Theory, p 478
316 PRlNCm-ES OF POl mCAL SCIENCE
and chokes reason. The voter is not given an opportunity to pause and think A
man who docs not think is not serving the purpose of his creation. The result is
that he is easily led astray Most of the electors being uneducated, some indeed
illiterate, as is the case with quite a sizable percentage in India, adult franchise is
a farce. Many do not know for whom they are voting, others vote as they are told
to do for considerations of religion, caste and regional affinities Votes are
purchased and even dead voters are resuscitated for the day of election Few
countries can deny that their practice and their theory do not fully coincide It is,
Merits of Democracy. Bryce, nevertheless, points out that the first three
defects are common to all forms of government and are not inherent only in
democracy The last three are associated more closely with democracy, but are
not insurmountable evils “Democracy,” as Dunning says, “has closed some of the
old char^ru Is of evil, it has opened some new ones, but it has not increased the
stream DemcKTacy must face self-interest and irresponsibility of power, both
of which underlie its major problems But
two powerful weapons to fight
it has
against these evils *
law and opinion The
latter cannot be realised in any other
form of government except democracy While admitting that democracy has
defects, Herman Finer says, that the political, social and economic gifts of
democracy endow mankind with vast riches He observes that under a
democratic government, “we have the assurance that the sphere of our private
life— our family, our diversions, our worship, our work -will not be invaded
except by due process of law in which we have an equal say with any. We rest
tranquil that officials and judges will not
abuse us and that they themselves will
have to answer for discrimination and bias and unauthorised invasions of our
private and public life to a public tribunal in which we, as of right, sit as judge
and jury
In spile of the unsparing attacks to which democracy has been subjected, it
still tends to spread, conferring more and more power on the people The Second
World War was fought on the basis of democracy vs dictatorship It was a victory
for democracy With it, however, dictatorship did not vanish altogether It did
apf)ear in some new countries other than those vanquished But once the
dictators received recognition and their dc jure authority was duly established,
they tempered their dictatorships with democratic processes and eventually
became elected Presidents in then countries Nasser in Egypt and Ayub in
It means thatdemocracy has a great appeal for all people and they have i*ot
lost faith in it Itremains their beau-ideal The problem of democracy centres on
the one point whether or not man is increasing in wisdom The answer is in the
no other form of government gives so much to the citizen as
affirmative, for while
democTaev does, at the same time, noother form of government demands so much
from him as does deniocracv I he rights which a democratic government confers
on a citizen and the duties he owes as a result thereof, make him an active
participant in the politics of his country and it is a widespread activity He
thinks over and tackles the problems facing him and his country as a rational
man and rationality is one of the fundamental tenets of democracy A corollary to
this is that no one has a monopoly of reason No one is the sole repository of
wisdom All men have something of value of contribute, however little it may be
27 /W,
Vol Il,p 504
Dunning, op citd, Recent Times, Vol IV, p 63 Refer to Modem Democracies, op
28
cud, Vol II, p 459
3) Finer, H I hr Ihfoi] find hadia’ of Modem GoiCmmenl, op aid p 952
,
principles of political science
not perish as long as there hope in the rationality of man, that is, as long as
is
man is free to think and reason and solve his problems Thinkers are doers and a
citizen of a democratic State does not only think for himself, but he also thinks
for the fraternity to which he belongs Faguet feels that “it is necessary to know
what a people thinks, what it feels, what it suffers, what it desires, and what it
“
hopes, and all this can be learnt only from the people itself
Democracy, as said earlier, is more than a form of government It is a form of
society as well, even an ideal or a spirit, a doctrine of human optimism
Democracies, says Finer, “admit the pragmatic nature of their search for
perfection, and recognise that no single exclusive principle
of perfection there is
able to “stand up
them himself Secondly, there is a great degree of general
’
for
prosperity which is more widely diffused as the energies and interests of all the
people are stimulated and enlisted in its support Indirect democracy does not
mean actual rule by the people, “for the people rather determine the ends
towards which their government shall aim, and watch over those into whose
hands they have placed the actual power of administration In short, it is
claimed that popular election, popular control, and popular responsibility are
more likely to ensure a greater degree of efficiency and welfare than any other
sf^tm of government ^2 There
is, thus, no justification for the assertion of Sir
Henry Maine that Aristocracy is the mother of all progress, that popular
government “is ( haracierised by great fragility, and that sime its appearance, all
forms of government have become more insecurti than they were before
The critics of democracy contend that men are not rational as democracy
accepts them to be and, as such, the complicated societies in which we live need
the best men m government. They insist that democracy never picks the best and
often the worst instead, votes are counted and not weighed is their familiar
argument No one denies that some men are not rational. Neither are men always
rational But neither can one assert that men are always irrational or that all men
are irrational Men are men, with all their frailities This is true all d
governments and democracy is no exception to it But the simple question is what
form of government can provide the scope for the use and flowering of
rationality^ It is democracy, because it is informative and is the only conduit for
social forces that is at all adequate in modem times It admits the will of all
members into the determination of social policy, secures the representation of all
views and feelings and is therefore more responsive to social and economic
changes It taps sources of political talent which he beyond the purview of other
systems of government It is best qualified constantly to adjust the supply of
control to social need and favours a wholesome social equilibrium It deepens the
sense of social obligation
Similarly, the merit of democracy does not lie in its efficiency as a form of
government Nobody has ever defended democracy on grounds of efficiency. It is
defended on the grounds that the denial of freedom involves the denial of certain
personal values which are more important than efficiency A good government,
tested on the touchstone of efficiency alone, is no substitute for self-government
Democracy is the most chenshed goal of self-government It is a government by
the people for then welfare and, as such, it stimulates them to self-education. The
supreme test of excellence in government is not the well feeding of the people nor
IS It to be found in the rigidity of order the State maintains “It is the character a
polity tends to create,” as Lowell remarks, “in the citizens by whom it must be
sustained The best government in the one that nurtures a people
long run is
political authority “Since the law will be made and the administration be given
momentum and controlled by us, voters,” writes Finer, “and since our power can
be successfully exerted by association and persuasion, the impulse of the system is
to foster fellowship and a common conscience among all men”, the spirit of
:ViO PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
search for another form of government instead of improving what we have The
essence of democracy, in the words of Mazzini,is “the progress of all through all
under the leading of the best and wisest ” Its supreme value is ethical and
educational As a form of government democracy can flourish and decline in
proportion to the moral and intellectual stature of man As Robert Maclver
pointed out, “there is only one way to keep it in being, and that is through the
intelligent perception, permeating the people, of what itis and what makes it
analysis depends upon man and how he accepts man hrst as a fellow-citizen and
ihen, as a member of that great fratemitv of mankind It is the recognition of this
sense of brotherhood that helps to stabilise fellow-feelings and cement the bonds
of comradeship Democracy can only succeed, when democratic feelings
synchronise with democratic actions at all levels
offence The result is obvious Our social,economic and political orders have
become shaky and unless democracy, as a form of government, finds the means of
equalizing opportunity and wipes out the existing wide economic disparities, its
future appeal is doubtful Political need anscs for the sake of a happy and just life
and if a democratic apparatus of government does not provide to man what his
basic demands are, the clamour for its substitution by some other form of
H Burns, CD ,
Dernormn, p 80
i*) .V( ('hap XIU,/w/w
% Maclver, R M ,
The Ramparts We Guard, p 4
FORMS OF GOVFRNMENT—DEMOCRACY 321
government, which can assure the same, is not i vain search. But that is groping
in the dark with far distant hope even for the twilight Democratic light is still
there to illuminate the path of life Clement Attlee correctly said that capitalistic
democracy may not give freedom or equality of opportunity to the mass of the
people owing to economic inequalities but democracy is the only method by
which economic and social equality will ultimately be achieved
SUGGESTED READINGS
Adams, H T/if Degradation of Democratic Dogma
Allen, C K Democracy and the Individual
appear from such a use as if there could exist within the State a number of
governments at the same time But it is not so It may be called a traditional
approach, but m the real sense there can be no government within a government
What seem to be separate governments are in ntality parts of one governmental
system They all form parts of one integrated governmental organisation This
point is important to grasp for proper appreciation of the distribution of powers
among its different levels of administration and the character of the governmental
system resulting therefrom The conventional use of the term for all levels of
administration, however, is universally accepted and practised All the same, its
use for the internal management of corporations, associations and groups is likely
to cause confusion and even ambiguity in properly understanding the operative
part of the machinery' of the State
Though a State can have but one government, yet such is the extent of
territory over which many modem States exercise jurisdiction and so numerous
and varied arc their functions that it is impossible for any single authority to do
Itswork from one single centre Then, it is not only the problem of doing the
work It must be done effectively and efficiently It is, therefore, imperative that
the sum total of governmental powers should be split up and distributed among
different organs and authorities, and, together, they should all constitute one
harmonious scheme for the administration of public affairs
functions to be performed These two are not alternate methods Both are used in
the organisation of all modem governments, but differently. This leads to
different characters of the resulting governmental systems
323
324 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
rather than the country as a whole It does not, however, mean that one single
central authority cannot perform these functions burden of But if it docs, the
work and responsibility would be too heavy for effective and efficient administra-
tion It would also result in intolerable expense and delay Moreover, it is politic
to entrust the smaller communities with the affairs that concern them alone,
because of the presumption that the people belonging to a particular locality can
best know and appreciate their needs. Besides, it gives to a larger number of
persons an interest and share in political affairs “We cannot realise the full
benefit of democratic government,” says Laski, “unless we begin by the admission
that ail problems are not central problems, and the results of problems not
central in their incidence require decision at the place, and by the persons, where
”
and by whom the incidence is most deeply felt
Analysis of the problem. But the real problem is that of determining how
the sum total of governmental powers shall be distributed territorially Ifwe
analyse this problem, it will be found that in it arc involved four distinct
questions (1) What authonty shall decide the distribution of powers^ (2) What
shall be the geographical system of division into different political units^ (3)
What shall be the powers of the government of each temtonal unit^ (4) What
shall be the type of governmental organization in each territorial unit?
For a student of Political Science the first of these four questioiLs, viz ,
what
authority has the legal right to determine the distnbution of governmental power
among the different temtorial units, is much the most important, for its decision
determines the character of the resulting governmental system.
Two types of Government — Unitary and Federal. Two systems are found
in modem States with two types of resulting governments, unitary and federal A
unitary government is a single integrated system of government for the exercise of
all powers. The legal sovereign confers all the powers of government in the first
instance upon a single central government. The central government may exercise
all these powers by itself or create political sub-divisions and delegate to them
such powers as it may deem wise to delegate. The central government is compe-
tent to change their boundaries as well as powers at its pleasure, by ordinary
legislative enactment. A federal government, on the other hand, is a system of
FORMS OF GOVERNMENT— UNITARY 325
government in which powers arc divided and distributea between the central
government and governments of political divisions. Both sets of governments
exercise powers granted to them by the constitution and are, within a sphere,
coordinate and independent, that is, both are free and autonomous within the
spheres assigned to them by the constitution and neither is helplessly dependent
on the other for its existence and proper functioning. It means equality of status
between the two sets of government, the one is not simply the creation of the
other Both, the national government and the regional governments, enjoy a
juridical status and a corporate personality
The Government of India, too, was unitary in character under the Act of
1919 Although the Provinces were given a partial responsible government, called
dyarchy, and the central and provincial subjects were demarcated, normally
allowing the Provinces to legislate on provincial subjects, yet the Government of
India was supreme m all affairs of Provincial governments, executive and
legislative The Act of 1919 had vested the superintendence, direction and control
of the civil and military government of India in the Govcmor-Gcneral-m-Council
who was required to give due obedience to all such orders as he might receive
from the Secretary of State for India The Governor-General had wide powers of
assenting to, vetoing, or of reserving for the significance, of His Majesty the
King — Emperor, and of returning for further consideration biUs passed by the
Central Legislature He could exercise similar powers in relation to bills passed
by the Provincial legislatures. The Indian Legislature was competent to make
laws for all persons and all things within Bntish India, except that the previous
sanction of the Governor-General was necessary for the introduction of any
measure regulating any provincial subjects as classified according to the Act of
1919 Similarly, the Central Legislature had the power to repeal or amend any
law in force in any part of British India, except that the previous sanction of the
Govemor-Gcreral was necessary for introducing a bill, repealing or amending
any Act of a Provincial legislature
Merits of Unitary Government. The unitary type of government represents
the most effective type of governmental organisation The whole problem of the
CH'ganisation of enormously simplified and the system possesses the
government is
complex problems, national and international, that they have neither the
initiative nor the time to devote to local affairs Local areas cannot, accordingly,
progress But such a criticism will not hold valid once we distinguish between
centralization of authority and centralization of the use of this authority A really
centralised government is cmic in which the central government, instead of
making use of agencies to which large powers of discretion are granted, attempts
Itself directly to administer local affairs It is in this sense that France, in
comparison with other countries, has a highly centralized government, and not
because it has adopted a unitary form of government There is nothing in the
unitary form of government which does not permit decetralization in the actual
exercise of governmental powers, or the conferring of autonomy or powers of
self-government upon political sub-divisions All the same, unitary government is
best suited for small countries which have a geographical unity and which arc
racially and culturally homogeneous It does not suit a country with a large
territory and huge population consisting of diverse races and cultures Only a
federation can bring unity out of this diversity
FEDERAL POLITY
Federal System. The term federation is derived from the Latin word foedus
meaning treaty or agreement A federal polity comes into existence either as a
result of centripetal or centrifugal forces When hitheito sovereign and indepen-
dent States, either because they are too weak to resist foreign aggression
individually, or because they remain economically backward by standing alone,
voluntanly agree to unite, as in union there lies strength, they form a federal
union Such a union comes into existence as a result of centripetal forces The
instrument by which a federation is broup’ t about is of the nature of a treaty or
agreement between independent States and the new unit of government, national
or central, which they agree to create A new State is, thus, created to which the
hitherto sovereign States surrender their sovereigntyand agree to become its
component parts, known by different names States in the United States, —
Australia and India, Provinces in Canada and Pakistan, Cantons in Switzerland,
Union Republics in the Soviet Union, and the Lands (Lander) in the German
Federal Republic — in different federal States
The central or national government, which comes into existence, as a result
of such a union, and the resultant new State is entrusted with powers of general
character, which concern the nation as a whole Other subjects, which are of
which variety of practice can be permitted, are left within the
local interest, or in
jurisdiction of the regional government, States, Provinces or Cantons whatever
be their name The powers so distributed between the two sets of government,
central and regional, are protected by the constitution and neither of the two can
encroach upon the jurisdiction of the other or destroy its existence by itself.
neither in the central government nor in the regional governments Neither can it
be divided between the two, as many writers have, held It lesides in the State
alone and it is exercised by the authonty which has the power to amend the
constitution. In a federation, therefore, separate States disappear, their sovereign-
1
ty being destroyed; and their citizens having divested themselves of the old
allegiance, create, on the basis of a national unity, a federal polity within a new
State.
A federation may also come into existence when a unitary State with a large
area, which needs unity out of its diversity, divides its power into two sets of
government and grants constitutional autonomy to its units The new apparatus
of government comes to be like this, the central government retains only those
subjects which are of national importance and transfers the rest to the
junsdiction of the units, each autonomous within the sphere assigned to it In this
case centrifugal forces operate and bring about a federal form of government For
example the Government of India Act, 1935, envisaged a federation consisting of
all the eleven Provinces and those Princely States which were to express their
Whatever be the method of its coming into existence and whatever be the
system of division of powers, a federal polity is a dual government, in which
powers are divided and distributed by the constitution between a central
government and regional governments Unlike the unitary government, powers of
the units in a federation are original and not derived. They are not the grant of
the central government, but the gift of the constitution and they are constitution-
ally protected Both the central and regional governments are coordinate,
independent authorities within their allotted spheres of jurisdiction Neither can
encroach upon the powers of the other If any change is desired to be made in the
distribution of powers, it cannot be made by any one of the two sets of
government alone It must be made by amending the constitution ^ prescribed
by law This means equality of status and this is the essence of federalism,
although equality of status does not necessanly imply absolute equality of
powers This is an impossible task and not within the reach of practical politics
The distribution of powers between the central government and regional
governments depends upon vanous factors and every country has its own peculiar
problems Carl Fncdnch observes, “It goes without saying that such divisions of
the ‘competencies’, that is, the sphere within which each may operate, must and
will vary according to time and space Economic and social life, the military and
geographical factors, all will play their role in determining the particular
arrangement From a fxilitical standpoint, no distinctive generalization or
principle can be denved The balance of powers is, accordingly, differently
tilted in different federations, in some it
is in favour of the central government
and in others it is in favour of regional governments But it does not deprive the
government of its federal character so long as the one is not rendered helplessly
dependent on the other for its existence or proper functioning By the federal
pnnciple, observes Wheare, “I mean the method of dividing powen so that the
general and regional governments are each within a sphere, coordinate and
independent ” The existence of a sphere of activities for either government
central and regional— where they are coordinate and independent is the essential
attribute of federalism. Dicey defines federation as a “political contrivance
intended to reconcile national unity with the maintenance of ‘State rights’, the
desire for national unityand determination of each individual unit to maintain
its identiy and independence.
(2) the States willing to federate lose their sovereign character as soon as a
federation is formed. A new State emei^es as a result of this union and it,
(4) the powers of government are divided and distributed into these two
parts. The central government is given jurisdiction over subjects of a general
nature, which are common to all and among others those promoting the union.
The regional governments are given power over matters of local importance and
utility, which do not require uniformity,
(5) a federation is made, it does not grow It is made deliberately with a
view to having the benefits of union And since the union establishes a system of
dual government in which powers arc dnided and distributed, a written
constitution is the logical necessity of such a government,
(6) it also involves ngidity of the constitution so that neither the central
government nor the regional governments may be in a position to deprive the
other of its powers If any change is desired to be brought about, it must be made
by amending the constitution,
It means equality of status between the two sets of government and this is
All cases of conflict of jurisdiction between the central government and the
units of a federation or between one unit and another arc decided by an impartial
judiciary, caUed the Supreme or the Federal Court. It is the guardian erf* the
constitution and it can declare any law, federal or that enacted by any of the
units, or an executive order unconstitutional and consequently inoperative. A
unitary government does not need such a process, because the powers of the
various sub-divisions are not their original powers. They are delegated to them by
the central government and what it delegates it can withdraw, diminish or
mcrease. The authority of the central government in this respect is undisputed
and unchallengeable.
In a federation there are two sets of laws as there are two sets of government,
each government legislating on subjects assigned to its jurisdiction. A citizen of a
federal State must obey the laws enacted by the national as well as local
government It also envisages double citizenship In a unitary system of
government there is single citizenship and a uniform system of law prevails
throughout, as in Bntain and France All this means that the loyalty of a citizen
is divided and local jealousies and distinctions plague the federal system A
unitary system of government does not suffer from any of these drawbacks
certain ^wer over the member ‘States’, but not over the citizens of these States.’^
destroy the central government nor modify its powers on their own initiative.
That can only be done by amending the constitution and according to the
prescribed method But in a Confederation the member-States create the central
authority, sometimes called even government, which they can destroy, or wide i
foreign countries But while the States were bound by the agreement to honour
the requisition and comply with the treaties, there were no means of compelling
them to do so, the power of the Congress was only recommendatory and not
mandatory Finally, a Federation deals with the citizens of a federal State; in a
Confederation the common organ of authonty deals with governments of the
member-States, it is a union of States and not of the people A Confederation has
no citizens or subjects to whom its commands can be directly addressed. To sum
up
whole country in respect of some matters that are of national importance and
concern the interests of the community as a whole and that there are indepiendeni
regional authorities for other matters of local importance, and each set of
authorities is coordinate with and not subordinate to the other within its own
prescribed sphere Such a system of government demands the presence of certain
conditions which should exist to pave the way for a federation to materialize
According to Dicey there should be, in the first place, a strong desire to have a
union. The will to have a union and to be under a single independent
government for some purposes is really the basis of a Federation It means that the
federating units must be inspired and bound' together by a sense of oneness with a
desire to objectify it politically Unless they become a community of interests,
sharing each other’s weal and woe, their cohesion into a new State is extremely
The second requisite condition is that the federating States must desire
difficult.
union rather than unity, that is, while there should be a desire on the part of the
federating States for national unity and to be under a single independent
government, they must desire, at the same time, to maintain their individuality
and autonomous existence by establishing independent regional governments in
some matten at least The aim of federalism is to give effect to both these
sentiments. It is m
this context that Dicey defined a Federation as a political
contrivance intended to reconcile national unity and power with the mainten-
ance of State rights. Or to express it in the words of Wheare, the group of States
or communities “must desire to be united, but not to be unitary ”
10. Wheare, K C ,
Federal Government^ p 36
FORMS OF GOVERNMENT—FEDERATION 333
But this Something more is needed. There should not be the desire
is not all
It will, thus, be clear that strong as the forces of language, race, religion and
nationality are in producing a desire for union, such a desire can nonetheless be
produced among people who differ in all these particulars, but possess a
sentiment of union, that is, a common sentiment that in union lies strength and
this strength can be achieved by a political cohesion j^The sentiment of unity,”
says Gilchrist, “is the index of a common mind ” A great deal, therefore,
depends upon the political leadership or statesmanship at the right time, which
helps to combat the forces of racial, religious and linguistic differences and instil
in the people instead a desire to unite itself The desire for union in Canada was
made effective by the leadership of men like John Macdonald, Alexander Galt
and George Etienne In America the people had a community of language, race
and religion and similarity of political institutions, but these factors had failed to
produce anything beyond a Confederation, It was under the leadership of
Washington, Hamilton, Madison, Jay, Benjamin Franklin and James Wilson
that the delegates at the Philadelphia Convention of 1787, “with a manly
confidence” in their country, threw the Articles d Confederation aside and
designed to bring unity into the diversity of the new nation. But it happened the
other way in India The Muslim League, under the inspiration of Mohammed
1 1 Mill, J S ,
Representatm Govfmment, p 36
1 2 Gilchrist, R N ,
Principles &f Political Science, p 359.
334 PRINCm.ES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
All Jinnah, had all through relied upon the theory of a separate Muslim nation
and the creation of a separate homeland for Muslims. If the separatist tendencies
based upon race, religion and language had not been fostered so assiduously by
the Muslim leadership, the result would have been a united Indian federation
rather than the division of the country into two parts, India and Pakistan “This
factor of leadership, of skill in negotiation and propaganda, can make,” observes
’
Wheare, “all the difference between stagnation and an active desire for union
Bangladesh
Of all the factors which produce the desire for union, similarity of social
institutions and particularly political institutions is the one vs huh is \er\ im-
portant, because it prtxluces best the capaciiv for union V\ heare remarks that the
desire for union has practically never been aroused unless similarity of political
institutions “was present actually or potentially among those who envisaged the
union.” Similanty of institutions creates conditions of common political stnacturc
which, m its turn, makes possible the development of a common political culture
It is essentially for this reason that the system of government established at the
centre finds its replica in the federating units also The Constitutions of the
United States and Switzerland both require that their respective units must have
a republican form of government In Canada, Australia and India the
parliamentary system of government has been explicitly established in all the
units.
13 Whcarc, K C ,
Federal Gwemrrmi, p 40
14 Gilchmt, R N ,
FnncipUs of Bolttual Science, p 359
FORMS OF GOVERNMENT— FEDERATION 335
15 Wheare, K C ,
Federal Government, p 47
16 Friedrich, CJ ,
Constitutional Government and Democracy, p 220
17 Report of the States Reorganisation Commissm, para, 237
18 Wheare, K C ,
Federal Government, p 48
19 Ibid, p 49
336 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCF
unity be such that, in practice, views can be adjusted and the differences
reconciled There should be a common meeting ground upon national policy as
well as upon the local liberties of the constituent units
wide differences in size and population, the federating States are not equal
partners in a union Units larger in size and population and more powerful in
resources than others may be too proud and domineering for smaller ones They
may even overrule the others and bend the will of the central government to
themselves The idea of dominance by some creates suspicion and lack of
confidence in others Confidence is the essence of the will to federate and the
capacity to work the federal government The essential prerequisite of a
federation, says Mill, is that there “should not be any one State so much more
powerful that the rest as to be capable of vying in strength with many of them
combined If there be such a one, and only one, it will insist on being master of
the joint deliberations, if there be two, they will be irresistible when they agree
and whenever they differ everything will be decided by a struggle for ascendency
“
between the rivals
It is true that some divergence in size between the units must necessarily be
present before a federal union is desired and this
an important factor in the is
governments must also be left with adequate economit resouices to run their
administrations and perform the functions assigned to them satisfactoriK
without being dependent on thedolcsof the national government If the resources
left are not sufficient to support an independent regional government, “then no
matter how much states desire a federal union and no matter whether a federal
constitution is drawn up, in practice federal government will not be possible
Soon the regional governments will be unable to perform their functions or they
will be able to perform them only at the price of financial de}x*nclcnce upon the
general government, that is, at the price of financial unification " One of the
reasons for which the leaden in South Africa rejected a federal union was that the
country would be unduly taxed if they were requia*d to support both a central
government as well as independenf regional governments A federation is an
expensive mechanism and it should be adopted only when the ronstitutent units
can pay the price of retaining the separate identity and independence of action in
the sphere assigned to them
The war against the British ended and the Treaty of 1783 acknowledged the
independence, freedom and sovereignty of the thirteen Colonies But the
Confederation became a league of disgruntled independents, which revealed the
powerlessness of the Congress created under the Articles of Confederation It
lacked the authority to weld the States into a unity, to mitigate their commercial
rivalries, to establish a sound currency, to remove the causes of domestic
disorders, and to foster American interests abroad Washington, Hamilton,
Madison and many others, who had laboured to bring together the States in
bonds of union, were convinced that the government of the Confederation must
cither be revised or superseded entirely by a new system Washington wrote, “I do
not conceive that we can exist long as a nation without having lodged somewhere
a power w'hich will pervade the whole nation in as energetic a manner as the
authontv of the State Governments extends over the several States ” They all
expel icnced the feeling that ail Amenca should be one, a feeling which cements
the bonds of oneness, giving birth to a nation “We are now a new nation,” said
Rush, “ the more a man aims at serving America, the more he serves his
—
colony We have been too free with the word independence, we are dependent
on each cjther, not totally independent States when I entered that door I
“
considered myself a citizen of America
Here are the germs of a union which now carries the nomenclature of a
federal government The delegates to the Philadelphia Convention of 1787, who
were sent bv the States for the purpose of preparing a revision of the Articles of
the functions and powers of the national goveinment being new, general and
inclusive, had to be carefully defined and stated, while all other functions and
powers were to belong to the States To make the powers of the central
government real, they act'epted the fact that it be empowered, among other
things, to coin money, to regulate commerce, to declare war, to make peace, and
m PRINCIPLES OF POIITICAI SCIENCF
Other countries that followed. Once the example of the United States had
demonstrated that a federal union could work successfully, a precedent was
established that others, whose situations were similar, could follow The first to
do so was Switzerland In 1847, the Swiss Confederation was convulsed by an
attempt of seven Catholic cantons to secede The Protestant majority crushed the
secessionists, who had formed a separate league called the Sounderbund. The
defeat of the seven Cotholic cantons was, in fact, the triumph of the movement of
national unity Next year the Swiss Diet approved a new constitution which
created a federal union closely patterned on that of the United States
The next to adopt this system was Canada, in 1867, although the Canadian
federation was produced by a different combination of factors The direct cause
of the federalmovement was the racial conflict between the British and
French “national groups, two nations warring within the bosom of a single State”
as the Durham Report had lamented, which rendered the unitary government
unworkable Economic problems also plagued a divided Canada Nor was
defence unimportant In 1864, a coalition government took office, pledging
unification The final outcome was the North America Act, 1867 and the
Dominion of Canada was established The scheme of distribution of powers
between the Centre and the Provinces was just the reverse of the American model
and It was essentially due to the lessons of America’s civil war of 1860 The
Provinces were given exclusive legislative control over a list of enumerated
subjects, reserving the rest for the Dominion The Dominion government was also
given the power to disallow any Act passed by a provincial legislature, to appoint
the Lieutenant-Governor of a Province, and to instruct him to withhold his assent
from provincial bills and to reserve them for consideration of the Governor-
General, who might refuse assent to such reserved bills Finally, appointments to
all the important judicial posts were placed in the hands of the Dominion
executive
In the formation of the Australian federation the need for common defence
was probably the though economic issues were also involved The
strongest,
Commonwealth came into existence on January 1, 1901 The Constitution
enumerated substantial powers for the federal government, the residue remaining
in the hands of the States The mam taxation powers were given to the federal
government, with three-quarters of the revenues to be returned to the States
dunng the first ten years
centralised Soviet State ” The Constitution of 1936 gave certain specified powers
to the Union government and left the residuary powers with the constituent
Republics; and each Republic exercised its authority independently of the
central government. The Constitution also gave to the constituent Republics the
right to secede. The 1977 constitution closely followed the federal pattern set by
its predecessor constitution.
FORMS OF C.OVERNMENT— FEDERATION 339
Constitution, and, as such they exercise all rights which are not transferred to the
F'txieral power ” The reasons for the adoption of this system are largely historical
The federal union was, in each case, formed by the union of previously
independent sovereign States At the time of the union, the latter desired to
retain to themselves all governmental power except such as was plainly necessary
to confer upon the central government in order that an effective union might be
established
In Canada the method adopted was just the reverse of that in the United
States and Switzerland Here, too, historical events determined the course “All
Constitutions,” as Jennings remarks, “are the heirs of the past as well as the
testators of the future ” The presistent racial conflict between the Bntish and the
French and the failure of the unitary government, coupled with the cool relations
with the United States, enforced the argument for unification and for a national
authority Federal government seemed the obvious solution But the experience of
the near-dissolution of the American Union in the Civil War led British and
Canadian statesmen to the conclusion that the central government must possess
more powers than those belonged to its counterpan in the United States The
Canadian Constitution— the British North America Act, 1867— accordingly,
divides the powers between the Provincial and Dominion governments in such a
m PRINCIPI FS OF POLITICAL SCIFNCL
and the Dominion has exclusive control over the which “for greater clarity*' rest,
were enumerated, though not exhaustively The legislatures of Dominion and the
Provinces are distinct from each other, neither has the power to alter the
constitution so far as the distribution of powers is concerned In Canada,
therefore, enumerated powers are given to the Provinces and residuary powers are
left to the Dominion government
The Constitution of India contains three lists of subjects, the Union List, the
State List and the Concurrent List, and the residuary powers rest in Parliament
The total number of subjects exclusively given to the Central government are
ninety-seven as compared with sixty-six which are under the actual exclusive
control of the Stales The Concurrent List contains forty-seven subjects upon
which both Union and State legislatures makes laws Here is an enumeration
more than anvthing attempted in any other federation The provisions which
deal with a conflict between the Union and State laws are interesting
’
In
general, they require that State laws on concurrent subjectsmust give way to the
laws of the Union government to the extent of their repugnancy to such laws The
Union legislature has also been empowered to legislate on any mattei in the State
List, if the Council o^ States (Rajya Sabha) passes a resolution by a two-thirds
the Union Parliament can acquire jurisdiction on any subject, as toi example,
even over university education “by the simple process of decision of the
Inter-University Board of India which is an international bod\ because it
’’
contains representatives of universities in Burma and Ceylon
B.R Ambedkar, Law Minister in the Government of India and tne principal
architect of the Constitution, admitted in the Constituent Assembh' that “the
constitution has not been set in a tight-mould of federalism ’’
The federal
principle has, indeed, been so much modified by unitary elements in the form of
control by the Central government over the State governments and the
intervention m the conduct of affairs of the State governments has become so
proverbial that the Indian Constitution, many cntics maintain, cannot claim
to establish a federal union And the C^onsiitulion nowhtie uses the woid
federation The omission is deliberate and shows the intentions of the authors
of the Constitution It is true that the federal principle has beep introduced into
the terms of the Constitution to some extent and Wheare d"cms it “justifiable to
des(ribe it as a quasi-federal constitution,” government in but a system of
which one partner can unmake another cannot claim to have even the semblance
of a federation The Indian Constitution may have the form of a federation, but
22 Article 254
23 Article 249
24 Article 250
25 Some Charactertstta of the Indian Constitution,
p 66
26 Refer to Anup Chand Kapur’s Government of Indian Republic, Chap IV
27 Wheare, K C ,
Federal Government, p 28
FORMS OF GOVERNMENT— FEDERATION 341
among equals; oneness of the State with the separateness of the units is its
formula, although equality of status docs not mean absolute equality of powers
There arc some students of federalism who hold that the federal principle
consists m the division of powers in such a way that the powers to be exercised by
the central government are enumerated in the Constitution and the residue is left
to the regional governments It is not enough for federalism, they assert, that the
central and regional governments should each be independent in its own sphere.
That sphere must be marked in a particular way, that is, the residuary powers
must lie with the regional governments Applying this criterion, a government is
not federal if the powers of the regional governments are specified and the residue
is left to the central government The Constitutions of the United States,
Switzerland and Australia embody the federal principle, because they distinctly
enumerate subjects over which their central legislatures exercise control and they
further provide that powers not so given to the central governments remain with
their states and cantons
But such a test of federalism, in the opinion of Wheare, concentrates on a
itiati\eiv superficial characteristic “’rhe essential point,” he says, “is not that
the division of powers is made in such a way that the regional
governments are the residuary legatees under the consntution^ but that the
division IS made in such a way that, whoever has the residue, neither general nor
regional government is subordinate to the other ”"^It is, no doubt, true that the
question of residuary power is important as it affects the balance of power in a
lederation, but this factor itself does not make a government federal The
iundamental point in a federal principle is whether the powers of government are
divided between coordinate, independent authorities or not It is immaterial
what the system of distribution of powers is and where the residuary power rests
The circumstances of each country decide which method is adopted Carl
Friedrich points out, “The existence of residuary powers has ever been held to
constitute the decisive test of ‘staiehoixi' for the component units In reality, such
residuary powers are an illusion, if the powers and functions delegated to the
centralgovernment are practically all-embracing, as they were in Weimar
Germany, broad delegated powers would mean more ‘local government’ in actual
practice than such a residue of ‘genuine self-determination’ In either case, the
governments and leaving the residue to the former What makes the Canadian
Constitution “quasi-federal” are the matters in which the Provincial Govern-
ments are subordinate to the Central Government, and not coordinate with it.
These matters arc* the power of the Dominion executive to disallow any Act
passed by a Provincial legislature even if it falls within its sphere of jurisdiction,
2H /W.p 1'?
and to reserve them for consideration by the Dominion executive, and it may
refuse assent to such reserved bills if it thinks fit
each component part of the union has its own separate constitution “To base an
arrangement of this kind”, writes Dicey, “upon understandings or conventions
would be certain to generate misunderstandings and disagreements The
articles of the treaty, or in other words of the constitution, must, therefore, be
reduced to writing, the constitution must be a written document for it is the
”
“charter of rights and duties of the federal and State authorities '^Wheare says
that it the government is to be federal, its constitution must be supreme By the
supremacy of the constitution he means that “the terms of the agreement which
establishes the general and regional governments and which distributes power
between them must be binding upon the general and regional governments This
is a logical necessity from the definition of federal government itself” ^“^If the
( c rural government and the regional governments are to be coordinate with each
confined exclusively to one set of the government, it does not give equality of
status to both and it is also probable that the one which possesses this power may
in an ordinary process of legislation make an invasion on the powers of
jurisdiction of the other
It does not matter legall> where the power of amending the constitu-
34 Wheare, K C ,
Federal Government, p 55
35 Dicey, A V Law of the Constitution, 142
,
United Kingdom Parliament should be careful not to permit itself to become the
agent of the Dominion alone or of the Provinces alone
The Constitution of India, like the Union of South Africa Act of 1909, makes
no pretence of making a federation. Since Wheare says that the “new constitution
of India established, indeed, a system of government which is at most
quasi-federal, almost devolutionary in character; a unitary state with subsidiary
federal features rather than a federal state with unitary features”, it would be
interesting to note the process of constitutional amendment The Constitution
prescribes three different methods of amending the Constitution Some parts of
the Constitution can be amended by a simple majority in both Houses of
Parliament, for example, new States may be created or the existing States
reconstituted and upper chambers created or abolished in the States Then,
certain specified subjects, as amendments affecting the method of electing the
President, the extent of the executive and legislative powers of the Union or the
States, the provisions regarding the Supreme Court, the representation of the
States in Parliament, and the method of amending the constitution, require a
majority of the total membership in each House of Parliament, a majority of
two-thirds of the members present and voting in each House of Parliament and
ratification bv the legislatures of one -half of the States Finally, for the remaining
provisions there must be a majority of total membership in each House of
Parliament and a majority of not less than iwo-thirdsof the members persent and
voting in each House of Parliament
responsive to the needs of the people and times, must contain a provision for it
amending it, and every federal constitution contains such a provision But the
process of amending the constitution, which provides a federal polity, must be
distinct, involving a different procedure, from the ordinary law-making proce-
dure, and and parties in the federation should be participants
all interests
therein The method of amending a federal constitution is, therefore, more
difficult and complex than amending a unitary constitution and it is peculiarly
rigid
decides disputes of jurisdiction arising between the central government and the
regional governments or between one regional government and another, and (2)
It keeps different governments within their limits so that none may enroach upon
the sphere of jurisdiction of the other If the federal principle is to really work, it
IS necessary that there should be an umpire independent of both the central and
regional governments which should ever be vigilant to prevent either set of
government from disturbing the balance between the centrifugal and centripetal
forces Happy balancing between the two forces is the essence of federalism and
there can be no other authority than an independent and impartial judiciary
which can act as the guardian of the constitution and thereby protect the
constitutional distribution of powers The need lor the federal judiciary has been
expressed by Mill in his own way and his words have often been
characteristic
quoted or paraphrased “It is evidently necessary,” he says, “not only that the
constitutional limits of authority of each (central and regional governments alike)
41 Ihtd p 60
42 Article 4
43 Article 169
Hb PRINCIPLES OF POl inCAL SCIENCF
should be precisely and clearly defined, but the power to decide between them in
any case of dispute should not reside in either of the governments, or in any
functionary subject to it, but m an umpire independent of both. There must be a
Supreme Court of Justice, and a system of coordinate courts in every State of the
Union, before whom such questions shall be carried, and whose judgment on
them in the last stage or appeal, shall be final. Sidgwick says that the more
stability is given to the constitution by making the process of changing it difficult,
the greater becomes the importance of this judicial function of interpreting its
clauses
Powers propounded by the Supreme Court of the United States The Supreme
Court derives its authority directly from the constitution and the method of
appointment of the judges, their removal and the pay and allowances they are
entitled to are all presenbed by the constitution ensuring the independence and
impartiality of the judiciary
APPRAISAL OF FEDERALISM
Advantages of a Federal Government. Federalism is a device which has
rendered immense service in the past and may still render in kniting together
under a common government peoples whose political interests are alike Many
regard it as a panacea for so many economic and political ills from which the
world suffers today and even envisage the scheme of a World Federation
Without going into the realm of political speculation regarding the feasibility of a
World Federation, and accepting federalism as it is, it can be said that small
independent States cannot exist in the midst of modern competing States and
they find a good substitute in a federal system of government which brings them
the advantages of union while retaining their political autonomy at the same
time Federalism a new hope to small nationalities claiming the right of
offers
self-determination While acquiring local autonomy as constituent units of a
federation, they save themselves from the risks of perpetual insecurity that haunts
the smaller sovereign States in the present competing international politics
equilibrium between the centripetal and centrifugal forces. The central govern-
ment IS assigned functions which are of national importance and general concern.
Problems of local interest that differ in different sections of the country are left to
the people of those areas for solution. In this way, a federal government presents a
happy blending of centralization and decentralization.
A federal government prevents the rise of a single despotism, checks the
growth of bureaucratic authority and conserves the political liberty of the people.
Abuse of power by the. central authority is more easily checked by a vigorous
federalism than by any other form of government Federalism, observes Bryce,
allows experiments in local legislation and administration that might be
dangerous if applied to the entire country Temtonal division of functions also
relieves congestion of legislative and administrative work at the centre It adds to
the efficiency of administration as well, because the division of powers is related
to the actual needs of life
government has to bear the burden not only of providing for two sets of
government, but also of determining the manner in which the total governmental
power shall be distributed among them This is a task of such difficulty that a
satisfactory performance of it at one time is impossible What might formerly
have been safely left to the separate units may, with the lapse of time and under
changed conditions, demand a national regulation and decision This leads to
bitter contests regarding the jurisdiction of the two governments and the political
history of the United States and other federal countries is marked by such
controversies “The proper adjustment of central to local governments thus
becomes,” says Gettell, “a constant source of difficulty and the danger of rebellion
”
or the formation of sectional factions is always present
Then, the prerequisite of a federal government is the supremacy of the
constitution, which implies a written and rigid constitution Supremacy of the
constitution means that the terms of the agreement, which establish the central
and regional governments and which distribute powers between them, must be
binding upon them If any change is .desired to be brought about, it must be
made by amending the constitution as prescribed by law and not by the
unilateral action of any of the two government But the process of
sets of
So far only twenty-eight States have ratified it, the last one being Kansas in 1937
languages and the two cultures in Canada But more realistically the problem is
economic The development of the English-speaking Provinces is held to be at the
expense of the French-speaking Quebec Till recently, the separatist groups had
not spelt out their separation in terms of outright secession But Quebec’s Premier
Rene Levesque, who heads the separatist Parti Quebecois’ (PQ), immediately
after office in December 1976 threatened secession It has been averted
assuming
as proposal was negatived at a recent referendum But the separatist
the
tendencies have not disappeard It will be a sad development in the career of
federalism if at all it ever happens India is also torn asunder into twenty-two
lingustic States with territorial, economic, and cultural disputes plaguing the
solidarity of the nation Recent events in the North-East region, particularly m
Assam, is a reminder that Indian nationalism had always been fragile and the
federal set up, though thirt) years old now, has not helped to dissipate separatist
lendenc les
from the physics courses taught in the schools to the conservation of natural
resources and the maintenance of economy, affects the war-making potential
The New Deal legislation of President Roosevelt and the Supreme Court’s
attitude thereto is clearly indicative of the rapid development of centralisation
The New Deal was devised as the new means of combating a new national
emergency, the depression The world today is as much scared of depressions as it
IS scared of war and this emphasises the recognition of the need for the
reallocation of powers in a new balance, not excluding strong local organs of
government “Since the New Deal,” says Lipson, “the situation has changed
almost beyond recognition Federal-State relations have become ampler and
closer Federal-lcKal relations have been established Federal-State local coopera-
tion IS now frequent Much of this is due to the more generous use of the
device of the conditional grants-in-aid A Committee of the Council of State
Governments appointed m the United States, defined federal grants-in-aid as
“payment made by the national governments to State and Local governments,
subject to certain conditions for the support of activities administered by the
States and their political sub-divisions” As these grants are conditional, it is a
matter of common experience that one who gives money must sec the fulfilment
of those conditions The conditions that the central government imposes aie in
respect of the principles and purposes of the service in question, the structure and
procedure of administiation, the recruitment and management of the personnel,
All federal countries are moving towards a unified economic and scKial
system coexistensive with its whole territory No problem can be isolated and
looked at exclusively from a single point of view Nor can a lcx:al solution be
found problems As population grows more dense and industry is
for all lcx:al
47 Lip Son, L ,
The Great hiues of Polilia, p 313
FORMS OF GOVERNMENT —FEDERATION 351
goods that will move across State lines, it is evident that labour relations can no
longer remain within the exclusive jurisdiction of the States If the vagaries of
nature are to be counteracted by harnessing nature, then, agriculture can no
longer remain a State subject The authority that is wider and wealthier can only
sponsor huge imgational schemes, the Damodar Valley, Bhakra-Nangal and
like
Beas projects in India Health and education, both State subjects in all
federations, have likewise assumed national stature Bad health conditions in one
State have an impact on the nation as a whole and the poor educational system
in one part of the country affects the prosperity of the country as a whole
But the great centralising factor has been the contrast in the attitude of the
people towards the central government and the govemm<ints of their States m
former times and in our time At the time of the making cff the federations of the
United States, of Switzerland, and of Canada there were differences of
nationality, but as time went on, a common nationality came to impose itself
upon the differences The citizens of these federal States came to feel that their
primary interests and allegiance was m and to the nation as a whole rather than
to their particular states 'Fhus, there is not only the constantly increasing
tendency to look to the central government
meeting their problems
for action in
growing conviction that only by the action of the central
as they arise, but the
government can their problems be satisfactorily solved A good part of President
Roosevelt’s New Deal policy sought to permanently regulate matters that had
hitherto rested with the states But many Americans justified this “usurpation”
on the ground that the pressure of economic and social problems could be borne
effectively only by the Federal Government The old school of states’ rights,
therefore, is steadily losing its hold upon the people, and in its place is arising the
tendency to look to the central government for the solution of the more important
economic and social problems A Welfare State cannot afford otherwise
political,
This makes a fundamental change in the theory and practice of a federal
government
48 Sait, E M ,
Political Institutions, A Preface, p 375
49 Willoughby, F W ,
7 he (Government of Modem States, p 185
,
Wheare does not accept the point of view that federal government is really
no more than a stage towards unitary government He says, “This is a pro-
phecy, not an historical judgment, for so far, no federal government— as I
define it— has become a unitary government ’51 He admits that war and economic
depression arc the enemies of federal government, and that if they occur
frequently, they “will almost certainly turn federal governments into unitary
governments ” So far as the growth of social services is concerned, he says, that
they, too, will tend towards the same end But he also says that the growth in the
powers of the central governments is only one tendency “One other tendency at
leastmust be noticed It has not been the general governments alone which have
grown in strength The regional governments have also expanded In all the
federations the regions now perform functions which at the establishment of the
federations, they performed either not at all or to a much less degree than now
This is one element in a tendency, he adds, “which may be broadly stated by
saying that there has been a great increase in the sense of importance, in the
self-consciousness and self-asscrtiveness of the regional governments This has
gone on side by side with the growth in importance ol the general governments
“
and It has obviously been stimulated by it
'
It has led to a sense of grievance in
the regional governments that their position is being impenlled by this tendency
towards centralisation “And in some cases they have felt so unjustly treated by
the general governments that they have talked of resigning from the federation
“
The secession movement in the State of Western Australia was one example
Wheare’s emphasis that the reason which originally prompted the independent
States — oneness of the State with the separateness of the units — to form the
federal union and not a unitary union, have not ceased to operate True it is, he
further says, that every region in a federal system docs not feel the desire for
independence to the same degree, “but in every federation a few regions feel it so
intensely that no attempt could be made to impose uniformity without bringing
into view the possibility of breaking the union in pieces Keeping these
considerations in mind, Wheare concludes that “the prospect of federal govern-
ment IS not so short as is suggested by those who concentrate entirely on
the tendency of the general government to increase at the expense of the regions
Federal government is still desired by some regions in all the federations There is
55 lbid,i>2bl
56 Ibid
FORMS OF government —FEDERATION 353
however^ to declare federalism in the United States dca in some areas the States
have captured some of their power through more vigorous insistence upon their
participation in the federal administration.”^^
People and countries have not lost faith m federalism so far While federal
States have shown signs of closer unification, other States, especially those new
born, are adopting federal constitutions and many writers predict a further union
of States on federal basis It happened very recently in the case of Egypt and
Syria with the consequent emergence of a federation named the United Arab
Republic, though Syria seceded subsequently Nationalist leaders from many
parts of Afnca met from December 5 to 12, 1958 to attend the All-Afncan
People’s Conference with a view to getting rid of the remaining colonial regimes
on their Continent, and to begin the first steps toward a federation of their
existing States Federalism, in fact, made an important
has contribution to the
solution of the world’s political problems By reconciling the claims of local
autonomy with those of national unity, federalism paves the way for the
adjustment of inter-State disputes Even a great admirer of unitary government,
WF Willoughby, admits that we should not “close our eyes to the immense
servicewhich the development of the idea of multiple government has rendered
in the pastand may still render in knitting together under a common government
peoples whose political interests are largely identical but which for sentimental
reasons are unwilling wholly to surrender their political autonomy Federal
government, as Wheare says, does not stand for multiplicity alone “It stands for
multiplicity in unity can provide unity where unity is needed, but it can
It
ensure also that there is and independence in matters where unity and
variety
uniformity is not essential ’’‘‘‘^This exercise in self-governments, he further says,
“is sufficiently valuable to be worth the cost it entails, and federalism marches
”
towards triumph
The “New” Federalism. The traditional theory of federalism stands
modihcd today to fit into the needs and demands of the present conditions The
emerging concept is that of “cooperative federalism ” It is argued that no society,
much less a developing society, can afford the luxury of a rigid division of powers
which was possible in the social and economic conditions of the eighteenth
century In the contemporar/ world, marked by industrial technology as a
foundation for effective power, uniformities on a broad geographic scale arc
necessary to viability in the effective use of modern techniques of production and
59 Wheare, KC ,
Federal Government, p 260
:rvi PRlNt mis OF POl niCAL SCIENCF
bO. Birch, A, Federalism, Finance and social Ugislalion Canada, Australia and the United
States, p 290
61 CarlJ Fncdnch, Constitutional Government and Democracy, p 217
62 Fine- Year Plan (India, Progress Report), 1953, p 1
FORMS or OOVFRNMFNT — FEDERATION 355
spheres assigned to them, but when the vital interests of the State intervene the
decisions of the national government, as the bearer of national security and
prosperity of the realm, should prevail, though they may concern matters outside
Its jurisdiction Vile, accordingly, defines federalism as “a system of government
in which central and regional authorities arc linked m a mutually interdependent
political relationship, m this system a balance is maintained such that neither
level of government becomes dominant to the extent that it can dictate the
detision of the other, but each can influence, bargain and persuade the other
Usually, but necessarily, this system will be related to a constitutional structure
establishingan independent legal existence for both central and regional
governments, and providing that neither shall be legally subordinate to the
others The functions of government will be distributed between these levels
(exclusively, competitively or cooperatively), initially perhaps by a constitutional
document, but thereafter by a political process, involving where appropriate, the
judiciary, in this prcxress, the political independence of the two levels of
government is of the first importance in order to prevent one level from absorbing
all effective decision-making power
What really matters in a federation is whether the centre and the States
ordinarily enjoy autonomy within the spheres assigned to them Such a
61 Bitch, AH ,
Federalism, Fmanie and Social Legnlalion m Canada, Australia and the
constitutional division of powers, is, no doubt, a restraint which both the sets of
government exercise upon each other, but it “should not blind us to the fact,”
observes Carl Friedrich, “that all governmental units share in the common task of
accomplishing the ‘will of the people’.” He rejects the argument advanced by
Miss Jane P Clark that “an emphasis on separateness or nvalry lends to forward
the least desirable developments in American government today” and says that
”
this remark “belittles the constitutional importance of divided powers
Federalism constitutes a device for preserving constitutionalism Not all the
accretion of power to the central government represents a net loss to the regional
governments. The latter have been steadily gaining power, from two sources;
from the development of new governmental functions, and by the transfer of
functions from the local areas The same forces that have made for centralization
within the nation have also promoted the transfer of local power to the regional
governments This apart, the self-consciousness and self-assertiveness of regional
governments deter even a strong centre from intervening without a convincing
cause which it may be able to plead at the bar of public opinion In a democratic
set-up the actions of government are ever under scrutiny No government forgets
that tomorrow is the day of election If the central government ventures to
trespass the limits ordinarily assigned to it, it shall have to pay the penalty at the
next election
SUGGESTED READINGS
Action, Lord Essays on Freedom and Power
coordinated under the control of the same persons, so that they must work in
the executive government and integrates and guides the work of the legislature
of the team which plays the game of politics in accordance with the mandate
which the majority partv in the legislature, of which the Prime Minister is the
dulv accredited leader, had received at the general elections The Prime Minister
performs four important functions (1) he is the head of the Ministry, that is, the
government of his country, (2) he is also leader of the legislature of the
count rs — the one whose intervention in the debates has the greatest weight, who
states and interprets government policy, *^ho is responsible for obtaining the
apj:)ioval of the legislature foi the policy of his government, (3) he is the person
through whom King or President, normally communicates
the head of the State,
with the Cabinet, with the legislature, and o timately, with the country, (4) he is
head of the legislative wing of the paity and responsible for maintaining
harmonv with its organisational v\ing Thev are the two limbs of the party that
had been returned bv the electorate in majority and to form the government
Mechanism of parliamentary pattern. The Cuncil of Ministers is the hub of
a pailiamentary pattern It may be made up either entirely of members of the
same political faith, or of members of somewhat diffenng affiliations, yet able to
of such exceptions and Ministers remain out of Parliament only while they are
trying to find seats. If they cannot get in and are unwilling to be created peers,
they resign their offices The Constitution of India provides that a Minister may
not be a member of either House of Parliament for a period of six consecutive
months But such a Minister ceases
• to be a Minister at the expiration
of that period unless he is duly elected In Britain no one may speak m either
House of Parliament unless he belongs to that House In India, a Minister enjoys
the privilege of occifpying a seat in either House of the Legislature, of being
heard, and of participating in its deliberations, but with the right to vote in the
House of which he is a member
A parliamentary or Cabinet system works on the well-accepted principle
that Ministers are responsible to the legislature for all their official acts and they
remain in office as long as they retain its confidence This is called ministenal
responsibility and it is this responsibility that gives to the parliamentary system
the name of a responsible government as well In Britain, legally, Ministers hold
c^ce during the pleasure of the King But a legal truth in Britain is a political
untruth and the pleasure of the King really means the pleasure of Parliament
The Constitution of India also provides that Ministers hold office during the
pleasure of the President ^ But the pleasure of the President vanishes when the
Constitution simultaneously presenbes that the Council of Ministers is collective-
ly responsible to the House of the People (Lok Sabha) This means the individual
^
individual indiscretion or for acts of omission and commission and the President
exercises his pleasure on the advice of the Prime Minister Without such an
advice he cannot act independently Ministenal responsibility is the essence of
parliamentary government Responsibility to the legislature means that so long
and official conduct of the ministers command the support of the
as the policies
majonty of the members of the legislature, they continue to hold the reins of
office and govern the country But as soon as the majority is reduced into a
minonty and the Ministry loses the confidence of the representative House,
House of Commons in Bntain, and House of the People (Lok Sabha) in India, it
must resign from office and give an opportunity to the Opposition to assume
office, or the legislature may be dissolved on the advice of the Prime Minister and
new elections held in order to ascertain the opinion of the electorate. The party
returned in majonty to the legislature as a result of elections, then, forms the
Ministry. The second alternative is more common and is generally resorted to
The legislature reveak its disapproval of the acts of the Ministry either by an
adverse vote on an important measure, or by a specific vote of no-confidence
1 Article 75 (5)
2 Article 75 (2)
3 Article 75 (3)
4. Gamer, J W ,FolUical Scienct and Government,
p 324
FORMS OF GOVERNMENT— PARLIAMENTARY GOVERNMENT 361
that the executive and legislative functions are “inextricably co-mingled” and
there no such separation between the executive and legislative powers as that
is
in both the creation and the administration of law and responsible and subject to
the sine qua non of the stability of government, can be obtained only when
Ministers come in as a team and go out as a team When a Ministry is composed
of heterogeneous parliamentary groups, as under a multiple party system, it is
most unstable, compromise, which bnngs the various groups together, is sure
for
most cherished and aspired for as it is based on the fact that the government is
carried on in the name of the head of the State, King or President, by Ministers
who arc members of the majonty party in Parliament and arc responsible to
Ministers are his Ministers and they remain in office during his pleasure He
summons, and prorogues Parliament Laws made by Parliament cannot
dissolves
be enforced without his assent and if he wishes, he may withold his assent thereto
But all this remains m theory and the Chief Executive does nothing by doing
everything Herbert Asquith, Prime Minister of Great Bntain, wrote in 1913 a
Memorandum on the rights and obligations of the King. He said, the King “is
entitled and bound to give his ministers all relavant information which comes to
him, to point out objections which seem to him valid against the course they
advise, to suggest (if he thinks fit) an alternative policy Such intimations are
always received by ministers with the utmost respect and considered with more
respect and deference than if they proceeded from any other quarter ” Beyond
this he must not go In the oft-quoted phrase of Bagehot, the King has three
rights—the right to be consulted, the right to encourage, the right to warn “A
king of great sense and sagacity he adds, “would want no others “ This is the
classical exposition of the powers of the head ol the State in a parliamentar;y
system of government
politically homogeneous and disciplined leaders The fall of the Ministry is the
fall of the parts and the strength of the party in the legislature determines the
solidarity and stability of the government This is best achieved when there is a
two-party ssstem, one in office, the other in Opposition But fairly good results
can also be obtained when there are fairlv solid blocs, each consisting of parties
who habitually work together and who have enough in common to permit them
to evolve a definite political programme The classical example of a lwc^parly
systemIS Britain Britain hates a coalition government, because it contradicts the
other IS the principle of ministerial responsibility Both are correlated and upon
these two hinges the success of the parliamentary system The Cabinet is a team
that plays the game
of politics under the captaincy of the Prime Minister He is
the undisputed leader of the parliamentary majority party who brings about
unity and close association between Ministers on the one hand, and the cabinet
and the parliamentary majority on the other C F Strong has succinctly said, “It
IS the party system which gives the cabinet its homogeneity, it is the position
of
the prime minister which gives it its solidarity
4 The Ministers in a parliamentary system arc answerable to the legislature
and they remain in office as long as they can individually and collectively retain
Its confidence Each Minister directs the work of the department over which
he
presides, in accordance with the policy as determined and decided by the cabinet,
and he is answerable to the legislature lor its successful implementation In
addition to this individual responsibility, each Minister shares a collective
responsibility with other members of the government, “for anything of high
done any other branch of public business besides ”
importance that is in his own
On matters of high polics the Ministry comes into office as a unit, remains in
office as ^ unit, and gcx?s out of office as a unit Ministerial responsibility ensures
cohesion and solidarity and accounts for the stability of the government.
Moreover, responsibility and responsiveness go together and it is only in a
pariiamentars' system of government that both c:an be secured
5 Anothei essential feature of a successful parliamentary system iv a certain
degree of moderation among political parties Cabinet system is a democratic
mechanism and dcmcxTacy is inseparable from a belief in the methods of peaceful
persuasion, in the ultimate reasonableness of man, and his response to rational
arguments It is. accordingly, necessary that both the majority party and the
Opposition should understand and observe the rules of the game The public
duty of the Opposition is to criticise and oppose the policy of the government, to
attack the government and individual Ministers The majority party, at its end,
must govern openly and honestly and it should meet criticism not by suppressing
Opposition, but by rational argument It means that there should prevail a sense
of give and take, the habit of tolerance and compromise They must have a strong
commitment to the demex ratic process itself A simple rule of British politics is,
“if you wish to govern, you must first show yourself fit to govern ” This rule acts
a.s a powerful and valuable stimulus both to the majority and minority, for the
minority party is legally recognised as His Majesty’s Opposition Just as the party
5 Strong, C F Modem ,
Pohtual Constitutions, p 221
364 PRINCIPLES OP POLITICAL SCIENCE
agencies of the State Lack of it means parliamentary absolutism Being safe from
dissolution and confident that its tenure goes by calendar, the legislature can
overthrow the cabinet with impunity. This is what happened in France in the
Third and the Fourth Rpublics and it made infinitely worse the tendency
towards cabinet instability already created by the multiple party system
7 Finally, cabinet is a secret body which is collectively responsible for its
the other.” There are, thus, few chances of conflict of authority and jurisdiction
With authority thus concentrated, the full power of government can be promptly
brought to bear upon any great emergency
Bryce adds two more advantages of the presence of Ministers in the
legislature* “(1) being in constant touch with the Opposition as well as in still
closer contact with the members of their own Party, the Ministers can feel the
pulse of the Assembly and through it the pulse of the public opinion and can
thereby obtain useful criticism, in a fncndly way, of their measures. The
members of the legislature can also call to the attention of the Government any
gnevance by their constituents and secure quick redress
felt (2) The system
*’
secures “swiftness in decision and vigour in action, and enables the cabinet to
press through such legislation as it thinks needed, and to conduct both domestic
and foreign policy with the confidence that its majonty will support it against the
attacks of the opposition.”^
immediately to the legislature, but no majority dare ride rough-shod over public
The ultimate appeal rests with the people, and the government must
opinion.
remember those to whom it will have to account in the future. “Government with
us,” says Jennings, “is government by opinion, and that is the only kind of
‘self-government’ that is possible ” The government is ever under scrutiny and
the parliamentary system provides for daily as well as periodic assessment of what
the rulers do It is kept on the qui vivc (alert) by the constant probing and
questioning of the Opposition and by the publicity given to governmental
policies and actions by the more responsible segments of the press Parliamentary
democracy, thus, keeps more nearly in step with public opinion than the
Presidential system
Parliamentary system is in the real sense a government by cnticism. The
majority party forms the government The minonty constitutes the Opposition.
The Opposition must oppose and criticize the government There is a saying in
Britain that the Prime Minister knows the leader of the Opposition more than he
knows his own wife It explains how far the Ministry is alive to the opinion of the
Opposition and apprehensive of its A
government which neglects the
cnticism
Opposition, does so at its penl The lapses of the government are its opportunities
and the Opposition uses them to appeal to the public opinion “The House is its
platform, the newspapers are its microphones, and the people u its audience.” No
other form of government can, therefore, meet the ideal of rationality and
responsiveness better than parliamentary democracy
Another ment claimed for the parliamentary system is its flexibility and
elasticityBagehot highly eulogised this aspect and pointed out that people can,
under this system of government, “choose a ruler for the occasion” who may be
especially qualified to successfully pilot the ship of the State through a national
crisis Churchill replaced Chamberlain as Prime Minister, because national
emergency demanded it and this change was brought about without any political
upheaval in the country But such a smooth change is not piossible under a
Presidential type of government The office of the President goes by calendar
Come what may. Presidential elections must be held after every four years “The
American Government,” says Bagehot, “calls itself a government of the supreme
people, but at a quick crisis, the time when the sovereign power is most needed,
you cannot find the supreme people all the arrangements are for stated times
There is no elastic element, everything is rigid, specified and stated Come what
may, you quicken nothing and can retard nothing You have bespoken your
government in advance and whether it suits you or not, whether it works well or
works ill, whether it is what you want or not, by law you must keep it ”^This is
one way of expressing the flexibility of the parliamentary system Another is the
ease with which it can meet the crisis in the social and political life of the people
the
Tlie executive can explain to and impress upon the legislature its appraisal of
situation and the methods proposed to tackle the emerging situation
Even well
established customs may be waived temporarily, as was done in Britain in 1931,
convention of
when the Ministers “agreed to differ” as against the constitutional
collective responsibility, to meet the abnormal situations
cannot
Moreover, parliamentary system can claim a high educative value
It
party is to win elections and to capture government To win elections means that
7 Bagehot, W ,
Thf English Constitution, Chap 2, Sec 9
2
the party should be in a position to secure the majonty of votes and the electorate
should approve its programme It is like placing one’s cards on the table and
acquainting the nation with the party’s political programme It is, for the
people to judge one party and the other on its merits If an issue of national
importance arises subsequently, on which the verdict of the people had not been
obtained by the party in power, the legislature may be and an appeal
dissolved
made to the electorate Dissolution also helps to remove dedlocks between the
executive and the legislature and makes the electorate the policy-determining
factor According to K Ixocwenstein, ‘in the authentic form of parliamentary
government, dissolution is the democratic fulcrum of the entire process of
adjusting power conflicts by making the electorate the ultimate policy-
determining factor Moreover, by-elections, which arc so frequent during the
life of parliament, serve as a barometer of public opinion and the government
corrects or adjusts its policies according to the results obtained from such
elections All this democratic process has immense educative value It makes the
people politically conscious of their rights and responsibilities, and vigilance is
Hru( has apt i\ explaim d this as pin t He sa\s, ‘\sfht attiuil working K\e-
tuiive has necessariK a pait\ (haractei it is a merit ol tins s\s(em that the
National Executive, be he King or President, should be outside party, and
represent that permanent machinery of administration which goes on steadily
irrespective of party changes when a cabinet fails, the transfer of power to
another is a comparatively short and simple <ill.in
^
Ministers, he says, “are liable to be distracted from their executive duties by the
work of preparing measures and carrying them through parliament
legislative
while parliament tempted away from legislative problems by interesting
is
8 Zun her, A J ,
Constitutions and Comtitutumal Trends Since World War II,
p 208
9 Bryc e, James, Modern Dernocracui, Vol II,
pp ‘i 1 1 - 1
inconceivable and inoperative. While the same men may be at once members of
the legislature and the executive, their functions in the two roles are distinct
programme may, however, be said that much of the above criticism is true
It
only in countries with multiple political parties where the lease of life of the
cabinet is short and precarious Countries, like Great Britain, having dual party
system, do not demonstrate such a state of affairs as dual party system is really
the true basis of parliamentary democracy
It is sometimes deplored that the Cabinet system divides the country into
two antagonistic sets of men, those who strive their utmost to get things done and
those who do their utmost to obstruct The Opposition under the Cabinet
government must oppose tooth and nail all measures sponsored by the
government, irrespective of their practical utility Sometimes governmental
policy IS subjected to such a scathing cnticism that it proves detrimental to
national solidarity and prestige When Opposition indiscriminately opposses
what the government may say or propose, it retards the progress of the country
and It, also, amounts to national wastage, both of money and time The
antagonism between the parties is not confined to the legislature alone They
keep the country in a spirit of commotion and turmoil As Bryce puts it, “the
system intensifies the spirit of party and keeps it always on the boil Even if there
are no important issues of polity before the nation there are always the offices to
be fought for One party holds them, the other desires them, and the conflict is
unending, for immediately after a defeat the beaten party begins its campaign to
dislodge the victors It is like the incessant battle described as going on in the
blood vessels between the red corpuscles and the invading microbes
But the fact is otherw ise The essential feature of parliamentary democracy
IS a certain degree of moderation among the political parties, or what may be
descrilx^d as political forbearance The minority agrees that the majority should
govern and the majority agrees that the minority must criticise The Opposition
IS the prospective government and it understands and observes the rules of the
game, as the majority does The government so arranges the parliamentary
programme as to give due opportunity to the Opposition to discuss and criticise
Its actions The government even becomes wiser by that criticism and arrives at a
aim promise This is the essence of discussion and parliamentary system succeeds
par excellence m this respect The situation of ruthless opposition prevails only
when extremist and anti-democratic forces gain a substantial membership in the
2 Ibid
1
,
p 445
13 Biyce, J , Dfmofraofc Vol II, p 512
PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
which they proceed to terrorise and ridicule. But this is not the way of
legislature
parliamentary system. “Whatever be the form of government,” says Guerin, “a
regime is democratic when the will to social cooperation of its members is
stronger and more spontaneous than its anarchical impulses ” Parliamentary
system recognises and welcomes differences and it provides the machinery for
their expression. But these differences must not go so far as to make the work of
government impossible If such things are allowed to happen, as they do in India,
it is the end of parliamentary democracy
major part of their time is devoted to parliament and cabinet meetings, social
and other political activities and in nursing their constituencies Nor docs the
bnef and precarious tenure of ihcir office leave any stimulus for them to learn the
departmental technicalities The result is, as the cntics say, that Cabinet
government is a government by mefficients who arc mere tools in the hands of
their permanent civil servants
Bui this IS not a correct appreciation of the parliamentar>' svstem Its essence
IS the responsibilil) of Ministers to the legislature no doubt, preferable to It is,
appoint a Minister who is well informed about the working of the department
over which he presides But it does not mean that he should be an expert The
business of the Minister is not to do the work of the department He is only to see
that It works properly and consistently with the declared policy of the
government In fact, there arc many advantages if the head of the department is
an amateur A layman secs the department as a whole and his appraisal of the
problem requiring solution is entirely different from that of an expert “The
cabinet”, according to Ramsay MacDonald, “is the bridge linking up the people
with the expert, joining principle to practice It.s function is to transform the
message sent along sensory' nerves It does not keep the departments going, it
”
keeps them going in a certain direction
government in general but are depnved of any share in the “formulation of the
individual policies The charge of dictatorship of the Cabinet is not quite
baseless But there is a redeeming feature too Lowell correctly says, “if the
parliamentary system has made the Cabinet of the day autocratic, it is an
autocracy exerted with the utomost publicity under a constant fire of criti-
the real dccision-making bodies within the spheres assigned to them And above
all is the ascendancy of the Prime Minister to unprecedented heights He no
longer remains primus inter pares. He generally formulates the policy of the
government and often takes decisions without consulting the whole cabinet
Ramsay Muir has said that the dictatorship of cabinet in the last icsort means
the dictatorship of the Prime Minister The Prime Minister makes and unmakes
the government, shuffles his pack as and when he likes, may advise dissolution of
Pailiament and being leader of the party may take disciplinary action against the
members of his party who flout the party whip and do not toe the line of the
Prime Minister
But It must not be forgotten that the Prime Minister’s position is bound up
with the part) His prestige, no doubt, is one of the elements that make for the
success of the party He is also responsible for party cohesion But without his
partv the Prime Minisiei is nothing Whatever he is and whatever he can claim
to be, IS due towhat the party has made him Once the party disowns him, he
meets the fate of Ramsay MacDonald Within the cabinet he cannot do all that
he wishes to do He must listen to and respect the opinions of his colleagues It is
essential for the Prime Minister to retain the loyalties of his political fnends who
owe him a personal as well as parts allegiance Laski explains, ''"1
ht parliamen-
tar\ s\stem is conducted on the vital hvpothesis that no man is indispensable,
and Its daih operation is a constant and salutars remainder to the Prime
Minister that his fortune defends upon the recognition of this truth
open discussions, and shifting majorities can hardly be expected to take prompt,
united and vigorous decisions These objections arc also not borne by facts World
War II had fullv demonstrated how cabinet government withstood the test ol
lime In India, tcHi, there is cabinet government, both at the Centre and in the
PRESIDENTIAI. PATTERN
Nature of the Presidential system. Bagehot said, “I he independence of the
legislative and executive powers is the specific quality of Presidential Government
just as fusicHi and combination is the principle of Clabinet Government ” Both
Cabinet and Presidential systems are representative in character, but responsibili-
ty of the executive to the legislature is the sine qua non of the former, w hereas the
latter is constitutionally independent of the legislature Under the Presidential
system the legislature and the executive are two distinct departments of
government. There is more or less a divorce between the two. The executive is
neither the creature of the legislature, nor is it responsible to that body for its
public acts or dependent on it for remaining in office The head of the State, the
President, is the real executive both as a matter of law and fact, and such power is
the result of a direct grant from the constituent authority effected through express
provisions of the constitution The fact that the President is not merely a Chief
FORMS OF (iOVFRNMENT— PRESIDENTIAL PATTERN 571
Executive but also the Executive makes all ‘ministers’ or ‘cabinet members’ his
assistants and, thus, denies them the more independent positions of ministers in a
parliamentary system
It IS a misnomer to describe as ‘ministers’ who constitute the Presidential
‘cabinet’ Neither is there ‘cabinet’ in the Presidential system nor are there
‘ministers’ Both arc the product of the parliamentary system The members of
the so-called cabinet in the Presidential system are not members of the legislature
and they do not belong to the legislative majority party They have no access to
the legislature They do not take part in the debates and have no locus standi to
initiate and pilot legislation or to defend the policy of government or stand in
need of seeking its confidence Nor have they any power to advise dissolution of
the legislature and appeal to the electorate, if the legislature does not approve
their policy They have, indeed, no policy of their own The policy of the
government is that of the head of the State, who appoints them and retains them
in office as long as it pleases him They are responsible to him alone and to no one
else The ‘cabinet’ under a Presidential system, in brief, is the tool of the head of
the State He can override the opinions of its members or he may not seek it or
even if he docs it is for him to decide whether to consult them individually or
And as for its members, a breath unmakes hem as a breath has
collectively
made
The Chief Executive in a Presidential system has a status independent of,
and ccxirdinate with, the legislature, and is not subject to the direction or control
of the latter either for his c/cmtinuance in office or in respect to the manner in
which he exercises his jxiwers The duties of the Chief Executive and his
administrative officers (membeis of the cabinet, b\ lau designated Secretaries in
the United States) he sshollv in the executise and administrative field and the\
have no resfwnsibhty m respect of the legislative functions, except as it mav be
then diitv to make known to the Icgislatuie the need for legislation in order that
Gamer gives a matter of fact analysis cjf the Presidential system He says
“What has been called ‘presidential' government as contra-distmguished from
cabinet or parliamentary government, is that system in which the executive
(including both the head of the state and his ministers) is constitutionally
independent of the legislature in respect to the duration of his or their tenure and
iiTC'sponsible to it foi his or then political policies"*^ The svstem is not
Pirsideniial because it has an el(‘cted President as the Chief Executive It is
Presidential lx*cause President is the leal executive who does not owe his office to
(h(‘ kgislatute noi c<m he be lenioved from office In a parlianientarv svstem real
t xecutive is the cuatuie t)( the legishiture and remains in office at its will
7 (Jai nrr,
J W ,
Polilu at Si if nee and Government, pp 311-12
372 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
the world Its occupant has become— with the exception of the Central European
dictators— the most powerful head of a government known to our day He is
absolutely free with respect to the exercise of his powers and tenure of office,
except that all appointments made and treaties concluded by him arc ratified by
the Senate As his term of office goes by calendar, his responsibility to the
electorate is unenforceable He can onK be impeached by the Senate His
conviction by the Senate cannot carry a greater penalty than removal from office
and disqualification to hold and enjov any office of honour, trust, or profit in the
United States
In the exercise of his executive duties, the President is assisted by his
Secretaries who are heads of different departments and are nov; ten m number
The Secretaries of the President are merely his personal assistants They are
appointed by him and are responsible to him None of them is a member of
Congress nor is he responsible to it Though popular usage collectively gives to
these departmental heads the name of ‘Cabinet’, yet it is a misnomer to designate
them as such The President cannot shift his responsibility to this body or any
officer of It He cannot make them individually or collectively accountable to the
legislature or the country for the policies and actions of the federal government
over which he presides Their responsibility is to the President alone ‘Cabinet’ in
the United States is a mere creation of the President’s will It is an extra-statutory
and extra-constitutional body It exists only by custom and if the President
desires to dispense with it, he can do so The procedure, as it stands today, is that
the ‘cabinet’ meets ordinanly once a week and the President places before it
questions upon which he thinks he needs their advice, and the members bnng to
the cabinet such matters in their respective departments as they deem appro-
and general discussion Votes arc scldon taken as
priate for ‘cabinet’ conference
they arc of no importance beyond securing a mere expression of opinion And
even if ever they arc taken, they have no value members have no ‘Cabinet’
corporate nghts as in Britain This two anecdotes, one
is well illustrated by
relating to Amenca and the other to Britain “Seven nays, one aye, the ayes have
it,”anounccd President Lincoln, following a ‘cabinet’ consultation in which
he found every member against him This attitude is so often contrasted with
Lord Melbourne's putting a question on com laws to the vote in the cabinet
saying, “it does not matter what we will say, as long an we all say the same
FORMS OF GOVERNMENT— PRESIDENTIAL PATTERN 373
thing,” Cabinet, m the United States, has been aptly described as the President’s
family.
can be successfully carried out without any fear of break The principal virtue of
Presidential system is the fact that it creates a stable executive within the
framework of a democratic order This means promptness, vigour and initiati e
in administration All executive authority is vested at one centre and the head of
and eff ectively control matters of vital importance in domestic and foreign affairs,
]ust as Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Roosevelt did in the United States in the
two World Wars What President Roosevelt did, during the economic crisis of the
thirties of the present century, is a matter of contemporary history All this is
not
18 Finer, H ,
The Theory and Practice oj Modem Government, p 669
^74 PRrNciPLF^ or poi mcAi sciencf
powers of the President of the United States and the Prime Minister of Britain,
Jennings writes that “the President pledged the United States to the realization
of the objectives of the Atlantic Charter while the War Cabinet, not the Prime
Minister, pledged the United Kindgom The President is also head of the
nation and is not merely party leader This gives him greater dignity, prestige
and authority The nation* looks to him to steer the country through any kind of
national emergency
thns the lime and energ'. iode\t)t# tiu insc I\es c \c lusne K to adminisfiatisc work
and pursue the policies of the government unaffected by political exigencies
There is another advantage too Since tS^' executive is not responsible loC’ongress
and Its adverse vote does not bring abc/Ui a c risis in the governniem the tumult of
the pally spirit is less in evidence It iv also clairncd that due to the presence of
the system of checks and balance'^ there prevails a greater sense cjl stability and
the administrative machine works more efficienth and c'fTectively
The advocates of the Presidential form aigue that such a system is best
suited for countries inhabited by different communities with diverse interests
Homogeneous dual party system, which is so (‘sscuitial for the success of a (Cabinet
government, cannot be secured under these conditions Multiple part) system is
the general outcome, wdien ihe people are divided both horizontally and
vertically But a government formed cjut of heterogeneous elements is a weak and
unstable government Under the Presidential system there is a “solidarity”
executive I’he President is the unmistakable fexus of responsibihtv Government,
cither for its creation or for existence, docs not dejxmd upon the complexion of
the legislature In the United States, bowevrr, twoparty system is firmly rcxncd
19 Rnnings, I ,
Cabintl (inifrnment,
p IHI
FORMS OF GOVERNMENT— PRESIDENTIAL PATTERN 375
other mav be following quite a different one, particularly when the executive
belongs to one jiarty and the legislative majority to another This condition may
[iroduce a stalemate which, in time of crisis, as during 1931-32, can be
disastrous
c’an, accordml), be no cohesiveness and the party ties, which bind the executive
and the legislature, are too flimsy for an integrated policy The result is that the
legislative procedure is difieient essentiallv from the one in a country having the
parliamehiarv svslc'm, financial procedure is worlds apart, iheiT is no coordina-
tion of political energy or responsibility, but each branch has its own denvation
of authority and its morsel of lesponsibility And in order to remove the
possibilities of concentration of authonty at one single end, a sy-siem of checks
and balances may have to be introduced as in the American Constitution The
system of checks and balances is not only the negation of the theory of Separation
of Powers, hut it is also highh injurious to admimsirativ^e efficiency Somewhat
ironically. Prof Beaixi remarks, that the rcks and balances in the United .
case of the Presidential veto and senaioiial as^ nt to lieaties If the system of
of the constitution The legislature has nc^ constitutional power to withdraw the
mandate which the electorate gave him at the time of election This has l)een well
explained bv Bagehot He says, “You have bespoken v our government m advance
and W'hethcr it suits you or not, w'hether it works w'cll or ill, wdiether it is what
"
Moreover, the Presidential system is
you want or not by law you must keep it
critici.sed for its rigidity, for the constitutional piovisions must always be adhered
to both in times of peace and war During World War II Presidential elections in
20 finei, H ,
I hr 1 hnny and hadut of Modern Oornmnent, p 101
21 Ik ard, Cl A .
Aruerican Government and Polilit p 16
376 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
America were held twice, whereas general elections were postponed in Britain by
an Act of Parliament In America there could not be any postponement without
amending the Constitution which is a difficult and lengthy process. The rigidity
of the constitution does not take cognisance of the needs of the hour. It must take
its own course, though it may, at times, prove harmful to the interests of the
nation.
Finally, the Presidential system has frequently been criticised for being
unequal to the task of conducting a vigorous foreign policy It is asserted that the
President’s dependence on the cooperation of a frequently recalcitrant Congress
makes United States’ foreign policy a slow moving and uncertain affair No one,
mcluding friends and foes, can guess about the degree to which executive actions
or commitments will be sustained or repudiated by Congress Absence of
dissolution in the Presidential system is responsible for less harmony and more
tension than in the parliamentary system The executive has no means to bnng to
book a refractory' legislature
Bryce maintains that “the parliamentary system has many advantages for
countries of moderate size, the Presidential, constructed for safety rather than for
promptitude in action,and not staking large issues on sudden decisions, is to be
preferred foi states and population such as are the United States and
of vast area
Germany “ In the United States of America the Presidential system has worked
vigorously well Wherever basic unity was required in an exceptional crisis,
regarded as ‘political
Democracy in its traditional Western form has not spread to the newer
nations of the world Even in contemporary Western Europe regimes, such as
French and the Spanish have come into existence by non-legal action or pressure
Similarly, regimes in the first lap of industrialization can rarely afford the luxury
of political democracy or constitutional restraint or power Economic develop-
ment, especially industrialization, tends to disrupt traditional social relationships
derive power There is a continuous piliblic scrutiny of what the ruler docs and he
IS subject to daily and penodic assessment The problem for the tyrant, as
Aiistotlc knew, is to find people who will tell him the truth. Constitutional
regime rarely suffers from this disadvantage The people to tell the truth are
NON-GONSTITUTIONAL REGIMES
Non>Constitutional regimes. Non-consiitutional democracies include
regimes of different types, though all are dictatorial in different degrees and lack
an organized political opposition and a free press 1'hey may exist because the
country' has no tradition of a constitutional behaviour or cannot agree on
fundamentals, or due to the inability of the executive to rule, as a result of the
presence of multiplicity of parlies which prevent the formation of a siahle and
coherent government, or Irom the attempt to implement an ideology as in the
USSR, the People’s Republic of China and other communist countries As a
result of these variety of reasons non-constitutional regimes are divided into
authoritarian and totalitarian
Force isrntenon of their politual authoritv and they remain in power as long
the
as force can retain them Thev are responsible to no authoritv except to
themselves The whole authority of the State is vested in one individual person
and he personifies the State Some writers are of the opinion that the Russian
dictatorship is the dictatorship of a party while in (iermanv and Italy it was the
dictatorship of individuals But Naziism and Fascism were also tin rule of a
party, though thev remained all through overshadowed by a single personality
}ust as Bolshevism was in the days of Ix^nin and Stalin 1 ill yesterday,
Khrushchev’s personality loomed large on the pohiual hon/oii In fact, no
government, as Maclvcr has shown, is ever actually in the hands of a single
individual If there is a single seemingly supreme ruler, he inevitably rests his
power on the active support of an associated class Uc rules in its interests no less
than with its coriperaiion He nearly always has a council of advisers w'ho
represent that class Hiller and Mussolini were leaders of the Nazi and Fa.scist
parties They selected their ministers from the ranks of their own parties in order
to pursue the ends of their respective parties I’here is, accordingly, no difference
23 Maciver, R M ,
The Wfh of Govrrnmfnt, p 227
FORMS OF GOVERNMENT— DICTATORSHIP 379
between the Russian type of dictatorship and that of Central European countries.
If there is any, it is only one of degree rather than of ki«d. In USSR it is really
a triple dictatorship— that of the party as regards the mass of citizens, that of the
inner group as regards the rest of the party, and that of the leader as regards inner
group, party and the nation
Modem dictatorship is the product of World War I. The War was claimed
to be a fight of dem(x:racy against autocracy and it was fought to make the world
safe for democracy The Treaty of Versailles was also formed on broad
democratic principles It recognised the principle of self-determination of nations
and built new Stales on the ruins of earlier monarchies The defeated Germany
presented to the world the best specimen of a parliamentary government through
the Weimar Constitution It was hoped that the new States as well as the old
would gradually come round to parliamentary demcxracy But surprising as it
may seem, in close wake of the War, nearly three-quarters of the people of Europe
found demcxratic government either destroyed or m danger of destruction Italy
came under the heels of Mussolini and his Fascist party in 1922, after his famous
march on Rome Prirno di Rivero was declared the father of Spam in 1923 The
Weimar Constitution of 1918 was replaced by a dictatorship under Hitler and his
Nazi parly In Poland the lingering shadow of parliamentary government was
in 1929, when Pilsudski sent a body of soldiers into the lobb) of the chamber
lc3si
In all these countries it was a dictatorship of the Right But in Russia it was
a dictatorship of the Ix'ft The formei means the dictatorship of the capitalist and
communistic society when the State “withers’ away Both these brands of
die tatorship am fundamentally opposed to one another in their ideology,
but they
operate on roughh the same principles 1 heir common feature is that both rule
by a single group and do not tolerate the existence of any other party They begin
that the claims of the
w ith the eoinmunity, not with the individual, and consider
State, as representing the c'ommunity, must always
have precedence They deny
than the State They deny that any pait or aspect of human life can be outside
the continuous contiol of the State, the State is charged wuth
normal and
within territories —political,
authority over ihe whole, the totality of w'hat goes
its
When the nation is glonfied, the obvious result is war Hitler and Mussolini
openly preached war Hitler extolled force and violence and he had all praise for
the man of action He power of the victonous sword According to
believed in the
Mussolini, peace “is an act of cowardice in the face of sacrifice ” Italy and
Germany punued a policy of colonial expansion for procuring raw matenals, for
the sale of their manufactured goods, and for the realisation of their will to
’’
power Mussolini said, ‘imperialism is the eternal and immutable law of life
“
Italy, he declared, “must expand or perish
regimes, to right or have adopted essentially the same technique The leader
left,
the basis of the system It is, therefore, the very antithesis of democracy.
Democracy, according to the dictators and their apologists, is a decaying corpse,
becaase it is “stupid, corrupt and slow-moving” Parliaments, it is maintained,
are mere talking shops, “incapable of accomplishing results, at times of
emergency they are absolutely helpless.” Since modem dictatorship is one-man or
one-party rule, it permits no plitical opposition and is hostile to individual
and Fascism and Naziism both, regarded it as a fetish of the past. The
individual, it is said, has no life apart from the State, and so he must be
completely subordinated to it The totalitarian State, thus, docs not give to its
subjects the right to speech, the right to press, the right to assembly and all those
which charactense the individual’s life m a democratic State, In the USSR
rights
where they are conceded they are subordinated to the cause of socialism and a
The ideal of Naziism and Fascism was “one reich, one people,
socialist society
one leader ” The Fascist oath read “In the name of God and Italy, I swear to
execute without discussion the orders of the Duce and to serve with all my
strength and if necessary with my blood the cause of the Fascist revolution.”
Mussolini’s motto to the youth organisation of Italy was “To believe, to obey, to
fight Hitler put it duty, discipline and sacnfice This is regimentation of
human life, pure and simple The whole nation must think in one way, talk in
one way, and act in one way Free discussion and criticism of government are
ruthlessly suppressed
one important fact The State, machinery and everything else that happens in
its
[)ubhc in their “social consciousness ” The Party must, therefore, exercise control
and accumulate powers The holders of powers are the agents of the mo\ement of
so< lalism and they act “democratically” in a more profound wav than do the
l)ecause they hold different social objectives (as was true of sizable groups in the
early days of communist regimes) or because they endorse different techniques for
moving toward the common goal or because thev threaten to establish
predominant influence (as it has happened after Mao’s death in China).
To sum up, totalitarian polities, like democratic ones, may be both civilian
there is an
controlled and popular, but in totalitarian communist systems
official
totality of social
ideology The ideology is totalitarian in that the
life is
exercises control over theeconomy, makes deliberate use of terror through the
and completely amoral use of force The existence of a single official
secret police,
ideology and a single party accounts for concentration of political and economic
power m thte same group
It IS, however, argued whether it is logical to fit in the USSR, Uermany and
Italy in the same category In the Soviet Union of 1970s collective leadership has
come to an end and there is
replaced rule of a single leader, the police state has
little use of terror Even more free opinion is tolerated now
and physical force
though the official ideology remains unchanged The third session of the Nation.il
People’s Congress, had in September 1980, represents a watershed in the histor\
of communist China It takes the process of post-Mao change a big step lurtlu i
These are to separate party and government posts, and to end the concentration
of too much power in individual leaders, to consolidate the concept of colh tut c
But Hitler King dead and burning in his Berlin bunkei and Mussolinrs dead
bcxlv strung upside down on a gibbet for the crowd's jeer had made these
dictators wuser They had realized that autocracy in its naked form and the nnth
of leadership as preached by the totalitarians, would no longer keep them in
power for long They tempered their autcKracy with constitutional process I’hev
ascribed their nse to power to inexorable circumstances and promised to bung
about conditions for the restoration of democracy which the earlier regimes had
corrupted and demoralised The present day dictators, therefore, made demex-
racy an umbrella to shelter their authoritarian rule
dictatorship for some time But when his authority was fully entrenched, he
summoned a Constituent Assembly and entrusted it with the duty to formulate a
republican constitution Colonel Nasser was elected President under the new'
Constitution Autocratic traditions, however, lingered on and they formed a
conspicious feature of the new Constitution In 1964, another C^onstitution came
into being with demcxratic traditions Nasser was the President of the United
Arab Republic and was succeeded, after his demise, by Sadat without any
diminution in the Presidential authority and there is none even now'
In Pakistan, General Ayub Khan with the help of Iskander Mirza, President
of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, captured power in October 1958, by a
military cout d’etat. The Constitution was abrogated, Martial Law promulgated
and political parties banned The constitutional machinery, thus, totally
disappeared Having fully established himself in power, Ayub forced Iskander
Mirza to quit his office and virtually banished him from the country In January
1960, Ayub Khan decreed setting up of local bodies elected through the scheme
of controlled elections. In February these local bcxlics elected General Ayub Khan
FORMS OF OOVERNMFNT— TOTALITARIAN REGIMES 383
From this survey, it is clear that man> developing countries are something
short of dictatorships, military or totalitarian, and yet arc short of democracies
The spectrum of immediate forms and styles of political organisation and
operation is broad Legislative assemblies, for instance, go through all the
legislative processes and perform their normal functions, and may exercise some
power, but it is largely window-dressing Frequently the effective leadership in
these countries “is consciously making use of democratic forms to build the
requisites ofdemocracy to the point where substance may be added to the form of
democracy "‘^Edward Shils has coined the term “tutelary democracy”^ for these
regimes In them one party is dominant but other parties are tolerated The
dominant party is itself far from monolithic, containing numerous divergent
elements Top leaders of the dominant party tend to occupy the highest posts in
government Charismatic leadership is heavily relied upon Such a regime may
"
better be called authoritanan rather than “tutelary democracy
24 I
Roland Pcnnock and David G Smith, Political Self me, An Introduction, p 612
25 Edward Shils, “Political Development in the New Slates,” Comparative Studies in
”
Society and History, pp 389 ff Shils uses also the category of “modernizing oligarchies
W
demanded stable governments with vigour of will and action. But owing to the
presence of multiple parties, divided and debased by their factiousness, they
could not forge a united front So the people were ready to yield to the authority
o( any power who could give them sufficient to eat and stable and efficient
government respected at home and abroad The dictators succeeded admirably in
lostering national unityand established confidence in the people by demonstrat-
ing to them that they could act more promj^tly and vigorously and arrive at
(pucker decisions Their firmness and determination stood in sharp contrast with
the weak and vacillating policies of democratic rulers When Hitler was asked
about the programme of the Nazi party he replied that Germany had enough of
programmes, she now needed action Amencans had praised particularly the
Italian dictatorship, c haractersing it as a system which they intended “to run. to
function, to do, to accomplish.’
The dictator has either no one to consult or the persons whom he consults
are his own men who always dutifully submit to his will He can, therefore, be
cpiick and prompt in his decisions and, consequently, able to meet emergencies
efficiently The Germany, Italy, Turkey and Spain is the
recent history of Russia,
history of marvels which a determined dictator can bring about in the national
life of his country Let us take the achievements of the Spanish dictator Rivera as
a lypual example Jackson, in his book, Europe Since the War, writes “For the
first time in then history the Spanish trains ran punctually New railways were
laid down, and a system of fine motor roads took the place of traditional mule
tracks of Spain The commerce and industry prospered under the dictator
Agriculture flourished Labour unrest was mitigated Poverty and unem- ’’
which inmate is assigned his task and vigilantly inspected as to the manner in
which he discharges it
'
This is good enough for the delinquent and defective
members of scKiety, but not for normal men or men towering above others in
character and ability A
and coercive direction of public life destroys
centralised
the possibility of development of human personality, learning, literature and art
According to Mussolini, the Fascist doctrine did not recognise the individual
”
except “in so far his interests coincide with those of the State Totalitarianism,
therefore, “has meant the crushing of individual liberty and the suppression of
human personality, violence at home and unashamed aggression abroad, tl^
26 ( lokt I , F W .
Ha ent PolUual Thou^hl, p 488
27 Ibid p 490
.
28 Asirvatham, E .
Pohtual Thmw p 5
386 PRINCIPLES OE POLITICAL SCIENCE
the very spirit of the people The dictator dictates and every one else is expected
to do his duty. It is tantamount to killing the initiative and enterprise of the
individual
Force and fear are natural foundations of authority for those who regard
national power and glory as ends in themselves Bt indiscnmmate use of torCe
involves dangers The lessons of history are, says Benedetto Croce, “that
regimes of force can survive only among decadent peoples, that they can figure
only as temporary expedients in nations that are growing and in the ascendant,
and that repressions onlv produce more violent explosions of the forces they
would restrain What is created by force is destroyed by force Force, is not the
’
stabilising basis of the State Consent of the governed is its real and enduring
basis As dictatorship does not derive its authority from the consenting
people, the dictator can never be sure ot his position He adopts violence and
coercive measures to suppress even the slightest opposition “Such a policy spells
disaster for the future, for to eliminate all differences is to eliminate all that
“
keeps the community mentally and spiiitually alive
to accelerate theeconomic and technological progress So far only war and defeat
has brought dictatorship to an end, after eleven years in Ciermany and alter
twenty years in Italy In the USSR
it is now more than sixty years old and in
the construction of the socialist society stupendous and incredible results have
been achieved and nghtly the 1977 Constitution could claim that the goal
ot completely developed socialist society had been attained In the international
politics, too, the Soviet State enjovs enviable position The People’s Republic of
China and other Communist States might not have reached that much of stature,
but their achievements in a comparatively shorter pericxl of their careers are no
less astonishing And socialism is not only spreading to other lands, but even
capitalist countries are increasingly adopting sociahstu policies to solve their
problems Hunger, poverty, unemployment aiyd undcr-em ploy men t are the stark
realities m all these countries, though their intensity may be lesser in the
29 Coker, F W ,
jRifcml Fohtical Thought,
p 488
7
anguish “when the spintual oxygen which has kept alive the attachment to
liberty and self-government in the minds of the people becomes exhausted will
not the flame burn low and perhaps flicker outf^‘But all have not lost faith in
democracy and Laski is the foremost among them He considers the democratic
government “is doubtless a final form of political organisation in the sense that
men who have once tested power will not, without conflict surrender it ”3i He
had abiding faith in the permanence of democracy and firmly believed that it
would continue
In spite of Its failings, which are many and some of them quite grave,
democracy is, as a rule, the most appropriate form of government for modern
times and it is the logical sequence of evolution Its appeal is still great for the
people as no better alternative mankind But democratic institutions
is open to
shall have to be reformed m order to become progressive, adaptable and flexible
vehicles responsive to the aspirations of the people Our economic, social and
politic dl ordeI^ have been rendered shaky and unless democracy finds the means of
equalising opportunity and wiping out the yawning economic disparities which
have paralysed the social structure and destroyed the political fabric, its future is
definitely bleak After all democracy is an operative ideal and it is the skill and
dexterity of its operators that can save u Maciver has cogently said that there is
“only one way to keep it in being, that is through the intelligent perception,
permeating the people, of what it is and what makes it precious We guard our
spiritual treasures only by learning to appreciate it 32 The traditional approach to
democracy has proved a sheer sham It requires to be substituted by reorienting
our democratic values than substituting it by a totalitarian regime Total-
itarianism may present a fascinating balance-sheet of achievements— improve-
ment in the condition ot th^' masses by providing order and securitv, economic
amelioration, restoiation of nationalistic self-respect, hopes and ambitions and
national unity But at what cost The cost is great and immeasurable It is
32 Maciver, R M ,
The Ramparts We Guard, p 4
SUGGESTED READINGS
Almond, Gabriel A and Coleman, Janies S (Eds
, ), The Politics of the Developing Areas
Anupc hand Kapur Two Constitutions
Arendt, H The Origins of Totalitarianism
Asirvatham, E Political Theory, Chap XV
Babbit, 1 Democracy and Leadership
Bagehol, W The tlnglish Constitution, Chap 1!
SEPARATION OF POWERS
performance of the several kinds of work to be done This is necessary for two
obvious reasons first that the benefits of specialisation may be secured and,
secondly, responsibility may be more definitely located When the work of
government is distributed to political organs in accordance with the nature of
function to be performed, it is the functional distribution powers
Carl J
Friedrich says that true government does not exist “unless
constitutional
proc'edural restraints are established and effectively operating Such restraints
mvolve sopfte division of power, for evidently some considerable power must be
vested in those who are expected to do the restraining Such a division ot
governmental power under a constitution has largely taken two forms the
functional division —
such as that into legislative, executive, and judicial, and the
” '
Based upon this principle of distribution, all the powers of government have
long been conceived as falling within one or another of three great classes,
aixording as they have to do with (1) the enactment of making of laws, f2) the
inicrpreiation of these laws and (3) their enfoicemeni To these three classes have
f>een given the names, legislative, judicial and executive Structurally considered,
government has been deemed to be made up of three branches having for their
functions the enactment, the adjudication, and the enforcement of law, and the
branches to which these functions belong are known as the Legislature, the
Judiciary, and the Executive respectively
I'his three-fold division of governmental powers had received such general
recognition that it became a division But recently it has been held by
classical
some writers that this division is unscientific Willoughby, for example, says “that
attempts to act upon it lead not only to confusion of thought but to serious
difficulties in working out the practical problems of the distribution of govern-
mental powers functionally He suggests that electorate and administration
are distinct branches of government and it is important to recognise their
389
390 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
little to Political Science until the issue of political liberty became urgent. In the
seventeenth century it “began to acquire meaning, and in the eighteenth, with
”
critical times, it came to the forefront of discussion
There arc traces of the theory in John Locke’s (Svil Government. Locke
“arc always almost united”, and to this union he expressed no objection. But he
would not permit the union of the executive power with the legislative. The
legislative power, he said, “in well-ordered commonwealth, where the good of the
whole IS so considered as it ought”, is placed in the hands of an assembly that
convenes at intervals But since the administration and enforcement of law is a
continuous task, a power distinct from the legislative must remain “always in
being” In practice, “the legislative and executive powers come often to be
separated ” In principle, too, Locke argued that they should be separate,
“because it may be too great temptation to human frailty, apt to grasp at power,
for thesame persons who have the power of making laws to have also in their
hands the power to execute them ” ^ This division of authority and the separation
of executive and legislative power is justified and explained by Locke on the
ground that it is necessary for the maintenance of liberty, liberty suffers when the
same human beings make the laws and apply them ^
separation of powers as a device to make government safe for the governed The
division of powers that he envisaged was th^ same as that of Locke, except for
renaming Locke’s executive power and tailing it the judicial power. The
executive function, as described by Locke, had been to execute the laws in any
case He also changed Locke’s terminology and designated his federative power as
the executive power But in his insistence that they must be entrusted separately
to different personnel he went considerably ahead of his predecessor His most
famous statement runs thus
“When the legislative and executive powers are united m the same person, or
in the same bexly of Magistrates, there can be no liberty, because apprehensions
may arise, lest the same monarch or senate should enact tyrannical laws, and
execute them in a tyrannical manner Again, there is no liberty if the judicial
power be not from the legislative and executive. Were it joined with the
.separated
legislative, the and liberty of the subject would be exposed to arbitrary
life
control, for the judge would then be legislator Were it joined to the executive
power, the judge might behave with violence and oppression There would be an
end of everything, were the same man or the same body to exercise those three
powers, that of enacting laws, that of executing the public resolutions, and of
trying the cases of individuals
the same agency is the prosecutor as well as the judge If all the three powers are
concentrated in a single hand there would be an end of everything, as there will
be tyrannical laws interpreted and enforced with the violence of an oppressor
Montesquieue’s thesis is that concentration of legislative, executive and judicial
9 Sptni of the Laws, Book VI, p 6 ed Franz Neumann, trans. Thomas Nugent (1949),
pp. 151-52
10. Fmer, H., The Theory and Practuo of Modem Government, p 98
SEPARATION OF POWERS 393
for safeguarding the liberty of the individual and for avoiding tyranny.
Montesquieu follows Locke, “but with more system and it is important to observe
that he never thinks to separate the powers completely, but rather to modify the
”
concentration of powers
In the United States, Montesquieu’s theory found its best expression “We
shall never know,” says Herman F'lner, “whether the Fathers of the Amencan
Constitution established the separation of powers from the influence of the
theory, or to accomplish the immediately practical task of safeguarding liberty
and property But they definitely desired liberty in the sense enunciated by
Montesquieu They also desired limits upon despotism Independence from
British suzerainty had given them the first A short experience with legislative
supremacy, after the Declaration of Philadelphia, had convinced them that
concentration of power in any one institution was fraught with abuse While
writing about the Constitution of Virginia, Jefferson wrote. “All the powers of
government, legislative, executive, and judicial, result to the legislative body. The
concentrating of these in the same hands is precisely the definition of despotic
government It will be no alleviation that these powers will be exercised by a
plurality of hands, and not by a single one One hundred and seventy-three
despots would surely be as oppressive as one ” The same point was elaborated by
Madison while issuing a similar warning “The legislative department is
everywhere extending the sphere of its activity, and drawing all power into its
impetuous vortex They (the founders of our republics) seem never to have
.
11 Ibid,
12 Ibid, p 99
13 As quoted in Lipson’s Oreat Issues of Polilics, p 277.
394 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
power in the same hands, must lead to the same tyranny as it had been
threatened by executive usurpations
If concentration of power was the evil to be avoided, was there besides
executive or legislative omnipotence some third possibility^ The alternative was
what has come to be called Separation of Powers In fact. Separation of Powers
became a political creed with the statesmen and those engaged in the framing of
the national constitution at the Philadelphia Convention. They were not new to
the theory The governmental system embodied a species
of the Colonial period
of separation of powers Prior to 1776, the executive branch, under the Governor,
was distinct from the legislative, and controversies between them were rampant
in the two decades that led up to the Independence With the principle of judicial
review, the statesmen of that day were also equally familiar as the constitutionali-
ty of Colonial Acts could be challenged before the Judicial Committee of the
But the Amencan Constitution did not explicitly state that powers ought to
be separate It simplv distributed the powers, legislative pow'ers were vested in
Congress, the executive powers in the President, and the judicial in the Courts
While apportioning the lion’s share of powers to one department of government
the Constitution gave smaller slices to each of other departments This was done
to avoid concentration and consequent abuse of power The maxim with the
Fathers of the Constitution was that power should be limited, controlled and
diffused “If power is not to be abused then it is necessary, in the nature of things,
that power be made a check to power ” In the field of legislation, for example, the
bulk of the law-making power was placed in Congress, but the President received
his share in the powers to recommend measures, to summon Congress in special
session, and to veto bills Similarlv the Senate shared with the President his
power to make appointments, declare war, and ratify treaties ITie Suprenu
(’oLirt. by exercising the power of judicial review, asserted its claim to a portion of
impeachment where the House was empowered to prosecute and the Senate sat
in judgment The President could interv'ene in the business of the courts through
his power of pardon for all offemes except treason
The functions of the government are legislative (rule making), executive (rule
application), and judicial (rule adjudication)
government group themselves into three divisions These divisions are not a
matter of theor)% but it is a practical fact asscx:iated with the character of the
functions themselves It is one thing to legislate, another to administer, and a
third By assigning each of these functions to different branches of
to judge
government composed of separate personnel and following their own mode of
action, separation is obtained Such a statement transfers the doctrine from the
realm of theory to that of political fact
Absolute separation impossible. But it docs not mean absolute separation.
Separation of Powers, according to Barker, “must certainly mean a distinct mode
of action”. Each organ of government has its own distinctive mode of action”
The legislative mode is “deliberate and deliberative”, the judicial mode is critical
rather than deliberative and the executive mode is a rapid determination ol
decisions and instructions in order to give effect to legislative and judicial modes
In a word, as Barker says, “we shall find three organs corresponding to the three
different action, but we may find one of the organs so absolutely
modes of
specialised in mode of action, or so entirely separate in its piovince, that it
its
’
cannot also act in the mode and enter the piovince of others Madison correctly *
The State is an organic unity and the various departments of its machinery
are inter-connected By the nature of their functions, they cannot be divided into
water-tight compartments 1 he government must always be viewed as a whole,
and Its organs, though distinct, must work in unison in order to lx* useful and
effectiye in serving the purposes for which they have lx*en created 1 he real
not be divorced from efficiency ” The functions of government are di\ided into
different departments so that each department does its job to the beest of its
executive and judicial power, the question ol how best to maintain their
separateness, the values resulting from such separation, and the problem of how
best to mesh these separate institutions of government with the structure ot
”
society
19 Badker, E ,
hmctples of Social and Politual Theory, p 261
Almond, G A ,
and Powell, G. B Comparatm Poiitus A bevelopmental Approach,
,
pp. 10-U.
SEPARATION OF POWERS 397
judicial modeof action, but not necessarily conhned to that mode. There is,
similarly, an executive organ which may be concerned with other modes of action
besides the executive A judge, for example, makes a new law when he gives a
de( ision on a point not covered by law or m
which there does not exist precedent.
Here is a case m which the judicial and legislative functions combine as a result
of natural process Again, the executive everywhere possesses the power of issuing
ordinances and proclamations This is a device of practical utility, but it has to be
place, legislature is bound by moral and ethical codes All proposals for law are
action it follows The most important limit on the legislature is the limit imposed
by the development and activity of political parties. There is, what has been
desenbed as, a parliamentary forbearance The minonty agrees that the majority
should govern, and the majonty agrees that the minority must cnticisc and
oppose Opposition is an effective restraint on the vagancs of the majority party
in the legislature Both the party in office and the opposition understand the rules
of the game and know that at some future date their positions may be reversed.
Thus, the concept of Separation of Powers, in its traditional analysis, has been
impossible to realize in any complete way
Totalitarian objection. The totalitanans reject the doctrine of separation
from beginning to the end Separation of Powers is aimed at preventing
despotism whereas totalitarianism believes in unity and oneness of power One of
the Nazi lurists wrote, ‘The Separation of Powers belontrs to a political era in
which political unit) was reduced to a minimum in the interest of an
autonomous bourgeois society However, national and ethnic unity and oneness
demand that all political powers be gathered in the hand of one Icadei I'he
Communists reject the doctrine outright as it is bourgeois principle ” V'yshinsky
wrote, “ From top to bottom the Soviet scx-ial order is penetrated by the single
general spirit of the oneness of authonty of the toilers The programme of the
All-Union Communist Party rejects the bourgeois principle of Separation of
Powers ” Soviet writers argue that Montesquieu developed the theory as a means
of limiting the absolute powers ot the Kings of France In the Soviet Union there
IS no class conflict and hence there is no need to limit one branch of government
by another All organs of government have to work in the same interest
What the doctrine means today. The modem democratic view does not
accept the traditional analvsis of the doctnne of Separation of Powers It is
explained that Montesquieu’s \iews were the product of an era which IcKiked
upon government itself as something inherentlv dangerous and possibly despotic
That government was deemed best which governed least as it existed to protect
and restrain, not to foster and promote But today, even the most conservative
person is unable to think of government in purely passive terms The intensive
integrationand complexits of mtxlern industrial s(xiety, and the accepted
concept of a Welfare .State demand more and more action and services from the
government All this needs planning the life and resources of the nation
The Welfare .State tends to concentrate power on the executive level and
consequently it means ascendancy of the executive ovrr the legislative branch
Locke had conceived of the relation between the three powers in tenns of
supremacy Montesquieu and Madison preferred to see an cquilibnum
legislative
between the three coordinate branches But such a division now seems outmoded
for all practical purposes a.s it is incapable of guaranteeing the services which the
government is expected to render Planning and active service cannot be the work
of separate branches of government which cancel each other out Planning must
be unified Fusion and not rigid separation of functions is required Thus,
“moulds arc broken in which the thoughts of Locke, Montesquieu and Madison
were cast and their contents have spilled together
The ascendancy of the executive and the blurring of the traditional division
of functions have been influenced by two other important tendencies One is the
organbatjon of the career civil scrvicx; and the second is the emergence of political
parties with their nationwide organisations Political parties unite what one may
try to separate. The development of the executive, therefore, into what may be
called a multi-functionmg organ, is one of the most notable features of a modem
SEPARATION OF POWERS 399
government. To put it in the words of Barker, “If the growth of the legislative
organ, in consequence of the development of the cabinet system, was the notable
feature erf* the eighteenth century, it may be said that the growth of the executive
organ in consequence of the extension of rights and the corresponding extension
of service.s which mostly fall to the lot of the executive, is the notable feature of
the twentieth ”2*Today, the executive is not only an executive, it is also, at the
same time, a legislature, it exercises a judicial jurisdiction too. Administration
and adjudication no longer seem as different as they had once appeared.
The core of the modem problem of government is to find a synthesis
combining the answer to two needs— the need for the Welfare State and the need
for freedom The Welfare State, as said before, means concentration of power on
the executive level and, accordingly, the ascendancy of the executive over the
legislative branch This tendency seems to be an alarming development to many.
It IS, undoubtedly, alarming unless controlling and balancing devices are
properly developicd to keep pace with the ever-changing face of the executive
power The doctrine of Separation of Powers has become important today than
perhaps at any other time
Barker suggests another check He accepts the bare truth of our times that
the executive is a multi-functioning organ, but he emphasises that when the
executive performs legislative and judicial functions let it employ the mode of
21 Barker, E ,
PrinctpUx of Social and Political Theory,
p 261
22. Refer mdependent regulatory commissions sikH as the Inter-State
lo the
Commerce Commission in the United States of which Justice Holmes of the U S Supreme
Court said that it performed “legislative, judicial and executive acts only softened by a
quasi ” Also refer to administrative justice in Great Britain and other countries.
23. Friedrich, CJ ,
ConsMuimal Government and Democracy, p 185
400 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
establishes its own distinctive mode of action with its own distinc tise K'dinitjiK
But It does not mean that separation of functions pre\ents leadeishij) I on miu h
separation destroys responsibility, immobilises action and ultimateh destrins Iree
£TOvernment Without leadership there would soon be a constitutional (iisis and
possibilities of the rise of dictatorship But it is essential to temper le.idership hs
imposing limitations upon it The real limitations are those vshith make tin
government responsible to the people, that is, it must answer to the jieople loi its
policies and if its answers are not satisfactors to the people, the\ should hav( ih(
means to replace it It can be ensured further by the pr»*sence ot an iruk [)end( ni
and impartial judiciary, the guardian of the rights of the pr'ople Thus thr
bepaiation of Powers is a living force in all democratu tountries as a (heck to
irresponsible power
In the context of what has been said above the theory ol Separation of
Powers now upon broader grounds than suggested by the limited doctrine of
rests
Locke and Montesquieu It reconciles theory with practice and thereby estab-
Hshes harmonv between division and concentration ot powers to maintain the
safety of the political order as a whole It stands for an effective system of divided
powers as contained in the classical doctrine and considers it sound, but holds
that there is nothing sacrosanct about it It appreciates the difficulties resulting
from divided powers and considers them great, but it also realises that the
24 Kant’s statement of this analog> is, “Every state contains three powers, i e , the
general and united will m three fold |ierson» heat ion Hie {xiwer to rule (sovereignu )
m tin
person of the legislative, the executive power in the person of the governor fin accordance
wiih law; and the law-infcrpreting power fattnbutive to each what is his according to law)
in the person of the judge | |
Similar to the three propositions in practical sylbgism
the major premise which contains the law of a will, the minor premise which contains the
aimmand to proceed according to that law, i e ,
the principle of subsuming | )
under the
law, and the consequent which contains the sentence or judicial decision as to what is law in
the particular case ” Refer to Carl J. Friedrich, ConsUtutmal Gwemment and Democracy, p 621
SEPARATION OF POWERS 401
underlying the separation of powers and the pattern of a syllogism is due to the
fact that commands imply decisions, and decisions in turn imply judgments.
Power means, inter alia, that a person or group possesses the ability to
command and the ability to command involves the ability to decide, whenever
there a choice between several alternatives Power, therefore, admits of
is
commanding and deciding Specific decisions and commands are the realm of
executive power, general decisions and commands fall within the sphere of
legislative power The latter is for that reason often called the rule-making power
Similarly, the executive power may be called measure-taking or rule application.
The judicial power apparently stands between the two, for it transforms a general
into a specific decision When a general command has been given, or a general
decision made, that is, the rule has been established, there still remains the
further decision involved in adjudicating the rule. The judicial power makes a
specific decisionby applying the rule The decision made is not a command. It is
for this reason that the pronouncements of the courts, while adjudicating, are
described as decisions and the whole process as rule That is, the specific decision
IS rendered while applying rules
But the advocates of the new theory of divided powers contend that most of
the time the government functionaries arc their own judges Whenever they
decide to do or not to do something because the law demands or forbids it, they
apply that law “by subsuming the particular situation with which we arc
confronted under the established legal rules. ’’“^Ordinanly, it is only the doubtrful
and controversial points of law which arc brought before the courts Majonty of
them are decided by various commissions and tnbunals with which an industrial
society IS honeycombed today The decisions of these commissions and tribunals
are administrative in their nature and not in strict accord with the classical
theory of the Separation of Powers Those who criticise the new theory of divided
powers seldom appreciate the practical aspect of the functions of government and
the task which it has to undertake Administrative tribunals and commissions
have taken deep roots in almost all countries and, in some, such tribunals carry a
constitutional sanctity, as in India The only point which need be emphasised is
that these commissions and tnbunals should adopt the mcxle of judicial action as
Barker suggested
25 IhiH
p 183
26 Ihid p 184
SUGGESTED READINGS
Black, H (' I'fu Relation of the Executm Pouyer to Legislation
Barker, E Prim t
files of Sonal and Political Iheory, pp 255-68
Fairhe, J
A The Separation of Powers
Finer, H The Theory and Prailice of Modem (ioi<emment, Chaps VI, VII
Carl Fieidnrh
J
Constitutional Gm^ernment and Democraiy, Ch&p X
Garner, ] W
Political Science and Ooiiemment, pp 322-344,423-428
Wheare defines it as “that bexly of rules which regulates the ends for which
and the organs through which governmental power is exercised” ^Gilchrist writes
402
1
that the constitution consists of “that body of rules or laws written or unwritten,
which determine the organisation of government, the distribution of powers to
the various organs of government, and the general principles on which these
powers are to be exercised ” ^
Constitution and Constitutionalism. Contemporary political scientists give a
distinct meaning to the term constitution and say that it is the process by which
governmental action is effectively restrained It is a “technique of effective
regulanzed restraint upon governmental actions”<’as Carl Friednch puts it. “As a
political process”, he adds, “the constitution can be described as analogous to the
rules of a game insuring fair play This is the meaning of the word ‘constitution’
in Its functional sense, as distinguished from its meaning in law, history, and in m
medicine ’’^A constitution, therefore, defines and thereby limits public power. Its
basis IS belief in a limited government and consequently “genuine constitutions”
determining effective limitations can exist only in non-totalitanan countries In a
totalitanan dictatorship the power exercised by its governing group is unlimited
and unrestrained whereas the exercise of political authority in a democratic
government is limited by a constitutional framework which protects certain areas
of personal and group life from governmental interference and provides that
governmental p^owers shall l>e exercised in accordance \»ith the known proce-
dures Carter and Her?, “Formal appearances
accordingly, conclude that
notwithstanding, totalitarian regimes do not have” genuine constituions At least
such regimes may eniov merely a self-limitation on the part of the ruling group.
And in any case whatever rules exist “are forever provisional, changeable,
revocable, they do not have the nature of generality, reliability and thus
calculability which the rules of law elsewhere possesses Constitutions, accord-
ing to Michael Curtis are “usually regarded as of higher validity than other rules,
thus bestowing legitimacy on those who claim to wield power according to
constitutional rules Constitutions reflect different aspects of the life and
behaviour of the community
There is nothing like a ‘constitution’ and a ‘genuine constitution’ The
emphasis of the contemporary writers is on constitutionalism rather than on
constitution This is made clear by Carter and Herz themselves They sa ,
government, not the State as a whole It deals with the fundamental concerns of
government and as there are different kinds of governments there are different
kinds of constitutions But every State, no matter what form of government it
5 Gilchrist, RN , p 21
Principles of Political Science,
6 Friedrich, C J ,
Constitutional Gwemmeni and Democraty, p 26
7 fhid,
p 121
8 Carter, G M ,
and Herz, G H , Government and Politics m the Twentieth Centmy, p. 64
has, must have a constitution. It is impossible to contend that the State with an
autocratic government exists without a constitution or that the framework of
government is not a constitution unless “the community hath agreed to it”, or
unless it guarantees “nghts” and “privileges” to the people If the State with a
democratic government has a constitution, so has the State with an autocratic
government There can be no State without a constitution, and every State that
ever existed has had a constitution of some kind
CLASSIFICATION OF CONSTITUTIONS
Evolved and Enacted Constitutions. While possessing a common characteri-
stic in content, constitutions differ greatly in type Some wntei-s classify them into
cumulative or evolved, and conventional or enacted. A cumulative or
evolved constitution is the result of slowly working evolutionary changes, the
product of accumulated material which has moulded and shaped the political
institutions of a country’ Such a constitution is not made, it grows with its roots
in the pnmitive past The edifice it presents is the accumulated wisdom of the
past and the result of numerous customs, usages, traditions, principles, judicial
decisions which have influenced its development. The conventional or enacted
constitution, on the other hand, is the result of the deliberate efforts of man It is
Ciostitutions are now divided, for brevity and definiteness, into written and
unwritten; although the distinction between them is more or less the same as is
10 Jennings, I ,
Tke Imw and the CmUtiuim, p 8
11 Ikd
THE FRAMEWORK OF GOVERNMENT*—CONSTITUTION 405
many elements, like statutes, judicial decisions, precedents, usages and traditions
have entered, piling themselves one upon the other from age to age and shaping
the political institutions of the country according to the wants of the people and
needs of various times There is no single document or documents which contain
It,though many sources may be found which describe it. There may be some
enactments of a fundamental character which make the constitution, but this
kind of written element is in a much smaller proportion than the unwritten
element, and it does not, at the same time, bear one single date These laws were
made and when they were needed The most important part of an unwritten
as
constitution is just what is kept out of the written law and given over to the sole
guardianship of custom
The and the only example of an unwritten constitution, as said before, is
best
that of Britain The fundamental political institutions of that country, which are
the basis of all governmental authority, are not set down in writing in any
formally accepted document or documents They are regulated by (1) judicial
decisions, sometimes founded on more or less vague “immemorial rights and
lilx;rties”, and sometimes founded on agreements, resolutions and laws made by
rebellious parliaments Then, (2) there arc a number of statutes dealing with
sepaiate parts of government like the Act ot Settlement, the Franchise Acts, the
Parliament act of 1911 as amended in 1949, and the Crown Proceedings Act of
1947 (3) But the major part of what lorms the soul of the British Constitution is
regulated by simple customs or conventions Britain is something more than the
“mother of parliaments”, and its growth was more or less spontaneous, slow and
sometimes haphazard It took eight centuries to transform parliament into a
governing body resting on the suffrage of all adult persons in the country and the
piocess has only been completed in our own times The (Glorious) Revolution of
lf)8R, settled once for all that parliament had supreme power and it could control
every aspect of national life The powers of the King were limited and the
constitutional result was the emergence of the cabinet Conventions alone provide
Cabinet government They demand that Ministers of the
for the essential rules of
King must be members of parliament, they should belong to the majority part)
in the House of Commons and function under the party leader, the Prime
It dcK^s not, however, mean that the written element in the British
Constitution is negligible Judicial decisions form a body of written constitution-
al law and the statutes certainly do The utterances of parliament on vanous
supreme occasions list in the constitutional documents ot the country and arc
“authentically existent” These, taken together, arc, Herman Finei says, as
cxplict and usually more explicit than the “written constitutions” of other
countries '-The conventions, he adds, are not so recorded by an institution with
12 Finer, H ,
7/rr rheory and Fracticr of Modern Government, p 118
406 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
which conflicts with the provisions of the constitution and that the constitution
must be amended or altered according to the procedure presenbed by the
constitution Here is a clear distinction between the constitutional or fundamen-
tal law and the statutory law i'he constitutional law embodies the will of the
sovereign and it should not be altered by the ordinary legislative process If the
statutory law conflicts with or is not m conformity to the constitutional law, it is
ultra vires or unconstitutional and, ipso facto, it is void and opcraiivr ilu*
constitutional law' is paramount, the statutory law is subordinate
Michael Curtis assigns five major reasons for the existence of wntten
constitutions.
“I They arc the sign of successful internal revolution against the former rulers
11 /W, p 119
THE FRAMEWORK OF GOVERNMENT —CO ^STITUTION 407
Not a real distinction. But the distinction between a wntten and unwntten
constitution is not real There is no constitution which is cither wholly written or
entirely unwritten All written constitutions grow and expand if they are to
endure and serve their purpose The real constitution is a living body of general
prescriptions carried into effect by living persons. No constitution can ever be a
strait-jacket Nor can it be ever in the mind of the constitutional fathers to work
out in all details a complete and final scheme of government operative for
generations to come They always seek merely a starting point and consequently
provide a skeleton to be clothed with flesh, by customs, exigencies, national
emergencies, economic developments, and various other factors affecting the
welfare of the nation Written constitutions, Bryce remarks, become “developed
by interpretation, fringed with decision.s, and enlarged by customs so that after a
time the letter of their text no longer conveys their full effect.” The constitution
remains a pnnted document, no doubt, but explained by judicial decisions,
precedents and practices and illuminated by understandings and aspirations
The point may be illustrated by few examples taken from the United States,
which IS represented as the best type of a »ntten constitution The most notable
example is the extra-constitutional development of the political parties. The
constitutional Fathers sought to provide a mechanism of government which
would be free “from all violence of the factiDn”, as Madison called it But in the
Presidential election of 1 796, the third under the Union and the first in which
Washington was not a candidate, there were two national parties, one supporting
John Adams and the other supporting Thomas Jefferson. By 1800, the party
system had settled itself quite firmly in the government, even to the extent of
necessitating the addition of the Twelfth Amendment so as to make the electoral
college method workable Since that time, party system forms the hub of the
American national life Next, there is no basis in the organization of the ‘cabinet’
which advises the President. President Washington found it useful to have a
small group of advisers to whom he could look for counsel. Other Presidents
continued with it and, today, it is impossible to dispense entirely with such a
body. ‘Senatorial courtesy’, ‘presidential nominating conventions’ and the
‘residence’ requirements in the election of Representatives are some of the
examples of constitutional usages. ‘Legislative committees’ are not authorised in
the constitution, but custom and usage has made them as permanent as if they
were a part of the constitution.
budget d" 1909, that led to the enactment of the Parliament Act, which gives the
House of Commons cxclasive control over Money Bills and a means of enacting
legislative bills without the (finsent of the Lands The Amending Act of 1949
further strengthened the supremacy of the House of Commons The statutory
element seems to be gaining in ndativc strength I'he Ministers of the Crown Act
now gives legal recognition to the C'abinet, the oflue of the Prime Minister, the
political parties and even to His Majesty’s Opposition
The distinction betwetm wntten and unwritten constitutions, therefore, is
not only confusing, but unv ientific Professor Strong calls the division [between
written and unwritten constitutions false, misleading and illusory The difference
between them one of degree rather than of kind Bryce’s conclusion is
is really
that the terms “wntten” and “unwritten” are not happily chosen, “although the
distinction they aim at expressly is a real distinction ’’’'Hennan Finer, in his own
charactenstic way, says, “Comparatively, then, and not absolutely, the adjective
‘unwntten’ when applied to constitution means (i) that all is not included in
writing which might be, while somethings are altogether excluded which in other
constitutions arc included, and (ii) (hat it is not the result of deliberate
establishment and adoption as a whole, with the result that no external sign
marks of a constitutional from an ordinary law ”i^K Wheare observes that the
and unwritten should be discarded and
classification of constitutions into written
“the better distinction which have a wntten constitution and
is between countric.s
those which have no written constitution ”»«Michacl Curtis makes a significant
departure from all the reasons assigned so far Hr says, “But the distinction
between regimes with a ‘written’ and those with an ‘unwritten’ constitution— for-
mcrly a means of comparing Britain and other systems—is not today of great
political importance. Regimes possessing constitutions may be of any nature,
democratic or dictatonal, liberal or conservative, communist, capitalist, or with a
mixed economy. What is significant is that political actions adhere to an agreed
pattern of behaviour or the generally understood principles of the political
’
system
Flexible and Rigid Constitutions. Bryce suggests a new scheme of classifica-
tion Under thisscheme constitutions are of two types flexible and rigid The
basis of this classification is the method of changing the constitution and its
relation to the ordinary or statutory law.
The flexible constitution places constitutional law and ordinary law on the
same level in the sense that both are enacted in the same way and both proceed
from the same source If the constitutional law can be amended, repealed or
altered by the same prcx'edure as the ordinary law, the constitution is flexible It
does not matter whether the constitution is pnmanly written or consists largely of
conventions What is e.ssential to determine is, how the constitutional law and
statutory law stand to one another Do they stand at par with one another or is
some sanctity, some superiority, attached to the constitutional law^ And what is
the procedure required for altering or amending the constitutional law^ If the
constitutional law and the ordinary law emanate from the same source and both
go through the same procedure in passing and amending them, then, the
constitution is flexible It means that there is no difference between the
constitution-making authonty and the ordinary law-making authority Parlia-
ment in Britain is sovereign and by sovereignty of Parliament Dicey means
constitutional changes and the ordinary law are both subject to the same
legislative procedure, thatis, a bill must be read three times in each House of
Parliament and after having been approved by both Houses, it becomes law on
being formally assented to by the King 1'he courts have no authority to nullify
any enactment of Parliament It mean« no special sanctity is attached to the
constitutional law, and the constitutional and statutory laws stand at par with
one another
Flexible constitutions were almost the only kind known to the ancient world
The position is now reversed The only surviving example of a flexible
The rigid constitution possesses a special and higher status, standing above
the ordinary law and alterable by a procedure different from the one used in the
case of ordinary law, thus, making it difficult to change. The ob)cct is to
emphasise that the constitutional law embodies the will of the sovereign and it
should not be alterable by the ordinary legislative process. A rigid constitution
interposes a barrier to statutory encroachments The powers of the legislature arc
limited by the constitution itself If the statutory law conflicts with or is not in
conformity to the constitutional law, it is ultra vires or unconstitutional and
cannot become operative But who shall say what a particular clause of the
constitution means or whether this or that statute is consonant with it^
Legislatures cannot be entrusted with such a power, because the object is to
devise means against legislative encroachments The courts then become the
guardians of the constitution They fix its meaning, they set the bounds to
competence of the legislature under it and annul what, in their opinion, goes
beyond the constitution This method of securing rigidity is called judicial
control or judicial review
The distinction between rigid and flexible constitution is a real one and
It found Its full expression when for eighteen years Congress of the United
States found itself without power to levy income-tax, and when, by decisions of
the Supreme Court, Roosevelt’s New Deal was tom to pieces Britain aflbrds a
sharp contrast There, ordinary statutes may override any decision of the highest
court And what parliament has enacted, the courts interpret and apply unless
parliament has oiheixvise provided
Process of amendment. The process of amendment vanes a good deal
between countries with ngid constitutions, especially as between unitary a^'d
circumstances and public opinion, but they do so rather more slowly than the
legislature. Secondly, it depends upon the content of the constitution. Some
constitutions are short, others long; some limited to general provisions, others
replete with details;some willing to leave civil liberty with the legislature, others
the reverse. “What makes the Indian Constitution so rigid,” says Jennings, “is
that in addition to somewhat complicated process of amendment it is so detailed
and covers so vast a field of law that the pcroblcm of constitutional validity must
often arise ”21
of political controversy, to place them be\ond the reach of majorities and officials
”
and establish them as legal principles to be applied bv the courts
A rigid constitution is conservative in the sense that it is free from dangers of
temporary popular passion It possesses the meiits of permanence and stability
and IS sure to command the confidence of the people The people weigh even
ordinary legislation in terms of the provisions of the constitution Finally, the
facility of amendment sometimes carries a deleterious effect Referring to the
situation under tHe German Republic, Max Radin said, “The heaping up of
constitutional changes by simple votes the Reichstag destroyed what Professor
Lowensteim of Yale apth calls the ‘constitutional conscience’ of the nation, and
rendered far-reaching and revolutionary changes by ordinance and coup d’etat
less shocking
But when ngidity and conservatism are earned beyond requisite necessity,
they prove elements of weakness The difficulty m amending the constitution very
often proves detrimental to national interest It causes unnecessary delay which
may lead to Take, for example, the method of constitutional
revolution
amendment in the United States of America. There is no prescribed time limit,
unless specifically determined by a resolution of Congress, within which a
21 Jennings, I ,
Some Characteristics oj the Indian Constitution, pp 9-10
22 Laski, H ,
A Grammar of Politics, p 335
23 As cited mEM Sait, Political Institutions, A Preface, p. 339
412 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
social, political and economic conditions of the country and keeps pace with the
time “Progress demands adaptability and flexibility and such adaptability and
flexibility can only be secured in countries with rigid constitutions by a
sufficiently easy method of amendment
A rigid constitution, which is necessarily written, having been made at a
particular time, cannot foresee the distant future The vision of its framers
however far-sighted they might had been, must remain blurred, they cannot
imagine the shape of things to come “It (a rigid constitution) is like an attempt
to fit a garment to an individual without taking into consideration his future
growth and changes in size Moreover, a rigid constitution is without any
regard to the past and without anticipation of the future, and is, therefoie,
conservative in outlook It does not adequately admit growth and expansion
Under a ngid constitution the main concern of the judiciary is to see
whether the law conforms to the provisions of the constitution or not Judges are
generally conservative in their outlook and when they go to the letter of the law,
they are disregardful of the new spirit to which the constitution needs to be
adjusted “To entrust the judge,” says Laski, “with the power to override the will
of the legislature is broadly to make him the decisive factor in the State ’’-'
The
judiciary becomes a super-legislature, but not in its representative capacity Its
decisions are political in nature and are, therefore, not impressive, impartial and
worthy of any special respect as the decisions of the courts should generally
command The attitude of the )udiciar\, which lacks elasticity and adaptability,
may accelerate the forces which upset the constitution itscK
Some writers hold that rigid constitutions are more valuable, because they
arc less subject to party feelings But this is not correct Rigid constitutions are
the focus of national sentiment, they are centres of national discussion and, as
such, aie more subject to party forces than flexible constitutions
24 Gilchnt, RN ,
Prmaples of Political Saence, p 213
25 Gamer, J W ,
Introduction to Political Science, p 394,
26 Laski, H ,
A Grammar of Politics, p 3()4
THE FRAMEWORK OF GOVERNMENT —CONSTITUTION 413
Constitutions”, p 22.
414 PRINCII>LBS OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
“that in a few years not a single example of the flexible type will exist ”^^The
United States was the first to devise a written and rigid constitution and other
countnes followed her The future seems to be with rigid constitutions and many
reasons can be enumerated in support of it In the first place, the modern
tendency is in favour of constitutional guarantee of rights which definitely
restrains the powers of a government In the second place, democracy finds its
best expression in the ideal of self-government which is embodied in a wntten
constitution The powers of government divided and distributed between
different political divisions should not be changed by the ordinary law-making
process Restraints are the core of constitutionalism and the constitution is, as
Carl Fnednch says, an “effective regularized restraint '-‘^Thirdly, whenever a new
form of government is introduced in any country replacing the old, the tendency
generally is to make the new form definite in a wntten constitution Finally, the
world IS veering round to federalism and a federal form of government needs
necessarily a written and a rigid constitution But the process of amendment
should not be so complicated or difficult as to prevent the organisation of the
State from corresponding to the existing political conditions The amending
process should be neither so rigid as to prevent change nor so flexible as to
encourage needless tarnpenng with basic principles This can be best expressed in
the words of Jawaharlal Nehru Speaking on the process of amendment provided
in the Constitution of India, he said in the Consituent Assembly “While wt
want this Constitution to be as solid and permanent as we can make it, there is
no permanence in constitutions There should be a certain flexibility If you make
anything ngid and permanent, you stop the nation’s growth, the growth of a
living, vital organic people In any event, we could not make this Constitution so
rigid that it cannot be adapted to changing conditions ” Like the “safety valve of
an engine”, says Gettell, “the amending process should safeguard the governmen-
tal machine against too great speed and at the same time serve as an outlet
not be entrusted to any small group of self-selected men, however eminent they
may be in public life If it is true that what concerns all must be consented to by
allin the ordinary matters of government, it follows that in the matter so
31 Kapur, Anup Chand, Theory of the ConsUlumt Assembly and Us development in Indra
416 PRINCIPLES OP POLITICAL SCIENCE
Requisites of a Constitution. A
good constitution must possess certain
characteristics In the first and precise.
place, the constitution should be dehnite
It should be expressed in as clear a language as possible, because even the
constitution Moreover, a constitution which goes into details, very soon becomes
overgrown New social, political, and economic influences render many of the
provisions obsolete necessitating frequent amendments Frequent changes take
away the sanctitv of the constitution Changes are, no doubt, necessary and
inevitable, but it is better to have them emerge through casual and relatively
spontaneous wa)s rather than through the formal procedure of constitutional
amendment
Finally, stability and flexibility are the two prime requisites ot a good
constitution. The system of government which the constitution establishes must
have a high degree of stability and its desirability should be questioned by no
one The making of frequent changes, inter alia, tend to weaken that allegiance
to, and respect for, the government which is such an important factor in securing
an orderly conduct of same time, the constitution of a
political affairs But, at the
modern State should be susceptible to progressive change or growth as errors of
judgment in its framing arc revealed by expencnce, as conditions change, and as
the political aspirations and beliefs of people undergo alteration The problem is,
therefore, to adopt a policy and procedure in respect of amending the
constitution that will represent a compromise between stability and flexibility
neither so ngid a constitution as to prevent change, nor so flexible as to encourage
tampering with basic pnnciples.
specimen of this excellence, though it is the bulkiest m the world and at many
points goes into needless details There are quite a number of provisions which do
not need to be constitutionally protected
Constitution of Sovereignty. A written constitution must definitely contain
the method or procedure amending the constitution and it is regarded as an
for
essential part of every written constitution It is upon the method of amend-
ment that the guarantees of individual liberty and the adaptability of the consti-
tution depend No written constitution is complete without such a provision
“Human societies must grow and develop with the lapse of time, and unless
provision is made for such constitutional readjustment as then internal develop-
’'
ment must stagnate or retrogress ‘President Wilson had said that
requires, they
the constitution must of necessity be a vehicle of lile and that its substance is the
thought and habit of the nation If the constitution can be amended easily, by a
method that enables the political sovereign to express its will, there can be no
conflict between actual conditions and legal organisation But an easy method ol
amending the constitution leads to instability, as a slight swing in popular
opinion may change the fundamental fonn of the government If, on the other
hand, the constitution is difficult to amend or if the political sovereign does not
possess the means to express its will, one of the two things may happen First,
34 Garner, J W ,
Political Science and Government, p 537
35 Friedrich, CJ ,
Constitutional Government and Democracy, p 135
36 Article 368
THE FRAMEWORK OF GOVERNMENT —CONSTITUTION 419
ments to the people for their approval This is regarded as the most democratic
method Popular referendum for amending the constitution obtains in
Switzerland, Australia, France and in some of the States of the United States of
America
It must again be emphasised that no constitution can be regarded as final or
Custom and Usage. What habit is to the individual, usage is to the State,
nations, like men, get into the habit of doing things in a given way Habit then
hardens into usage, which tx*comes difficult to change The political customs and
usages, which have their basis neithci in laws nor in judicial decisions, are
essential parts ol the basic framework of the fundamental rules of the government
in every countiy They modernise, amend and democratise the otherwise rigid
constitutions
But there arc two considerations m this respect The first is that customs play
an important part in the case of old rather than of new constitutions Secondly,
customs develop and thrive in countries where the inhabitants cherish respect for
the past and a higher regard for precedents In India, there is no set of established
conventions The reasons are obvious The Indian Constitution had ever been in
the melting pot, and her late masters (British) always gav'e a small dose of
lelorms whenever the patriotic movement gained momentum The present
constitution though new yet it is amendments It has been amended
prolific in
forty five times during a span of thirty years Thus no opportunity has been given
tocustoms to grow and get piermanently established In France, tex), development
of the constitution through usage and custom has been very small, because
France has been the laboratory of constitutional experiments Between 1789 and
420 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
1875, she adopted and then rejected nearly a dozen constitutions and all those
constitutions were the result of revolutions rather than of evolutions
other Presidents have continued with it, and, today, it is impossible to dispense
entirely with such a body The constitution also provides for indirect election of
the President But the electoral system did not function as the framers of the
constitution had contemplated The electors have now been reduced to mere
dummies and the Presidential election has become direct There are many more
examples of customs and usages, like senatorial courtesy, legislative committees,
and residential requirements in the case of the Representatives, which have
supplemented the constitution and without them it would be unworkable The
most revealing of these is the rise and organisation of political parties The party
system that grew and matured in the eighteenth century was antithetical to the
ideals of the men who had drafted the constitution The system of government
they set up did not anticipate the emergence of parties, but today it is impossible
to work the institutions of the country without parties
Since then the pnnciple of judicial review has been embedded in the
American system of government, although there is no direct provision in the
constitution which empowers the Supreme Court to declare the constitutionality
or otherwise of State or Federal Acts The Marbury case forms the basis of this
important authonty of judicial review exercised by the Supreme Court It has
THE FRAMEWORK OF GOVERNMENT— CONSTITUTION 421
brought about important changes in the United States Constitution and the
Supreme Court is characterised as a “continuous constitutional convention”,
might not otherwise feel authorized to deal with have been covered under this
provision In the same way, by broadly interpreting the constitution. Congress
hzis established a huge defence establishment, created scores of administrative
boards and bureaus, entered into the business of education, banking, insurance,
etc and found authority to regulate the economic and social life of a highly
,
industrialized nation
The letter of law remains the same, unchanged and unaltered, but expediency
and exigency give to the provisions of the constitution another meaning which is
radically different from the original meaning given to them Talking about the
United States Constitution, Charles Beard said that “is a printed document
explained by judicial decisions, precedents and practices and illuminated by
understanding and aspiration In short, the real constitution is a living body of
general prescriptions carried into effect by living persons ’’^“^The constitution is
achieve the dynamic political purposes The constitution remains the same, but
the political habits of the people and their attitude towards government and the
solution of problems confronting the government change the spirit of the
constitution
The factors which prominently account for informal growth and expansion
of a constitution are
1 The process of centralization is the first and the most important in the
countries, federal or unitary, at all stages of their development, had always looked
to the national government for solving their problems Their desirt to make the
country big and prosperous necessitates big business, big agricultuie and big
labour, and all add up to big government All this means enhancement of the
powers of the national government without making any amendment in the
constitution The acquiescence of the people in this prixcss is spontaneous
irrespective of the barriers which the constitution might have created All this
means a vital change in the spirit of the constitution
2 The second factor is the party system Political parties are indispensable
for the working of a democratic government, yet no constitution provides for
them, except in one-party States Though it has an extra-constitutional growth,
yet It forms the hub of the political life of the nation Referring to the United
States of America, Brogan says, “But for the appearance of a national party
system the election of a President really enough of a national figure to carry out
might have been impossible And it is certain that the greatest
his duties,
breakdown of American constitutional system, the Civil War, came only when
the party system collapsed ”^**The President is chosen as a party man to head a
government operated under a party system He surrounds himself with advisers
of his own political faith, consults usually with men belonging to his party in
framing policy, and he uses his power as chief legislator to pursue the party’s
39 Brogan, DW ,
-4n Introduction to American Politics p 45
40 Ibid
THE FRAMEWORK OF GOVERNMENT-CONSTITUTION 423
4 The attitude of the people toward their constitution also affects the
machinery of the government it establishes President George Washington
succinctly explained this in his farewell address He said, “Time and habit are at
least as necessary to fix the true character of governments as of other
institutions ” In countries practising constitutionalism, people respect their
constitutions to the point of veneration For example, the people of the United
States have so much abiding faith in the sagacity, moderation, and “sense of the
possible” shown by the framers of the constitution that the original document is
virtually worshipped Although there is no document which contains the British
Constitution, the constitutional structure essentially has remained the same
through all these centuries The institutions necessary for carrying out the
functions of the Stale were established from time to time as the need arose But as
Jennings “Formed to meet immediate requirements they were then adapted
says,
to exercisemore extensive and sometimes different functions There has been a
constant process of invention, reform and amended dstribution of powers The
building has been constantly added to, patched and partly reconstructed, so that
It has been renewed from century to century, but it has never been razed to the
ground and rebuilt on new foundations
On the other hand, France had been the “laboratory” of constitutions Tht
constitutions in the developing States, both m Asia and Africa, are always in the
melting pot Pakistan is the most convincing example in this respect The
problem of emerging Asian and African States is still a social, more than a
political one and if the constitution^; are to grow and endure, the need is to build
a strong sense of unitv in the country so that criticism and diversity may not seem
like treason If this cannot be achieved, the only alternative is revolution Soviet
SUGGESTED READINGS
Boutmy, £ Studies in Constitutional Law
Bryce, J * Studies in History andJurisfnudence, Elssay III
Dicey, A V The Law of the Constitution
Finer, H Theory and Practices of Modem Government, Chaps VIII, IX
Fnednch, C J Constthtttonal Government and Democracy
Gamer, J W
Political Science and Government, Chap XVIII
Hawgood, J A Modem Constitutions Since 1817
Kapur, A C Theory of the Constituent Assembly and its Development in India
Keisen, H General Theory of Law and State
Lowell, A L Government of England, Vol I, Chap I
—
Democracy has two patterns direct and indirect Under a system of
direct democracy the will of the State is formulated and expressed by the people
themselves They make their own laws without the intervention of any
intermediary agency But such a type of democracy is impossible to obtain in our
times The modem State is a huge State with enormous area and population. It is
physically impossible for the people drawn from the length and breadth of the
whole country to frequently assemble together and take a direct part in making
laws Modem democracy is indirect and representative The voters elect their
representatives and they become members of the legislative assemblies charged
with duty of making laws and bnngmg harmony of purpose between the
government and the governed.
Origin of Representatimi. But how did this practice of representation
originate^ 'There is no conclusive proof to determine how and where the practice
A Preface, pp 467-499
2 ^Itau, R H An Introduction to Politics, p 179
425
426 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
there were only a few thousands of voters spread all over the country and
parliamentary seats were in the grip of rich men and were bought and sold like
shares on the stock exchange The first change m the system of representation,
fixed in the Middle Ages, was made in 1832 and yet it was a long way from being
a people’s parliament At intervals after 1832 extending to 1928, there had been
successive electoral reforms and now all adults over eighteen, men and women, in
the country possess the right to vote and elect their representatives to the House
of Commons Parliament today is really the House of Commons
known as electorate The electorate constitute/- the whole populatictn of the State
minus those who, at any time, are denied the right to vote
was claimed that laws and policies of government concerned all people and
what toucheth all should be decided by all To grant suffrage to some meant
the exclusion of others from representation Unrepresented interests were likely to
be neglected by the government To safeguard the interests of all elements of
population, It was essential that everyone must possess the right to have his
opinion counted in the final decision of public affairs.
The second school was led by Bluntschli, Lecky, John Stuart Mill and Sir
Henry Maine They held that franchise was not an inherent right of a citizen It
was a right which was conferred by the State and it should not be granted to all
Moreover, franchise was a sacred right which required an informal exercise of
judgment in the election of representatives To extend it to the unenlightened
THE ELECTORATE AND REPRES»?NTATION 427
and Ignorant masses was to invite dark days for democracy It was, accordingly,
suggested that all citizens of the State should not possess the right to vote. This
school of thought was against the idea of universal suffrage
It is, however, now admitted that by universal suffrage its advocates meant
universal adult suffrage Minors had always been excluded from the right to vote
So were the lunatics and the aliens Conviction for a crime has been regarded as a
reasonable cause for disqualification The modern view in regard to the nature of
suffrage is that it is an office or function which is conferred by the State upon
only such persons as are believed to be most capable of exercising it for the public
good and not a natural right which belongs without distinction to all citizens of
the State But what ought to be the qualifications of persons believed to be mc»t
capable of exercising their vote for public good^ Every State has its own electoral
laws Adult suffrage is the maxim of democracy, but at present electorates
include a fractional part of the population, reaching as high as three-fifths in the
more liberal States, and in several States, such as New Zealand, where adult
suffrage is permitted, almost one-half of the population are voters, India, too
stands in this catagory
Excluded classes. All States exclude minors, a'lens, and lunatics from the
right to vote and by adult meant every citizen, male and female, who is
suffrage is
not a lunatic or criminal India, the United States and France fix the adult age at
twenty-one years Britain and Russia consider eighteen years sufficient In some
cases the limit is as high as twenty-five The underlying idea is that a certain
matunty is essential for the proper exercise of judgment in electing representa-
tives Criminals in confinement, idiots and lunatics are invariably excluded,
because they do not possess the requisite mental and moral qualifications deemed
necessary for a voter Some States disqualify, either temporarily or permanently,
persons convicted of crime for the reason that they are not good citizens and
lack civic sense Aliens are nowhere permitted to vote as they are not citizens of
the State in which they reside, but owe allegiance to another State
Some States impose other limitations, which may either be the survival of
earlier restrictions or may be necessitated by political reasons One of these is that
a voter must necessarily be an educated person with at least the ability to read
and write John Stuart Mill said “I regard it as wholly inadmissible that any
person should participate in the suffrage without being able to read and write .
to argue that political behaviour has depended, depends now, or must depend
upon instruction It depends upon will,upon the passions and men and .
women vote primarily for what they want and not from purely intellectual
guidance ” But in some States of Amenca it is still being retained “chiefly to
disfranchise the Negro ” Here comes in political expediency In India illiteracy is
not a disqualification, if a citizen possesses another qualification such as the
payment of land revenue, income-tax, municipal or district board rates Literacy,
theory underlying the property qualifications was that only those who own a
certain amount of property may fairly be regarded as having a stake in the
country. Another argument advanced m favour of the property qualification was
that the nght to vote should be conferred on those who paid taxes John Stuart
Mill was an ardent supporter of property qualification. He maintained “It is
important that the assembly which votes the taxes, either general or local, should
be elected exclusively by those who pay something towards the taxes imposed.
Those who pay no by their votes of other people’s money, have
taxes, disposing
every motive to be lavish and none to economise as far as money matters are
concerned, and any power of voting possessed by them is a violation of the
fundamental pnnciples, a severance of the powers of control from the interest in
Its beneficial exercise.”
of the people, however worthy citizens of the State they may be When property
is the only qualification to elect representatives, the legislatures will be
representative assemblies of only the propertied class and other sections and
interests of the community would naturally remain unrepresented Such a nature
of representation is a mockery of democracy The argument that those who pay
taxes should possess the right to vote stands entirely on a different footing It has
nothing to do with possession of property A tax is a contribution paid by
mdividuals in a community for the services rendered by government Taxation
and representation go together and it is a much valued democratic argument of
the theory of representation Taxes are paid, directly or indirectly, by all citizens
of the State and not only by the propertied class Those who foot the bill of
government must have the means to see how money is being spent, no matter
whether they possess property or not
Sex qualification. Till very recently the franchise was confined to males only
and women were not given the right to vote In the United States full suffrage
rights were extended to women in 1920 In Bntain, the Representation of the
People Act, 1918, allowed only a limited system of female suffrage This Act was
altered in 1928 and now there is equal franchise for men and women Although
the old prejudices against women suffrage are disappearing, yet some States still
deny to their women the right to vote and the right to be elected to public office ^
vote and their views got was also wrong to say that
adequate representation It
their participation would deteriorate the domestic and political life In fact, the
admission of women in politics would introduce in political life a purifying,
ennobling and refining influence that not only would tend to elevate the tone of
public life and bnng about more wholesome political conditions in society, but
also would insure better government To deny her the right of suffrage was to
deprive womanhood of the instinct of good citizenship Woman was the cradle of
civilization and the future of every State depended upon her active participation
in the affairs of government If she was deprived of the civic sense, she had
nothing to impart to her children Finally, when women enjoyed all civil rights it
was inconsistent and irrational not to give them political rights. Political rights
must necessarily go with civil rights
behind They have proved their worth in the social and political life of every
country. Why then should they be denied the nght to franchise^
and a woman was Prime Minister in Ceylon and a woman occupies the same
august office in India and in Britain as well So was one in Israel But Finer brings
forward an interesting issue for deep consideration It would be instructive to
quote him in extenso He says, “The wholesale entrance of women into politics
must inevitably introduce complications, owing to the contact of different sexes
No one who has an experience of co-education and cooperation in industry can
avoid the conclusion that the minds of men and women are often diverted from
objective considerationsand are senously affected by considerations of courtesy
and the personal beauty and desirability of one of the opposite sex whose fate or
interest is involved Boys and girls tell lies for each other, and turn in work in
some one else’s name, pugnacity is aroused in the presence of girls, and discipline
IS audaciously rejected because it is humiliating Time is wasted in philandering,
and the mind loses itself m idle fancies In business women are often shielded
from responsibility because of their sex, they are appointed Ix'cause they are
pleasing, they are dismissed and passed over in promotion because they are
ugly Women become extraordinaril) dexoted to their work because they arc
devoted to a particular manager and work badly for others in the hrm We all
know such facts, and they should not escape us in public life And although the
vast majority of people in a representative assembly, its committees, and the
ancillary organizations may be married, and therefore presumably (but only
presumably) less susceptible to the charms and wiles of the opposite sex, everyday
experience teaches us to expect certain results Whatever Finer says may be
the result of his minute study of sex relations prevailing in the Western countries,
but It cannot be true of the East where womanhood is held in high religious
esteem and sanctity of relations between the two sexes is the main basis of the
social order
5 Finer, H ,
The Theory and Bractice of Modem Government,
p 234
THE ELECTORATE AND REPRESENTA TON 431
graduates of universities have more than one vote in the State elections, where
two chambers exist In Britain, before 1918, voters had as many votes as positive
qualifications The Reform Act of 1918 permitted, at most, two votes per voter to
be chosen among the qualification of residence, occupation, and university
degree it was estimated that there were 200,000 qualified to cast
In 1945 a
business vote and 175,000 a university vote The Labour Government abolished
the “plural vote” by the Representation of the People Act of 1948
/ •
’
it
But the practical defect ol plural voting is the difficulty in prescribing a just
and equitable standard of weighing the votes To put a premium on education or
property is to attach arbitrary values to a certain category of votes Thus, while
a university graduate may receive a special vote, the Civil Engineer or Architect
who IS highly qualified in his particular branch of works, may justily complain
that he has no extra vote Property, too, is not a true critenon Democracy
cannot work when political rights arc based upon wealth Weighted voting for
the wealth means a class government to perpetuate vested interests Such a
process is most undemocratic as it iS inconsistent with the principle of political
equality Plural voting, therefore, is fast disappearing as it has disappeared in
Britain One vote, one person is the requirement of democracy
6 Garner, J. W ,
Political Science and Government, p 633
7 W, p 635
8 Finer, H ,
The Theory and Practice of Modem Government, p 55
THE ELECTORATE AND REPRESENTATION 433
ticket method allows greater freedom in selecting candidates and this permits the
election of superior men And when the members elected represent the whole
State, instead of a single district, they will make their actions conform to the
welfare of the State as a whole rather than to those of particular districts
But the defects of this system “are not only serious’’, observes Finer, “they
are actually destructive of the values most people want from representative
government” The general ticket method leads to a mushroom growth of political
parties with confusing programmes, baffling the judgment of voters Then, the
electoral area being the State as a whole or huge multi-membered districts, it will
not be possible for the electors to have a personal assessment of the candidates
The result is centralised authonty of the party machine to organise the issues and
conduct the campaign And it permits the least degree of local and personal
adaptation ol the candidates There is, aecordmgly, complete divorce between the
electors and their representatives Neither it is possible for the representatives to
nurse their constituencies nor does the system allow hye-elections All this is
conccntiated in a few clisincts while that of the minority party is widely spread
over
In ‘pite of certain obvious drawbat ks, the single district plan has been
accepted as the most favouied eledoral method In fact, there is no plan of
election which may be from clrawbaclo- 1 he general ticket plan, too, is
free
making a rapid heaclwav with the mtioduv »ion of the system of proportional
representation The system of pioportional representation possess not only all the
advantages of the general ticket method, but obviates its disadvantages b\
ensuring that minority parties will secure repi sentation and that such represen-
tation w ill be proportionate to their relative strength
most popular and is followed in all democratic countries for electing members of
the representative oi the people's chamber Ihc election of the House of
(airnmons m Britain is dimet All and the
members of the State Assemblies
House of People (Lok Sabha) in India arc now directly elected, except for a
few indirectly elected and two nominated members from the Anglo-Indian
community
When voters do not directly participate in the election of their representa-
tives, but choose only an intermediary body which alone will make the final
)
electmg the representatives is, not that of the general mass of voters, but of the
intermediary body of electors whom the general mass of voters had elected in the
first instance This system of election limits the power of the voters
fully in keeping with democratic principles A direct contact between the electors
and their representatives stimulates interest in public affairs and develops the
sense of public spirit It also sharpens the political intelligence of the people
Democracy has an educative value and there is no better method of educating
citizens than giving them the opportunity of directly participating in the election
of their represenatives The spint of political vigilence so injected in the people
enables them to see and judge if their representatives justify the trust reposed in
them
But the methcxl of direct election has been vehemently opposed by some
political thinkers It is maintained that all voters are not the best judges to wisely
exercise their political right The average voter, it is argued, cannot always choose
for himself the able man His judgment, while casting a vote, is very often
means
influenced by considerations other than political standards Direct election
election campaigns and intensive political propaganda for and against different
candidates Both the press and the platform are geared up for this purpose The
demagogue plays with the emotions of the masses and the catchwords of the
professional politicians mislead them When voters are swept off their feet by
gusts of popular passion, the natural result is the election of undesirable
candidates Election campaigns often assume ugly forms and candidates are
vilified Many citizens, who otherwise would have established their mark as
Indirect election, its advocates claim, offers the only escape from the dangers
of universal and the evils of mob rule The ultimate chance of
suffrage
representatives rests with the body of selected persons constituting an electoral
college. These electors posses supenor intelligence and political knowledge. In the
selection of representatives they arc guided by a keener sense of responsibility
than an average voter Moreover, when representatives are indirectly elected,
popular passion is avoided There are neither election campaigns nor party
propaganda. All this tends to reduce the evils of party system. Indirect election, it
But the indirect method of elecflon does not find much favour It is held to
be undemocratic and politically inexpedient Nor has it any educative value.
When voters have no direct participation in the election of their representatives,
they take only a lukewarm interest in politics and eventually become negligent in
public affairs Moreover, the indirect method of election does not decrease the
evils of party system Actually it leads to more party commotion and in countries
Four or five years is now considered the most-favoured term for the popular
assemblies although it is only one year in two of the States
in America. At one
time annual elections were widely accepted as a real test of knowing popular
that, “where annual
feeling The supporters of annual elections even maintained
elections end, tyranny begins” But this principle had to be
given up, because of
1 1 Gilchrist, R N ,
Principles of Political Scunce, p 280
436 PRINCIPLES OF POI ITICAL SCIENCE
representing other common people tan best represent the will of the people and
they are the best to tell the government what it cannot do and what the people
will not stand This is tantamount to what actually the body politic could have
done if they were to decide the problems themselves
The Chameleon type is the representative who does what exactly his
to discern what his constituents want He is not expected to make any alteration
or modification in the terms of his instructions without the express authority of
his electors In fact, he has no wishes or will of his own as a representative This
type of representation is also known as instructed representation and was
generally the accepted theory of representation in the early stages In a
federation, members representing the constituent States in the Upper House of
the federal legislature weredeemed as ambassadors of the States they represent-
ed was, accordingly, the inherent right of the States to instruct them about the
It
attitude and stand they were to take on different problems before the legislature
and the manner in which they would vote on a particular issue
The statesman type of representative finds its classic defimtion in the words
of Edmund Burke He said, nearly two centuries ago, “Your representative owes
IS IjsLski, H ,
Grammar of Polilui, p 319
438 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
also gave a true analysis of the relationship and their between the electors
representatives “The Parliament,” he declared, “is not a Congress of ambassa-
dors from different and hostile interests, which interests each must maintain as an
agent and advocate against other agents and advocates But parliament is a
deliberative assembly of one nation, with one interest, that of the whole where
not local purposes, not local prejudices, ought to guide, but the general good
resulting from the general reason of the whole You choose a member, indeed, but
once you have chosen him, he is not a member of Bristol, but he is a member of
parliament ” A national assembly is an embodiment of national interests Burke
tried to emphasise find the best man to represent you, a man in whom you would
have full faith and confidence as your representative, but once you have elected
him depend upon him to use his judgment about what is best
The concept of statesman or unmstructed type of representation is based on
two important facts The first is that most people are not well enough informed
about problems confronting the government to make decisions, and, secondly,
that, even if they were, the process of decision making is so difficult and complex
to the electorate in order to win their support and to win elections In whatever
role the party is, it is nothing without the unity, solidanty and disciplined duty of
the representatives elected on the party ticket They must swim and sink together
If a representative elected on the ticket of a particular party decides to change his
party label, political morality demands that he should submit himself for
re-election on the ticket of the party to which he now owes allegiance “Clearly,
he IS not entitled,” as Laski has said, “to get elected as a free trader and to vote at
”
once for a protective tariff
16 The writings and speeches of Edmud Burke (Little Brown and Company, Boston,
1901), Vol II, p 95
17 Laski, H ,
A Grammar of Politics, p 319
THE ELECTORATE AND REPRESENTATION 439
QUAUFICATIONS OF REPRESENTATIVES
The responsibilities of representatives are many and difficult The problems
which they are required to tackle are various and complex They should,
therefore, be the pick of the nation chosen with due regard to their expenence of
public affairs and renowned for their honesty, integrity, broad outlook and selfless
“Absence of limitation,” wntes Laski, “may give us a Younger Pitt, but it gives us
also a large number of members who go to the legislative assembly merely for the
prestige which membership confers^'** These qualifications are not fixed They
difler from country to country, butall governments insist upon the following
minimum qualifications
secure favourable legislation for his own financial interests, or to further the
own country In ail probability his interests would be
political interests of his
antagonistic to the interests of the country of which he has been elected a
representative The propriety of excluding aliens, from the legislative assemblies
IS now universally accepted
18 Ibtd,pM
440 PRINCrPt ES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
property have sufficient leisure to devote their time and attention to legislative
work, and for nursing their constituencies They have not to worry for a living
Moreover, they have more stake in the State and so they discharge their duties
more diligently and without even remuneration
6 Election Malpractices. Every Slate prescribes rules for the fair conduct
of elections and election campaigns If any candidate infringes these rules, he
renders himself liable to disqualification So much evil has been wrought by
corrupt customs and election malpractices that Acts have been passed m every
country, prescribing rigorously what each candidate may spend, how he may
spend and the norms he should observe in his election campaign For example,
It
in India a candidate must not appeal for vote on religious, caste or other sectarian
7 Religitm. In some countries law may require that a person may believe
or have faith in a particular religion in order to become a member of the
THE ELECTORATE AND REPRESENTATION 441
MINORITY REPRESENTATION
The Problem of Minority Representation.
It is maintained that the existing
system of representation does not represent the whole people A candidate who
secures a majority of votes is declared elected and he represents in the legislature
the point of view of those electors only whose votes he was able to secure Those
who had supported an unsuccessful candidate remain unrepresented The
situation becomes still more confusing when the difference in votes secured by the
successful and defeated candidates is almost negligible Let us assume that from a
particular constituency two candidates A and B, seek election Let us, again,
suppose that out of a total of 4,000 voters in that constituency 2,005 vote for A
and 1 ,995 votes are cast in favour of B Since A has secured the majority of votes,
he is declared elected It means that 2,005 voters only find representation and the
remaining 1,995 voters remain unrepresented I'he minority stands in danger of
being disfranchised
Such a system of representation, where mere majority election exists, cannot
be the real basis ot democracy A democracy is a government of the people and
the people constitute the whole mass of the people in a State It is an essential
principle of demot racy that it must not deny to a considerable portion of people
participation in the conduct of their political affairs Democracy, if it can claim
to be the government of the people, must be representative of all classes of
opinion Law, in order to be the manifestation of the will of the people, should be
supported and approved by the representatives of the large majority of electors
But when minorities arc not adequately represented and they have not the
opportunity to express their opinion, laws made by a legislature cannot be said to
have the widest consent of the people In a country where large groups of people
feel that their will dex^s not find expression in the making of the laws, which they
are called upon to obey, such laws cannot command a deferential and effective
obedience The unrepresented minorities fret and fume and ultimately they are
compelled to revolt against the tyranny of majority rule as political malcontents
of today are the revolutionaries of tomorrow “In a reallv equal democracy,” says
John Stuart Mill, “every and any section would be represented, not dispropor-
tionately, but proportionately A majority of the electors would always have a
majority of the representatives, but a minority of the electors would always have
a minority of representatives Man for man they would be as fully represented as
the majority Unless they are, there is not equal government, but a government of
inequality and privilege, one part of the people rules over the rest, there is a part
whose fair and equal share of influence in the representation is withheld from
them, contrary to all just government, but above all, contrary to the principle of
democracy, which professes equality as its very root and foundation
Adequate representation of minorities, therefore, is the most important
'
India IS the only unfortunate country where people are divided both
horizontally and vertically and communalism has always been the bane of her
politics In other countries people are essentially divided on their political or
economic issues All schemes of minonty representation in these countries aim at
There are many expedients and forms which are suggested and practised to
secure representation for the minorities Butall such schemes are not the vaneties
With whatever name it may be called, this system of representation provides for
the election of representatives by general ticket The constituencies are multi-
member with at least three seats No maximum is considered necessary, although
Lord Courtney suggested a fifteen-member constituency as a reasonable limit
followed to determine the quota The simplest is to divide the number of votes
castby the number of seats to be filled from the constituency, and the quotient is
taken as the quota or the number of votes necessary to elect a candidate For
example, if the total votes cast are 8,000 and there are 8 members to be elected
from that constituency, the quota necessary for election will be 1,000 But Droop
suggested another method of determining the quota He found that in
constituencies of 3 to 8 members sometimes inaccurate results were achieved in
20 Gilchrist, RN ,
Principles of Political Semee, p 275
444 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
In counting the votes only the first pretcrence or choices are counted first and
a candidate securing the required quota is declared elected His surplus votes, if
any, are passed on to candidates not yet elected, in the order expressed in the
preferences. The process of transferring surplus votes to the next preferences
continues down the list until the necessary number of representatives have been
elected Not only surplus votes of successful candidates are transferred to later
choices, but, if need be, of those candidates as well who have secured so few votes
that they have no chance of being elected at all The idea is that no vote is to be
lost The voter is, thus, assured that if the candidate of his first choice does not
require his vote, his second or other choices will gain by it
determined, as in the Hare System, by dividing the total number of votes cast by
the number of seats to be filled, or by dividing the total number of votes cast by
one more than the number of seats to be filled, and then adding one to the result,
as suggested by Droop Then, the total number of votes polled by each party list
IS divided by the quota and the result isthe number of representatives to which
each party is entitled If all the seats are not filled up, the party which has the
largest fractional surplus gets the remaining seat There is another device which
may also be followed The fractional surplus of votes secured by the party in the
neighbouring constituency may be added to make up the deficiency in the quota
Let us suppose that the total number of votes cast is 50,000 and five
representatives are to be elected from that constituency Let us, again, suppose
THE ELECTORATE AND REPRESENTATION 445
that there are three party lists— the Congress, the Samyukta Socialist and the
Communist— and each
has polled 21,500, 20,500 and 8,000 votes respectively.
list
The quota of eligibility being 10,000 votes, two seats each go to the Congress and
Samyukta Socialist parties None can go to the Communists One of the two
things may happen If the fractional surplus method in the constituency is
followed, then, the fifth seat may also go to the Congress, because their fractional
surplus is higher than that of the Samyukta Socialists If constituency transferring
fractional surplus of votes method is followed, then, the votes polled by the
Communist party in the neighbouring constituency, say 2,500, are transferred to
be added to the total of 8,000, thus, entitling the Communists to claim one seat
Similarly, the surplus of 1,500 votes secured by the Congress may be added to the
votes of the party in another constituency entitling it to an additional seat
The Lust System is exceedingly simple, since the voter need only select the
party he likes and by selecting it he votes for the entire list of candidates of the
parly he has selected But all this amounts to undue importance of the party
leaders The electorate has nothing to choose and decide The strict List
System has, accordingly, been subjected to a great deal of cnticism Recently
some modifications have been offered to it and in a number of countries the
voters have been allowed to indicate their own preferences, thus, making a
departure from the “bound list’’ This system is known as “free list” Such a
system has recently been adopted in Italy and in certain parts of Australia
Switzerland had previously given considerable freedom to Us voters, permitting
them to substitute names on the lists The Swiss system is another variant of the
List System It allows the voter to write on the list of candidates an additional
name of his own choice
popular opinion and consider it the most democratic and just method of election
It IS a device which ensures representation to all parties, big or small, and that,
too, in proportion to their voting strength The parliament in this way becomes a
mirror of the opinion of all the people Lord Acton has observed that the method
of proportional representation “is profoundly democratic, for it increases the
influence of thousands who would otherwise have no voice in the government,
and it brings men more near an equality by so contriving that no vote shall be
w'asted and that every voter shall contribute to bring into parliament a member
of his own ” It IS here that democracy really works as a government of the people
Proportional representation gives to minority parties a sense of security and
political contentment The Hare System gives every elector a real representative
local and regional affinities and interests and, accordingly, they offer no national
solution of the problems
21 Fncdnch, C J ,
Govemnunt and Democracy, p 282
Constitutional
majority and the choice was between a minority and a coalition government. The
coalitiongovernment was formed, combining all groups, with 79 votes as against
the largest party s 68. Some writers and statesmen hold proportional representa-
tion responsible for the collapse of the German Republic of 1919 At one time
there were thirty political parties which contested the Reichstag election
Dicey points out that the mathematical representation of all sorts of opinion
IS may be an opinion which may be bad, foolish
highly objectionable, for there
and even undesirable Taking an extreme example, he asks, would it be desirable
to have an advocate m parliament of those who have extreme hatred of the
Jews?
Dicey also holds that the more you make the system of election complicated and
difBcult, the more you throw the voters into the clutches of the party agents and
wirepullers."'‘Sidgwick too said that proportional representation gives encourage-
ment to demagogy and sectional legislationBut the worst side of proportional
representation is that it destroys the national character d* the legislature and
makes it an arena of divergent sectional interests All issues deliberated upon
in
the legislature are discussed not with reference to their bearing on the general
well-being of the nation, but from the point of view of a particular group cm*
interest In this way, legislation is paralysed as group legislation inevitably tends
to increase class legislation and class legislation jeopardises the life of the nation
directed to and concentrated always on the party machinery more than to the
constituency The intimate contact between the voter and his representative is
eliminated A good electoral system should enable the candidates to be known to
the electors in a genuine way, and after elections the representatives must remain
closely connected with their constituents so that a personal relation develops
between them But the system of proportional representation “destroys any
prospect of personal relations between the member and his constituents; he
would simply become an item in a list, voted for almost entirely on party
grounds Further, the election campaign becomes less intensive, and more
extensive, that is, “it does not occupy itself with the cultivation of the individual
voter by personal apfjeals, but in the institution of monster demonstrations, like
processions, inwhich the mechanical apparatus for making a noise or creating a
diversion is predominent ” Nor does the system provide for by-elections. A
bye-election is always the barometer of public opinion If no opportunity is
provided for the expression and realisation of changes in the public opinion the
legislature loses its representative character
is sufficiently complicated and
of proportional representation
The system
beyond the comprehension of an average voter Under the Hare System
with the
counting and recounting of votes is a complex and tedious problem
of votes Moreover, it places voters at
intricacies of preferences and transferring
there is an additional
the mercy of the counting authorities In the List System
use unfair and
danger of corruption Prospective candidates are tempted to
corrupt methods to get their names included m the party list. It also helps to
increase the influence of party bosses and encourages party manoeuvring. The
group managers arrange the onginal lists in such a way as to secure a majority for
their own nominees
prcxif that proportional representation does attempt to remedy some of the evils
from which the body politic suffers Even in Britain, where the two-party system
exists, It has found due recognition Fhe Government there oHered a proposal to
parliament, in October WO
and renewed it in October 1941, that “it will be the
desire ot His Majesty s Government when a General Election again becomes
practicable to give sufficient notice for the creation ol a new register, and this
interval will also afford opportunity for parliament to consider, if it so desires,
questions connected with changes in our electoral system” The proposal did not
materialize, but the question of introducing the method of proportional
representation is not off the cards The leader of the Liberal Party, after the
General Election results in October 1964 as well as in 1974, declared that he
would press for its introduction That has not happened But if Britain adopts the
system of proportional ^presentation, the Liberals, as they plead, would have
many members in Parliament, for the Party’s proportion of the total vote in the
past three General Elections had been much higher than its proportion of Ps M
Carl Fricdnch, however, is of the opinion that homogeneity which parliamentary
government needs is not only not created by proportional representation, but is
actually destroyed He concludes that the “prevalent English and Amencan
opinion against proportional representation is practically sound There are
special conditions which might mitigate this conclusion But the proportional
representation enthusiast, who would argue from the relative .success of propor-
25 .Sidgwick, H ,
Elements oj Eohttrs, p 396
26 l^ski, H , A (Jrammar of rontics, p 316
27 Ibid, pm
2b As quoted in J W Garner’s Political Science and Government, p 663
THfe ELECTORATE AND REPRESENTATION 449
tionalism in some small countries that we should try it m Great Britain and in
the United States, goes wrong.”
Some countries which adhere to the system of proportional representation
have tried to eliminate its shortcomings through special devices. In West
Germany, a “5 per cent clause” denies any representation in the
for instance,
The Limited Vote Plan. Of the various schemes which have been adopted to
ensure representation to minonties, one is the Limited vote plan. Under this
system there are multi-member constituencies with at least three seats. Each
voteris allowed to casta smaller number of votes than there are scats to be filled.
Moreover, he must not give more than one vote to any single candidate His votes
should be spread over to as many candidates as there are votes to cast. For
example, in a five-member constituency each voter may be allowed to vote for
four candidates or even less. In this way minority parties become reasonably
certain of electing one or two members This method had been used at various
times by Britain, Italy and Japan for election to lower Houses, but it no longer
prevails
In practice the limited vote plan secures representation only for fairly large
minorities It does not work when there are many parties. Then, it does not allow
be elected If the system of relative majority had prevailed, then, A would have
been elected “The second ballot (there might be a third or further ballot where
there are many seats),” says Gilchrist, “secures a more just reflection of the
opinion of the electorate where three or more candidates seek election ” The
Second Ballot System demands a single-member constituency, and it does not
secure proportional representation
The Alternative or Contingent Vote. The Second Ballot suffers from serious
defects and to avoid its evils and shortcomings, the Alternative or Preferential or
Contingent Vote method has been put forward The system proposes only one
election, but every voter is permuted to mark his preferences on the different
candidates, thus, indicating his first, second or third choice The candidate of the
first preference is declared elected if he gets an absolute majority If none of the
candidates gets an absolute majority, then, the candidate who has got the least
number of first preferences is dropped and his votes are distributed to other
candidates according to the second choice of the voters The candidate securing
an absolute majority after the redistribution of votes is declared elected. If no
candidate even now gets an absolute majority, the candidate at the bottom will
again be dropped and his votes similarly transferred according to the second
choice of the voters The candidates who secures an absolute majority will then
be declared elected This method, too, necessitates a single-member constituency
system and it docs not ensure proportional representation, although it is an
THE ELECTORATE AND REPRESENTATION 451
FUNCTIONAL REPRESENTATION
Functional Representation. Functional or occupational representation is a
protest against the system of territorial or geographical representation In modern
States the usual basis of representation is territorial A district or constituency is
demarcated and voters living within the terrtorial limits of that constituencv
elect a representative or representatives This system of territorial or geographical
representation is held to be inconsistent with the spirit of democracy It is
maintained that members elected from different constituencies are not represen-
tatives in the real sense of the term It is a misrepresentative system rather than
representative as a representative elected on the territorial basis cannot represent
the varied and diverse interests living m a constituency He can represent only his
own interests which he has in common with others People pursuing the same
kind of work or functions have more things or ideas m common than people
living in the same locality It is, therefore, proposed to replace the traditional
territorial system of representation by occupational representation in which
various industrial or other occupational groups should be reflected
In the beginning the demand for reform in the electoral system of territorial
representation took the form of a demand for proportional representation But it
was soon realised that the system of proportional representation ensured
representation only to minorities which were recognised as political parties. It
Functional Third Chamber Both these groups, however, believe that men are
“much more intelligent and trustworthy, judges of the real qualities of those who
work in the same industry than of those who live in the geographical district,
while many also believe that the chief political issues are necessarily industrial
”
issues which need to be decided by the representatives of the industries involved
The system of functional representation is commonly known as the Soviet
system The geographical or tentorial system of representation has been replaced
in Soviet Russia by a system based on the vocational principle, i c ,
workers,
farmers, professional men and other classes choose their own representatives
without regard to temtonal areas A representative in the Soviet Union does not
represent the distnct from which he happens to the elected He represents a
particular interest Mussolini introduced the system of occupational representa-
and the Senate was, accordingly, reorganised It consisted of various
tion in Italy
trades and professions, employees and trade unions recognised by the Fascist
Government The Weimar Constitution of Germany (1919) introduced an
innovation by creating a National Economic Council representing the interests of
labour, capital, and consumers. The National Economic Council contained the
elements of a third legislative chamber Tlie Council did not possess the power of
legislation, but the constitution provided that all drafts of important laws
Politics,
p 290
454 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
electors would desire to be represented m some other capacity than that of merely
being workers m a given occupation
Vocational representation, it is further argued, does not solve the problem of
minority representation. Nor docs it offer any protection to an independent voter
who may not like to vote for a candidate put up by his profession or trade Then,
there IS the practical difficulty involved in classifying a huge population on a
vocational basis suitable for electoral purposes There are sure to be enormous
difficulties in determining to which group an individual may belong. It is not
easy to arrive at any satisfactory system of classifying either industries or
occupations Finally, the system of vocational representation docs not make an
adequate provision for those who move from industry to industry
interests are considered dominant over other interests But it docs not force the
voters to be so represented if other interests arc deemed paramount
SUGGESTED READINGS
Bryxe, J Modem Dmocranes, \’o\ I, Chap VIll
Cole, GDH Guild Socialism Restated
Commons, J R Proportional Representation
more important than the minoi and conclusion, so the legislature is more
”
important than the executive or judiciary ‘ But the scales are reversed now The
all-iound accc’pted concept of the Welfare State has blurred supremacy of the
legislature The Welfare State tends to concentrate power on the executive level
and, consequently, its ascendancy over the legislative branch This is the
inescapable reality of the twentieth century
1 La ski, H ,
A Grammar oj hlUu v
p 295
2 Gilchnsl, RN ,
I^incipies of Polihtal Scuna, p 293
455
456 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
and persisted at the Centre till India became a sovereign State in August, 1947,
the legislature is completely subservient to the executive A dictator, like Hitler or
Mussolini, pays scant attention to the existence of a legislature Both Hitler and
Mussolini suppressed the powers of the legislatures and ruled mainly by issuing
decrees or ordinances The German Parliament conferred upon the National
Cabinet in 1933, in fact, upon Hitler himself, power for four years to make laws,
conclude treaties, adopt budgets, and indeed to do, without check or restraint,
“anything whatsoever, inside or outside of the constitution But the power
conferred on Hitler never came to an end during his lifetime Even the Iron
Chancellor Bismarck, who wielded enormous authority in his time, never
approached the power placed in the hands of the Nazi chief
But in a Parliamentary System, as it obtains in Britain and India, the
legislature is superior to the executive in the sense that the latter is responsible to
the legislature for all its acts and Ministers remain in office only so long as they
can retain its confidence. Parliament in Britain is legally sovereign It plays a
double role and combines the constitutional and the legislative powers It is
competent to make and alter the constitution and, at the same time, make
ordinary legislation In the United States of America, on the other hand, the
powers of the legislature are co-extensive with those of the executive
The functions of the legislature, therefore, differ from State to State 1 here is
expression of the will of the people. The will of the people is expressed through
representative assemblies and all other means of making laws have been
swallowed up by legislation Legislation is the most prolific and direct source of
law Again, laws must be consistent with the changing conditions of society and
in harmony with new social environments Old laws which have become
the
obsolete, are and new ones substituted in their place Under a
repealed
parliamentary system the executive has a direct hand in the making of laws
Before a Bill begins its career in the legislature, the Cabinet discusses the
proposal to introduce a Bill on the initiation of a Minister If the Cabinet accepts
the proposal, it is introduced in either House of the legislature and it is the duty
of the Minister concerned to pilot the Bill through all stages of parliamentary
procedure and sec that it is finally passed and duly enacted But under the
Presidential system the executive is not in direct touch with legislature It only
exerts its mflucnce either through Presidential messages or through members ol
Congress who belong to the President’s party The Government has no place in
the legislature and all Bills, public or pnvate, are introduced and defended by
members of the legislature
fitted for the direct business of legislation.”^ The amaterus make a bad job out of
should not be made hurriedly It needs proper thrashing so that its contents and
ends may be considered from all points of view For discussion two heads are
better than one, and two hundred are better than two In this respect a legislature
IS par excellence a deliberative body The term parliament, which may be used
for a legislature, is derived from the French word parler, which means to talk,
and parlement which means a meeting for discussion Legislature is a forum
where thinking is done, as it consists of many persons representing numerous
interests, various points of view, and different sections of the community.
Deliberation, in fact, is at the heart of a democratic policy It is the chief process
by which policy is determined and laws are made
Since deliberation
is a continuous process of debate, it was long felt that
defeated, it lapses
Financial Functions. We are well aware of the conflict between the Stuarts
and Parliament in Britain It was all about financial matters and the principal
means by which Parliament mounted to power was the power of the purse. The
fact of representative democracy is the control.and
regulation of national finances
likes Laski does not support Taylor’s opinion To him the function of
legislation is not the only function of parliament “Its real function is to watch
the process of administration to safeguard the liberties of private citizens.’^'
President and the Ministers for high crimes In India, either of the two Houses at
the Centre can prefer a charge for the impeachment of the President If the
charge is preferred by the House of the People (Lok Sabha), the Council of States
(Rajya Sabha) investigates the charge If the Council of States prefers the charge,
then the House of the People investigates it The impeachment succeeds when the
House investigating the charge passes a resolution that the charge has been
sustained
Constituent functions. Legislatures have also constituent functions to per-
form Parliament m
Britain is both a legislative body and a constituent assembly.
It can change or abrogate any law whatsoever and by the same procedure.
Proposals to amend the United States’ Constitution must be made by a
two-thirds majority of the Congress or by a national convention which Congress
calls at the request of the legislature'- of two-thirds of States. Bills to amend the
5 Taylor, E ,
The House of Commons at Work, p 126
6 Laski, H ,
ParltammUtiy Government tn Enttland, p 167
460 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
but they may also elect officials. The elected members of both
some executive
Houses of Parliament form a part of the electoral college for the election
in India
of the President The United States Congress has electoral functions too As a
matter of routine, it meets in joint session every fourth year to count the electoral
votes cast for the President and the Vice-President If no candidate receives a
majority of the electoral votes for President, the House of Representatives selects,
each State voting as a unit, the President from among the candidates with three
highest votes When no candidate secures a majority ot the electoral votes cast
for the Vice-President, the Senate makes the choice from among the two
candidates with the highest number of votes The President of France was elected
by the joint action of the two legislative chambers The Swiss legislature elects
the judiciary, members of the Federal Council, and the head of the civil service
Miscellaneous functions. Parliament in India has the power to move for the
removal of judges of the Supreme Court and of the High Courts on the ground of
proved misbehaviour and incapacity, and the address for such a removal must be
passed by a two-thirds majority in each House In Britain judges can be removed
only by a joint address of both Houses of Parliament to the Crown Judges in the
United States can be removed by the process of impeachment and the procedure
followed IS exactly the same as in the case of the President, that is, the Senate sits
as a court of trial
may not be arrested while attending sessions or travelling to and from them for
any reason except the commission of crimes They may not be punished for
anything they say in debate except by the House to which they belong
laws should avoid the dangers of rash, hasty, and ill-considered legislation A due
amount of caution and reflection are the prerequisites of legislation Passion is
that the legislature should be a representative body of all the people representing
numerous interests in order to secure the consent of all sections of opinion
Various means have been adopted to secure these ends One of them is the
manner of the organisation of the legislature
called unicameral When the legislature is organised into two Houses, it is called
the bicameral system It is almost a dogma of Political Science now that the
legislatureought to consist of two chambers. Single chamber government is
considered the apotheosis of democratic rashness Some writers characterise
government by a single chamber as visionary, “if not corrupt and violent”, which
usually ends in dcpotism Sir Henry Maine expressed the opinion that almost any
kind of second chamber is better than none. He said what ought to be expected of
the second chamber is not a “rival infallibility but an additional security”
THE LEGISLATURE 461
bicameral structure is also the child of chance and growth, the result of historical
accident As it was not a deliberate
creation, no such thing as a deliberate
weighing of the relative advantages of different types of organisation took place
When Edward I called his Model Parliament in 1295, all the different classes of
people summoned to attend met in one single assembly But afterwards they
broke into three groups of “estates”— Nobles, Clergy and Commons— to hear
separately the King’s plea for money and “to make such response as they
individually chose” Gradually, however, practical considerations led to a
different arrangement The greater barons and the greater clergy, who were
feudal lords and land-holders too, had many interests in common and they began
associating together in one body The lesser clergy found attendance at
Parliament very irksome Moreover, they were jealous of their clencal privileges
and preferred to make their money grants in their “Convocations” They soon
ceased to attend Parliament altogether Similarly, the knights, after a good deal
of wavenng, found their interests identical with the burgesses and finally united
with them for all purposes The
result was the division of Parliament into two
chambers, in one Temporal and Spiritual, in the other representa-
sat the peers.
tive Knights of the Shire and the representative Townsmen How and when
exactly this arrangement came about, nobody knows It was accidental and the
result of social and economic circumstances By the close of the reign of Edward
III this bicameral organisation seems to have been fully established * Thence-
foward the distinction between the two Houses became political
The next country to develop strong legislative bodies was the United States
of America Regarding the desirability of creating a national legislature
consisting of two chambers, there was little difference of opinion among the
members of the Philadelphia Convention The foremost reason which prompted
bicameralism was the spirit of great compromise without which, perhaps, the
union would not have come into being The hitherto sovereign and independent
States would not agree to the new administrative set-up, unless their old status
was preserved in one branch of the legislature and where they could be
represented as constituent political units On the other hand, the larger States
would not agree to a plan of the new constitution unless they were given
adequate representation in proportion to their numerical strength There were
economic reasons too The North, the more populous part of the country, was
commercial in interest, whereas the South, the sparsely populated part, was
agricultuYal The division of legislature into two Houses based on two different
principles of representation was in part influenced by these considerations in
order to balance and harmonise the two distinct economic interests in the
national government
thought that these dangers could be met largely through the adoption of the
representative type of government, still it was felt that certain additional
safeguards were desirable “Such safeguards, it was believed, should be secured by
providing for a bicameral legislative system, one of whose chambers would be
more directly representative of property interests and be, thus, in a position to
protect such interests
9 Willoughby, WF ,
The Government of Modem State\, p 337
10 Observations of Chief Justice Spencer made at a convention held in 1821 to revise
the Constitution of the State of New York It is cited by WF Willoughby m his Ihe
Govermnent oj Modem States, p 338
THE LEGISLATURE 463
reasons prompted the German Empire. In France, the experience with a single
chamber legislature was not satisfactory and their proceedings “were marked by
violence, instability and excess of the worst kind.”** Other countries adopted it
for giving expression to certain political principles that obtained then. And for a
long time it had become axiomatic that legislature should consist of two
chambers
During recent years a great change has been witnessed in the theory and
practice of the bicameral system of legislature and this, too, began in Bntain
While the struggle between the King and Parliament was continuing, there
developed a struggle within Parliament as to which House should speak for
Parliament in financial matters The House of Lords never admitted the claim to
sovereignty by Commons on financial matters, although by usage gradually the
Lords acquiesced in the claims of the representatives of the people. But in 1860,
the House of Lords began interfering in financial matters and in the beginning of
the present century it made a bid to revive its powers by rejecting the proposals
aiming to levy certain new taxes on landed property The result was the passage
of the Parliament Act of 1911, which not only confirmed the sovereignty of the
House of Commons in money matters, but made it omnipotent in matters of
ordinary legislation too The position, today, is that while Britain continues to
have a legislature that is apparently composed of two chambers, the existence of
the House of Lords does not matter at all If the House of Commons were to pass
a law abolishing the House of Lords, there is nothing to obstruct it
the prime consideration that had led to the original adoption ol the bicameral
system
Unicameralism, however, could not persist for long and at present the
bicameral system is almost of universal prevalence But with the changes referred
to above the force of the arguments originally adduced in favour of the adoption
of a bicameral system have been greatly weakened, if not entirely destroyed To
illustrate it, the first French Constituent Assembly in 1946, adopted the
unicameral system The second Constituent Assembly reverted to the system of
bicameralism, but the powen given to the Council of the Republic were not even
near to the weaker second chamber like the House of Lords It was a Council for
reflection, as one of the writers described it, and not a Council of action There
was nevertheless a strong body of opinion to the effect that the bicameral system
has certain intrinsic merits To some extent bicameralism is based on a distrust of
popular opinion and its expression in the popular House Following are the mam
arguments generally advanced in support of bicameralism
John Stuart Mill pointed out that the concentration of power in one single
chamber makes it despotic This means that all power has a tendency to
degenerate, and if not checked by a rival chamber, it is likely to go beyo»d its
limits Lord Acton, accordingly, maintamed that the second chamber is “the
essential security of freedom” The necessity for two chambers was, thus, based,
1 1 Garner, J W ,
Political Science and Government
464 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
I
as Bryce said, on the belief that the innate tendency of an assembly to become
hateful, tyrannical, and corrupt needs to be checked by another House.
elected on the basis of adult suffrage is usually radical in its outlook Its members
are comparatively young and they are always keen to establish their mark by
doing something radical and thereby ensuring their berth in the next general
election Upper Houses are usually for longer terms and elected under conditions
which make for greater conservatism among their members Conservatism, the
advocates of bicameralism assert, is needed to check the radicalism of the popular
activity of the popular House and there is a greater likelihood of temperate and
deliberate discussion resulting in balanced, equitable and careful legislation
before they become laws In fact, it is of considerable advantage that the decision
of the popularly elected chamber should be given a second thought and that, too,
under conditions of a calmer atmosphere in a chamber which is less susceptible to
immediate popular pressure Take, for example, the House of Lords The Lords
can afford to have full and free debates on issues which the Commons arc too
busy to discuss or which party leaders may consider too explosive to touch By
their debates the Lords prepare the public for the consideration of the important
issues, educate public opinion, and make the government susceptible to public
reaction The House of Lords, thus, performs a useful function in infiueneing the
people and the government Reference of a measure to the second chamber, after
having been passed by the first, provides a sufficient pause for reflection and
deliberation Second chambers, accordingly, ensure that opportunity will always
be given for a sober second thought, thereby exercising a controlling, modifying,
retarding,and steadying, influence on legislation. There is careful scrutiny of
legislationby both the chambers The length of time that elapses between
mtnxluction in one chamber and final passage in both reduces the chances of the
tyranny of the majority, haste and carelessness attendant thereon, and ill-con-
ceived legislation
Moreover, this pause also enables the opinion of the nation to be adequately
expressed on the proposed legislation. It would be especially needed as regards
can DC conveniently remedied, if there are two chambers chosen at different times
or for different terms There will be a constant flow of fresh public opinions under
a bicameral system as the legislature reflects the popular will at all times. The
House of Representatives in the United States is elected for two years whereas the
Senate is elected tor six years One third of its members retinng after every two
years The House of the People (Lok Sabha) in India is elected for five years while
the Council of States (Rajya Sabha) is elected for six years one- third members
retiring after every two years.
The popular chamber in every democratic country is now flooded with work.
Growth in the functions of the State made legislation numerous, complex and
has
specialised Consequently, there is so much rush of work that one chamber cannot
have sufficient time to devote and to fully deliberate upon
all measures Second
chambers avoid congestion of business and relieve the popular chambers of many
arduous tasks, enabling them to concentrate on important measures Not only do
non-con trovcrsial bills originate in the Upper Chamber and fined an easier pass-
age in the Lower Chamber after having been lully discussed and put into
well-considered shape, but it also usefully does the examination and revision of
bills after they have passed through all the stages in the Lower Chamber This is
now more needed since the time of the popular House is rationed and it is obliged
almost on under special rules limiting debates, thereby curtailing
all bills to act
the possibilities of freeand full discussion Upper Chambers generally function
under no such limitations Their membership being reasonably limited and
consisting of the best brains of the country, veteran statesmen and seasoned
politicians with diverse experiences, there is intimate, practical and highly
intelligent discussion and criticism
in the States.
claimed to prevent the domination of the legislature by the bigger and more
prosperous units Bicameralism thereby secures the spirit of compromise among
different interests, as it did in the United States, in the absence of which national
unity would not have been possible.
The bicameral system protects individual freedom against, legislative
despotism If there is no balancing of authority and all law-making were
concentrated at a single centre, it is likely to become tyrannical in its
simple and responsibility under this system can be definitely located The
bicameral system, in contrast with this, is complicated and responsibility is
divided When both the chambers are popularly elected and possess coequal
powers, discord and division is inevitable Division of responsibility means
inaction, thereby paralysing the will of the people When one House is a replica
of the other, it has no utility, because “if the two assemblies agree”, as Sieyes said,
“the second chamber is unnecessary, if they disagree it is obnoxious” There is
duplicate of the fint house and lacks a raison d’ etre.”*^ It is, therefore, suggested
to co-opt specialists on the Select Committees of the popular chambers, which
should examine the details of the provisions of the bill rather than- to make
legislatures bicameral
offence ” He argues for abolishing the House of Lords, and the critics of
bicameralism unequivocally regard second chambers as destructive of national
solidarity, creating deadlocks and frictions between the different sections and
interests of the people
cue, while making laws, from the opinions expressed m the press and on the
platform Such being the case, there is no need to give unnecessary duplication to
deliberation and delay the much-needed legislation Nor is there any truth in the
assertion that bicameral system prevents legislative despotism There are many
other safeguards, like the ^uspenslve veto of the executive, and a second vote in
the same chamber after some interval, against the so-called despotism of a single
chamber
Finally, double chamber system, its opponents maintain, duplicates work,
considered legislation
measures, deliberate on imp>ortaru aflairs and assist in pilanning But it should not
bt' able to cieate deadkx ks to interpose long delays or to nuilifv the policy of the
lower chamber 'Fhe upper chamber is intended to be to act as a brake but not
too tight a brake Its necessary function is to resist and not to persist The more
popularly clee ted chamber must be the final determining authority
first House.
It must be at once said that a really satisfactory formula relating to the
composition of the Upper Chamber is hard to find TIic Upper Chambers in
THE LEGISLATURE 469
Peers appointed for life, and the Princes of the Royal blood But the very idea of a
hereditary chamber is repugnant to a democratic age, and it can be safely
predicted that no civilised country will venture to deliberately bring it into being.
If the British people \ycre themselves to sit together to re-fashion the whole of
their political machinery, the first would be the hereditary House of
to disappear
Lords It IS really to put democracy to shame more than ninety per cent of
that
the Peers should sit in their places because their forefathers had there sat before
them “The idea of hereditary legislators,” wrote Thomas Paine, “is as
inconsistent as that of hereditary judges or hereditary juries, and as absurd as a
hereditary mathematician or a hereditary wise man, and as ndiculous as a
hereditary poet laureate ” Serious efforts have been made to abolish the
hereditaiy character of the House of Lords, though without any tangible results
But even the Peers themselves are now agreed upon the imminence of some
change in the composition of the House of Lords The principle of appointment
for life and the inclusion of women Peers are valuable indications of the desired
change
The second is the principle of nomination The members are appointed to
their officeby the executive either for life or for a given period The method of
nomination has one advantage The process of popular election does not always
result in the selection of the ablest and most upright men. There are in every
country many talented men who are reluctant to seek election because they
cannot withstand its turmoils and put themselves in the full glare of publicity
and criticism The system of nomination enables such distinguished men to
participate in public affairs without subjecting themselves to the rough and
tumble of an electoral campaign. But a chamber composed of nominated
members is not a representative chamber and, accordingly, it lacks the authority
possessed by a popular House Moreover, nomination does not always result in
the selection of talent and ability Favouritism and services rendered to the party
in power are the mam criteria of nomination The power of nomination is,
Dawson, *^as the choicest plums m the patronage basket, and they have been used
without compunction as rewards for faithful party service.” The result is the low
regard in which the Senate is popularly held. The Canadian Senate hardly
commands its own confidence It is merely a recording body and it hardly
disagrees with the Lower House or opposes any public bill. Sir George Foster, in
the course of a debate, remarked “Who on the street asks to know what is the
opinion of the Senate upon this or that question^ Who in the press really takes
any trouble to know whether the Senate has any ideas, and if so, what they are
upon any branch of legislative concern, or upon conditions which require the best
and most united work of all in order to arrive at a successful conclusion ” It is,
therefore, difficult to see any solid value in a body of this kind
Two
methods may be adopted for the election of an Upper House direct
elections and indirect elections Directly elected Upper House may be found in
federal States like the United States of America and Australia The U S Senate is
composed of 100 members two senators being returned by each one of the 50
States. The Australian Senate has 60 members, the six States of the Common-
wealth returning ten members each on the general ticket system The main
difficulty in the case of directly elected upper chamber is that it becomes a mere
duplicaticm of the Lower House Being a representative chamber, its members
carmot afford to disregard the wishes of their constituents Even the most
courageous and honest must keep a weather eye on popular feeling Moreover,
when both the Houses arc directly elected, one becomes a replica of the other and
It leads to chronic constitutional dead-locks as both the chambers are of equal
14 Laski. H ,
A Grammar of Polittcs, p 30
15 Ibid,
as senaton for life five other Italian citizens “who have brought renown to the
country by merits of the highest order in the social, scientific, artistic or literary
fields ” In the United States, too, it has been suggested that all ex-Presidents be
given a life-time seat in the Senate The proposal emanates with a view to
bringing congressional-executive relations closer, but the underlying idea to make
the Upper Chamber a reservoir of knowledge is also there
Since 1945, the British House of Commons has consisted of 630 members.
The House of the People in India consistes of not more than 525 members
directly elected from the States and not more than 20 members to represent the
Union Territories Till recently, the membership of the United States’ House of
Representatives was “frozen” at 435 The entry of Alaska, as forty-ninth State,
and Hawaii, as the fiftieth, now makes it at 438 The National Assembly of
France, under the Fourth Republic, consisted of 580 members The number, thus,
varies from State to State But what should be the advisable number^ Viewed
solely from the operative standpoint, a relatively small chamber has undoubted
advantages over a large body A small well-knit assembly attains coherence above
all and helps to establish definite responsibility. But a small House cannot, from
Its very nature, have the same representative character as has the large House It
being duly heard in the uses of authority Finer would strongly favour the
18 Finer, H ,
Thf Theory and Practice of Modem Government, p 390
472 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
increase in size of the Lower House to eight hundred in all modern democratic
States.
The length of term of members usually varies from three to five years It is
only two years for the United States’ House of Representatives In the United
States, as John Adams, and the author of the Federalist, tells us, there was a
current maxim with the new States that “where annual elections end, tyranny
begins”. Connecticut and Rhode Island were half-yearly, and the rest, save South
Carolina which was biannual, were annual The House of Commons is elected for
five years and the term of the House of the People is also the same But both are
subject to dissolution and, accordingly, the term of office may come to an end
earlier Dissolution involves new elections
self-government and it is claimed that the legislative term should neither be too
long nor too short If it is too long, the legislature cannot claim to be the mirror of
public opinion There will be time lag If the term is too short, the legislators will
not have the time and opportunity to gain the requisite knowledge and
experience which their arduous and technical job requires Nor shall they be in a
position to develop a legislative policy, and establish legislative traditions to
enable the chamber to function properly and efficiently It will be a race with
time
The practice of various States is to fix the term at four or five years The
supporters of this desirable medium claim that it permits the legislator to become
proficient and he can devote adequate attention to legislative problems It also
reduces the insecurity attending frequent elections with their demands on time
and money According power for a legislature seems
to Laski, “the best period of
to be not less than four, notmore than five years Finer would rigidly fix it at
four years He says, “My judgment that a four years’ term is a modern necessity is
reinforced by reflection on the obvious mounting trend to national planning A
longer term than four years is inadvisable because the broader the activity of
government, especially when is (as much must be) still of an experimental
it
nature, themore opportunities ought there to be for reference back to the citizens
The way back must be kept open The more massive and complicated the
administrative apparatus, the more ought it to be subjected to the periodical
lashing waves of popular opinion
The two chambers should differ in principle. Where the structural princi-
ples of both Houses of the is the same much of the value of the
legislature
bicameral system is two Houses are identical in constitution, the
lost If the
second is a mere duplication of the first, and the advantages of the additional
chamber are questionable “If the two Houses were elected for the same period
and by the same electors,” observes Lieber, “they would amount in practice to
little more than two committees of the same House, but we want two bona fide
different Houses representing the impulse as well as the continuity, the progress
and the conservation, the onward zeal and the retentive element, innovation and
adhesion, which must ever form integral elements of all civilisation. One House,
therefore, ought to be large, the other comparatively small, and elected and
19 Laski, H ,
A Grammar of Politics, p 342
20 Finer, HL, TTu Theory and Practue ofModem Gewernmeni,
p 390
THE LEGISLATURE 473
can become a law without the consent of both the Houses Either House may
propose amendments to a bill and they become valid by receiving the consent of
the other In the case of bills relating to the raising and spending of money, the
powers of the two Houses are generally coordinate, but not co-equal The Lower
House possesses supreme control over the finances of the State, the maxim being
that representation and taxation go together The representatives of the people
are the final arbiters over all matters of income and expenditure of the State. All
financial bills, accordingly, originate in the Lower House and its power in this
respect is decisive The British House of Lords may not originate, amend or
reject a money bill In France the powers of the Senate, under the Constitution of
1875, were co-equal with those of the Chamber of Deputies, except that money
bills originated in the latter The Senate might amend or reject them But in
reality the Senate was invariably in a position of inequality and the supremacy of
the Chamber Under the Fourth Republic
of Deputies was an established fact
financial legislation was Assembly alone and it was transmitted to
initiated in the
the Council of the Republic for its opinion But the Council was required to give
its opinion within the same span of time as the Assembly had herself taken
Therefore two months’ span which was required in the case of ordinary
legislation for the opinion of the Council of the Republic, was not necessary with
regaro to financial bills Under the constitution of 1958, the Senate and the
National Assembly have equal powers except that the budget originates in the
National Assembly In India money bills can only originate in the House of
the People (Lok Sabha) and the Council of States (Rajya Sabha) must send its
recommendations thereon within fourteen days of receipt If it does not return
the bill within fourteen days or returns it with recommendations which arc not
acceptable to the House of the People, the will of the House of the People
prevails. In Britain the House of Lords can delay a money bill for one month In
the United States, on the other hands, the Senate, though forbidden to originate
bills for raising revenues, possesses the undisputed power to amend or reject
them
There must be a sharp distinction between the powers of both Houses of the
legislature.The diflerences in powers will, of course, depend upon the mode and
composition of the Upper House If the Upper House is hereditary or nominated,
as in Britain and Canada, its powers are considerably limited. But if it is an
elected House, it stands on a footing of equality with the Lower House as far as
the law of the constitution is concerned. The march of democracy, however, has
21 As cited by J W
Garner in his Introduction to Political Science, p 439
22 Refer to the controversy between the House of the People and the Council of
States in India
474 principles of political science
conflict between the two, the verdict of the House which is more representative of
the people must ultimately prevail The case of the American Senate, which was
deliberately designed to enjoy greater powers than the House of Representatives,
IS quite exceptional Wherever both the Houses possess co-cqual powers, much of
the value of bicameralism is lost Identical powers mean sheer duplication and
the advantages of such a system of legislature are questionable The Upper
House, for all intents and purposes, is a revising body Being a chamber solely
created for purposes of reflection and not action, it is intended to exercise a
moderating influence on the radicalism of the Lower House It may serve as a
brake, but not too tight a brake, which may lead to open rupture between the two
Houses If public opinion supports the attitude taken by the Upper Chamber, the
Lower House would automatically mend itself, otherwise the former should
respectfully bow to the wishes of the wider representatives of the people The
function of the Upper House, in fine is to resist but not to persist.
It has long been an almost universal practice to confer upon the Upper
Chambers which the Lower Houses do not possess Nearly
certain special powers
in every country Upper Chambers are vested with the exercise of judicial powers
The House of Lords is the highest court of appeal in Great Britain In the United
States, the Senate serves as a court for the trial ol impeachment cases. The French
Constitution of 1875 empowered the President of the Republic to dissolve the
Chamber of Deputies with the consent of the Senate In the United States the
Senate exercises certain specific executive powers All Presidential appointments
must have the assent of the Senate, all treaties require its ratification
DIRECT LEGISLATION
Need for direct legislation. The democracy during recent
representative
years has been subjected to a great deal of criticism This is primarily due to
the popular belief that legislatures play excessive party politics and the welfare of
the people as a whole is generally discounted The whole machinery of the
government is so geared as to serve the party ends and party politics are really the
politics of the party bosses It is their will and their decisions Both the legislators
popular approval is obtained under duress and is just a propaganda screen for the
dictatorial coup d’ etat and a device to suppress democratic opposition at home
and a pretence abroad that the will of the people had been obtained in support of
their regimes.
Rousseau was the great apostle of direct democracy and his classical dictum
that “England is free only on the day of election” shows his mistrust of
representative democracy But direct participation of the people is the distinctive
contribution of Swiss democracy, and it is as old there as Swiss history. It is still
kept alive in some of the Cantons, but in others it has been replaced by the
referendum and the initiative as a substitute for personal attendance of the
people at the annual meetings of the t^antonal assemblies The referendum was
generally used from an early period by States in the United States for the
ratification of the new constitutions and subsequent constitutional amendments.
Their use for legi-slative purposes spread to the United States in 1898 Now nearly
all some form of referendum, a good number of them permit the
the Slates use
use of initiative and referendum on a local level, and more than half the States
provide for statutory and constitutional initiative The turn of the century
brought direct legislation into several European States too The Constitution of
the USSR also provides for referendum if the differences between the two
chambers of the Supreme fioviet on a legislative measure cannot be reconciled for
the second time after its reference to the Conciliation Commission
The Referendum. Literally, word referendum means “must be
the
referred” As a concept of Political Science it means the process by which the
given up, the underlying idea is that a law must be the manifestation of the will
of the people, and every law passed b\ the representative assembly should be
submitted to the people for their final approval
The referendum may be of two kinds (1) facultative or optional, and (2)
compulsory or obligatory
When a law, after it has passed through the legislature, is submitted to the
people for their acceptance or rejection on a petition from a specified number of
citizens, It is known referendum If the majority vote
as the optional or facultative
IS m becomes a law, otherwise the decision of the legislature
the affirmative, it
ordinary law unless the Federal Assembly declares the matter urgent
In the case of compusory or obligatory referendum all laws of a specified type
must necessarily be referred to the people for their acceptance or rejection before
they can become laws The obligatory form is obviously more democratic, for it
requires expression of popular opinion on eveiy law In Switzerland and
Australia, all lonstitutional amendments are subject to compulsory or obligatory
referendum In some of the Swiss Cantons even ordinary' laws are compulsorily
referred to the people for their opinion
1 Arguments in favour of Referendum. The principle of popular sover-
and shaped by the partisan influences of the parties, the press, the platform and
the propaganda The referendum, on the other hand, is the surest method of
476 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
discovering the real wishes of the people and is, therefore, an excellent barometer
of public opinion. According to Carl Friedrich, direct popular action in its several
forms serves to strengthen the democratic element They “provide a modern
constitution with an integrating device by which the dissensions of parties,
pressure groups, and propagandas can from time to time be overcome.
2 The advocates
of direct legislation claim that a citizen knows better than
his representativeswhat can serve him best and when he is required to express his
opinion thereupon by approving or rejecting the legislation, it would enhance his
interest in the public affairs A law, which comes direct and straight from the
people, carries with it fuller moral authority and commands unquestioning
obedience than a law made for them by thair representatives
3 The referendum minimises the importance of political parties and
discourages partisan spirit It is a popular check on the vagaries of the legislature
and the political machine Frequent rejection by the people of measures passed
by the legislature shows that the latter docs not aluays know or give effect to
what has proved to be the real will of the people It ensures, at the same time,
that laws opposed to the popular will have no chance of being enacted The
referendum, as a matter of fact, puts a veto in the hands of the people
4 The referendum reduces the political high-handedness of the majority
party Under the representative system a law is usually what the majority party
in the legislature wishes it to be It seldom represents the will of the minority
parties If it is referred to the people before it can be finally enacted, the
minorities do get an opportunity to adequately express their opinion and to
muster strong their opposition and, if possible, to negative it This is real
democracy
5 There is no time-lag in direct legislation “Direct legislation”, says Bryic
“helps the legislature to keep in touch with the people at other times than at
General Election and in some respects a better touch, for it gives the voters an
opportunity of declaring their views on serious issues apart from the destructive
”
or distorting influence of party spirit
6 Wli< n the people feel and realise that they are the real legislators, their
patriotism and their sense of responsibility are fully stimulated Direct legislation
has more educative value than the representative system When the people know
that they themselves are to make and unmake laws, they are prompted with a
keener and more active interest in public affairs This is the true price of
democracy
7 The process of direct legislation is conservative in character The people
willseldom introduce radical changes when they themselves know that they are
the arbiters on legislation They know what laws, if need be, can be easily
adjusted to their needs and requirements They will, accordingly, refrain from
making sweeping changes
8 The referendum, it is maintained, is the best means of resolving
deadlocks between the two Houses of the legislature In the Australian
Constitution direct legislation is recommended as a device for breaking a
deadlock between the two chambers
9. Finally, as Bryce says, “There must somewhere in every government be a
power which can say the last word, can deliver a decision from which there is no
26. Friedrich, CJ ,
ConsUtutuml Government and Democracy, p 571
THE LEGISLATURE 477
appeal In a democracy, it is only the people who can thus put an end to
”
controversy
interest m the discharge of their legislative duties If the measure succeeds at the
popular vote, the credit for it goes to the people and not to the legislature If it
does not succeed, the blame goes to the legislature and authority pf a The status
legislature must suffer with the result that the people become less deferential
towards it Bryce, in summing up the effects of direct legislation on the
legislature, says “Its sense of responsibility is reduced and it may be disposed to
pass measures its judgment disapproves, counting on the people to reject them, or
may fear to pass laws it thinks needed lest it should receive a buffet from the
”
popular vote 'Fhe real difference between direct popular action and the action
of the legislatures lies in the field of deliberations The voters cannot assemble
and discuss matter and consequently the opportunity to arrive at truth is lost
IS by Its nature too crude an instrument to find room for the nice distinctions
inherent in the art of government The making of laws requires special
trainingand experience which the people at large cannot possess Nor can they
have the knowledge necessary to enable them to precisely appreciate the
implications involved in the proposed legislation The interests of the people are
really safer in the hands of the representatives chosen for their talent and maturer
judgment than when submitted to the hazard of a popular vote All legislative
measures are minutely discussed and deliberated on the floor of the legislative
assemblies Amendments and alterations are made in the light of discussion and
the knowledge of new facts. But “you cannot amend and alter when your
legislative assembly consists of millions of members” “'^The people must accept
or reject the bill, no amendments are possible. The vote must be given for the
27 Finer, H ,
Theory and Practice of Modem Government, op cit , p 568
28 Laski, H ,
A Grammar oj Pobtus, p 322
29 Ibid
478 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
whole bill. “It is an appeal from a court which has the makings and some of the
equipment of a wise legislature, to all the crudities of a majority vote.”
3. One of the criticisms against direct legislation, and really a cogent one,
relates to the small size of the votes cast, at a referendum. It is maintained that
the result of the ballot docs not fairly represent popular opinion, because in most
cases the opponents of the measures go to the polls in larger proportion than its
4 Moreovei, when people are frequently asked to cast their votes, they
develop “electoral fatigue” and psychologically abstain from voting The result is
that the decision arrived at is invariably that of a minority of the citizens and it
becomes difficult to know whether there is any public opinion at all on the
question
5. The referendum sometimes involves unnecessary and harmful delay in
passing many laws of vital national importance AH this takes away the educative
value of the referendum When citizens do not interest themselves in public
affairs, direct legislation becomes a farce.
majority vote, as happened on the question of the Swiss Federal Penal Code,
it
and of the Federal Economic Articles in 1938 and 1947, with a majority of only
53 per cent in both the cases, the moral authority behind the law may suffer more
than would be the case had opinion been nearly equally divided in the
Legislative Assembly In countries, where direct legislation does not exist, a law
passed by representative legislatures is accepted in a normal course and no one
cares to enquire what was the majority that passed it It comes in the regular way
from the usual organ of the people’s will and it is accepted by people in the usual
way. But when it goes to the popular vote, everyone is keen to know the majority
that passed it Those who opposed it, carry on their opposition openly as they feel
aggrieved to have been overridden by a negligible majority
7 There is no justification to hold that direct legislation lessens the evils of
party system As a matter of fact, political parties become more active when
frequent votes are to be taken The referendum accentuates political rivalry and
partisan spint which, in a parliamentary government, may prove embarrassing to
the party in power
8 Finally, “the most comprehensive but also the vaguest argument”, says
Bryce, “adduced against the referendum is that it retards political, social and
economic progress ” Sir Henry Maine developed this point in his book. The
Popular Government, in 1885, and it particularly impressed Englishmen who
had always as.sociated the masses with conservatism But it is not supported by
Swiss cxpencncc It is true that prejudice or undue caution has in some case
delayed the progress of economic or social reforms which the Federal Assembly
proposed, but no general harm has followed in Switzerland .fnim that conserva-
tism
All told, one is disposed to agree with Professor Laski that direct legislation
has not any special contribution to make to our problems Herman Finer suggests
that “we should all be better served if our concern were fixed upon the reform of
the party system, we should strive, then, to make the parties more responsible-
minded, more sensitive, more masters of the social sciences ” Even the question of
referendum, he concludes, is the question “of the quality of the country’s political
the legislature Such a device of popular legislation is called the initiative. Byihis
process, it is claimed, a voter can make his influence felt in those cases where the
legislature may not agree to adopt a constitutional amendment or a law
The initiative may also take two forms formulative and in general terms.
When the demand is couched in general terms, it is the obligation of tht
legislature to draft, consider by the required number
and pass the law as desired
of citizens, subject to the ratification of people If the proposal is formulated in
the form of a bill complete in all respects, it is the duty of the legislature to
consider the measure as it is
32 Finer, H ,
The Theory and Practice of Modem Government, p. 568
33 Ibid
480 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
lives The individual will of the citizen really expresses itself by his own voice and
vote However politically moral and best intcntioned the representatives may
be, they must act in accordance with and in conformity to the policy of the party
to which they belong and obey its whip and, thus, may misrepresent those whose
representatives they claim to be The referendum gives only the negative right to
the people, whereas the initiative gives them the positive right of framing laws
which they actually need If the referendum protects “the people against the
legislature’s sms of commivssion so initiative is a remedy for their omission”
the case, then it is argued, “why should a body of persons chosen by the people
close the door against the people themselves allowing only such proposals as take
fancy to pass through so that the people can deal with them^” A law initiated by
the people carries with it the impress of public opinion and is, therefore, held in
greater sanctity and, consequently, there is more ready and willing obedience to
It Such behaviour on the part of the citizens adds to the stature and
political
stability of thegovernment and all-round reverence for the institutions of the
country Finally, the initiative minimizes the possibilities of political upheavals,
because there is no indefinite postponement of legislation deemed essential by
the people for their welfare, they hold it in their own hands
Arguments against. But the initiative, like the referendum, reduces the
authority and responsibility of the legislature Making of laws, more especially
drafting of bills, is a complicated and difficult task It requires specialization
which only experts connected with the work and members of the legislature
acquire by experience An average man cannot be expected to know the
technicalities required in drafting bills The result is that popularly initiated bills
are “very often crude in conception, unskillful in form, marred by obscurities and
omissions ” The language used in the initiated bills is very often seriously
defective and liable to many mterorctations This process of direct legislation,
from knowledge to ignorance In the
therefore, transfers legislative initiative
cantons ol much more freely used, it
Switzerland, wiiere the initiative has been
has not been the parent of any reforms which might not have been obtained
through the legislature The people, on the other hand, have sometimes placed
unwise laws on the statute book The much acclaimed advantages of initiative,
therefore, arc actually negatived by the practical results
in countries where similar conditions are not obtainable “It is racy of the soil,” as
Bryce says “There are institutions which, like plants, flounsh on their hillside
and under their own sunshine.”^"’
Independence of judgment is the first quality which citizens must possess
Future prospects. What good has direct legislation done in the countries
where it has been actually used^ “The answer nlust surely be,” writes Finer, “that
these countries, save for the combating of the dishonest 'bosses’ in the American
States, arc no and are probably wofse off
better off This is, he further adds,
“certainly the opinion in America” In Switzerland the opinions, both of scholars
and statesmen, -on the value of direct legislation are most divergent Some extol it
as the most perfect institution, in theory and practice, so far devised There are
others who decry it on the ground that people are consulted on matters which
they do not understand and assert that the actual working of the system has been
bad Some refoi ners resent the delays and checks inherent in the referendum and
some voters complain of the excessive deman*' made on their spare time And yet
the people as a whole value the privilege. The institutions of the referendum and
the initiative are the pivot upon which hinges the entire Swiss governmental
system If they are abolished, certainly the pres, nt relations among the executive,
thclegislature and the judiciary will have to be altered, and either the American
or the British system of government adopted This the Swiss are not prepared to
do The institution ha.s become permanent in Switzerland But Finer gives a stem
warning not to accept direct legislation as a remedy for the defects of
parliamentary government “It improves nothing,” he says, “neither the laws nor
the people It disturbs without providing solution It is an appeal from a court
which has the makings and some of the equipment of a wise legislature, to a 11 the
crudities of a majority vote Its operations leave stark naked the physical power of
numbers, surely not a desirable thing But Carl Friedrich does not take so
gloomy a view Referring to the operation of direct legislation in the Amencan
States, he says, “On the whole, the experience has been the same in Switzerland;
neither the ardent hopes of expounders nor the dire apprehensions of its
its first
35 «,p433
36 Finer, H ,
The Theory and Practice of Modem Government, p 564
37 Idem., p 563
38 Friedrich, CJ ,
Comtitutmal Government and Demoaacy, p 554
482 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Whereas in Switzerland the referendum and the initiative have been developed
extensively in national affairs, in the United States they have so far been used in
the States
SUGGESTED READINGS
Bryce, G Modem Dermcracm, Vol I, Chap XIX, Vol II, Chap LXIV-LXV
Finer, H Theory and Practice ofModem Government (1954), Chaps XVII, XVIII, pp 560-568
FncdrK:h, C J Constitutional Government and Democracy
Kapur, Anup Chand Government of Switzerland, Chap VII
Laski, H J A Grammar of Politics, pp 308-340
Lecs-Smith, H B Second Chambers in Theory and Practice
Locwenstein, Karl Political Poiver and the Government Process
Macndis, Roy C , and Brown, Bernard E Comparative Politics Notes and Readings
Mamot, JAR Second Chambers ( 1927)
Mill,J S Representative Goiiemment, Ch&ps IX-XIII
Pcaslec,Amos J Constitutions of the Nations
THE EXECUTIVE
the executive The term executive is used to designate all those officers of the
government whose business it is to execute, or put into effect, the laws It is the
pivot around which the actual administration of the State revolves and includes
all officials engaged in administration Herman Finer says that “it is most useful
to look upon the executive as the residuary legatee, foi that explains the mixed
nature of its functions and parts”' In early times, all power, ol every kind, rested
with one single person, the prince, and he exercised that power with his narrow
circle of advisers They not only executed policy but planned it and sat in
judgment As the movement for responsible government advanced, it caused
“portions of the power to be taken over by other institutions, the remainder itself
being subjected to certain norms of constitutional morality and controlled by the
new organs ” As thus understood, the executive embraces the whole governmen-
tal organisation with the exception of the legislative and judicial organs and
held officers Both, those who see that the laws are properly enforced and those
who actually enforce them, are really integral parts of the same machinery and
all collectively constitute the executive department of the government The only
difference between the two is that the former initiate the policy and supervise its
implementation If it cannot be carried out within the framework of the existing
law, they propose new legislation in order to enable them to carry it through. The
latter, members of the civil service, are not concerned with policy-making though
483
484 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
at the top they considerably influence the policy-makers. Their primary function
is policy execution or enforcement
actual There wide difference between theory and practice here In terms of law
is
When the same person plays both the roles of head of the States and head of
the government he combines unto himself the ceremonial as well as political
responsibilities There is a single identifiable head of the executive, the President
of the United States, who will also be the head of the State He is a executive as
well as the executive, Under absolute monarchy and dictatorship the question of
distinguishing the real from the nominal executive does not arise Here all
able to bring unity and efficiency into the government, and being alone, he or his
Ministry is responsible, whereas two Presidents would be apt to checkmate one
another, if they were of different parties, and would be jealous and rivals if they
”
were of the same party
The is organised on the theory that one bad general is
executive, in brief,
better than two good ones The executive organised on the plural principle is
incompatible with force, energy, unity of purpose and ind<.pcndcnce It is,
therefore, politically expedient that there should be some one penon who can, in
the last resort, exercise a decisive and final authority Absolute monarchy and
dictatorship arc typical examples of a single executive. Under a Parliamentary
system the real executive is the cabinet, plural, no doubt, but the cabinet, headed
by the Prime Minister, is a unit which provides political leadership
It comes into
chosen after every four years by the Federal Assembly and one of itsmembers is
annually elected to serve Chairman and is designated as
its President The office
of President rotates among
the members of the Federal Council according to
seniority The President is in no sense the chief executive, although he holds an
office of some dignity and enjoys some precedence over his colleagues Nor is he
the chief administrator He has no more power than his colleagues and is not
more responsible for the exercise of executive authority than other Councillors
are All decisions emanate from the Federal Council as a single authority The
President is simply chairman of the Federal Council and he presides over its
meetings As chairman he only exercises a casting vote and that, too, in case of a
tie Such official authority as he may exercise comes to him as a member of the
consisting of thirty-nine members and elected for a term of four years by the
Supreme Soviet, performs functions executive in character, which are the
prerogatives of the chief executive head of the State in other countries with a
single executive The Presidium has its chairman, now designated President
officially though not constitutionally, but he has neither any special privileges nor
2 Laski, H ,
The American Presidency, pp 79-80.
486 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Many advantages have been claimed for a plural executive An executive or-
ganised on the collegial principle, it is claimed, does not afford temptations and
opportunities for abuse of power To vest the supreme authority of the State in a
single person is a relic of absolutism and is, consequently, opposed to the spirit of
republicanism A plural executive, its admirers argue, may lack the advantage of
unity and energy, which characterise a single executive, but a group of men are
likely to possess more ability and wisdom than can be found m any single
individual The executive functions involve not merely the ministerial function of
executing legislative command but also the formulation of policy This onerous
task can best be performed by a board consisting of the wisest and the talented
Finally, plural executive renders more difficult executive encroachments on the
legislative power and on the liberties of the people
and, nomination
Hereditary principle. The hereditary principle is associated with monarchi-
cal governments The term of office is for life and succession goes from father to
son governed by the law of primogeniture Hereditary monarchy is the result of
historical conditions rather than of dclibcfatc choice and it now survives in a
handful of old countries It is true that a hereditary executive carries with it
Direct popular election. The choice of the Chief Executive by the direct
vote of the people is the opposite principle of the hereditary method. This method
IS the vindication of the principle of popular sovereignty It grants the people the
right to elect their Chief Executive who should represent their will and enjoy
their confidence But, in spite of its popular appeal, the method of direct election
has been sparingly adopted in practice The framers of the American Constitu-
tion ruled out for various considerations They desired to establish a method
It
to play with their emotions, and the popular choice may not be the best.
Moreover, periodical elections of the Chief Executive of the State create political
tension and excitement in the country. Political rivalry', factious intrigues and
often corrupt methods employed by the party machines account for general
demoralisation “As soon as one candidate is elected those who aspire to succeed
him proceed to canvas the people Party feeling is perpetuated and at election
time It often becomes very bitter, it may even lead to foreign intrigue Hamil-
ton feared that direct election would “convulse the community with extra-
ordinary and violent movements and lead to heats and ferments” that would
disturb public tranquillity Popular election of the Chief Executive, under the
Parliamentary system produces a radical change in the character of public life.
The Chief Executive becomes the standard bearer of a party or a combination of
parties He could hardly be expected to maintain, under these circumstances, the
mediating role as head of the nation If he is popular and commands the respect
3 Gilchnst, R N ,
Principles of Politual Scunce, p 307.
488 PRINCIPLES OF POL me Al SCIENCE
But ail this is a mere theory The elections are indirect only in name The
immediate representatives who constitute an electoral college, give little evidence
of independence of character and judgment In almost every country, where
political parties are highly organised, the electors are chosen on parly pledges to
vote for the party’s candidate They hold a definite mandate and are mere party
agents with no discretion to exercise their \otes The election of the President m
the United States has not only l^ecomc direct in practice, but it has now assumed
the form of an important national pageant “It is an operation of the first
The idea underlying this method of election is that selection should be made
by those who are best qualified to exercise their judgment in public affairs The
members of the legislature arc sure to make a wiser selection than the general
mass of voters or intermediate electors constituting an electoral college Being
actively concerned with public affairs and intimately acquainted with the public
careers of the statesmen, the members of the legislative assemblies arc, of all the
persons, more qualified to chcxwc the best man for this august office This method
ensures greater harmony and cooperation between the legislative and executive
4 The Federalist, No 68
THE EXECUTIVE 489
Executive by the legislature has given excellent results wherever it has been
experimented with In all these countries the election of the President takes place
with little or no popular disturbance The modem tendency is, accordingly, in
favour of election by a legislature
Nominated Executive. Nominated executive, for the most part, exists in
dependencies of some great powers The Governor-General, during the British
rule in India, was a nominated executive Similarly, the Governor-General of
Korea was appointed by the Emperor of japan and the Imperial Diet The choice
of the incumbent of the office is made on the basis of his qualihcations and
S{x*cial fitness for the job which he is called upon to supervise The Governor-
General of Canada as >\ell as that of Australia are appointed by Her Majesty the
Queen on the recommendations of the Governments of their respective Domin-
ions from amongst Englishmen in public life, or the nationals of their own
countries The Dominions have preferred such a method of appointment
themselves and it docs not make them subordinate to Britain Both Canada and
Australia are sovereign States
Term of office. Opinions differ as to the length of the term for which the
Chief Executive should be elected In practice, the executive tenure ranges from
two years which is the rule in many States in the United States, to seven years,
which is the term of the President of the French Republic The President of India
holds office for a term of five years, whereas it is only four years in the case of the
President of the United States The term of the Swiss Federal Council is four
yearsand the office of its President rotates every year among its members The
nominated Governors-General of Canada and Australia are appointed for a term
of five years
The argument in favour of short tenures for the executive is that the shorter
the period of office, the gi eater the security against abuse of power There
had prevailed a strong belief in the democratic countries that executives with
long tenures are always exposed to a temptation to transform their offices by
means of a coup dVtat into monarchy tenure, as Napoleon did when he converted
his consulship of ten years into and then into an imperial office.
one for life
term of office, like one or two years, is politically inexpedient A short term makes
the executive timid, weak, lacking in independence, and without a policy. There
490 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
ISneither any inducement nor any incentive to initiate either a new policy or a
programme. The most that can be expected of the majority of men, under such
circumstances, will be “the negative merits of not doing harm instead of the
positive merit of doing good”
Popularly elected Executives are generally amateurs m the art of administra-
tion By the time they acquire some familiarity with their duties and responsibili-
ties, their brief term of office expires and they quit The result is that another
amateur comes in who is as much inexperienced as his predecessor was
Continuity of executive policy and stability of administration are impossible
under such circumstances. Moreover, short tenures mean frequent elections
accompanied by the inevitable popular excitement and commotion
The term of office for the executive head should neither be too short nor too
long A and a very long term may lead to
very short term of office bears no fruit
abuse of power A four to five years’ term has much more to commend it It is
long enough to constitute encrg>', stability and efficiency in administration It can
also ensure responsibility of the executive to public opinion It is a period,
observed Chancellor Kent, reasonably long enough to make the executive “feel
firm and independent in the discharge of his trust and to give stability and some
degree of maturing to his system of administration” A six-years or seven-year
term is not favoured It is considered to be an unduly long term A responsibility
which cannot be enforced at shorter intervals than once in six or seven years
manifestly loses much of its effectiveness
serves as a check upon the personal ambitions of the head of the Stale. A man
who knows that he is not eligible for re-election, will not pander to the people In
all his public acts he will maintain independence of character and judgment.
When re-election is permitted, he will undertake nothing new and a large pention
of the latter part of his term of office will be occupied in matters relating to his
election and to the neglect of his official duties.
IHE EXECUTIVE 491
atmosphere which welfare can best be realised If this is the raison d’etre of the
in
State, then, no rigid line of demarcation can be drawn to define its functions.
There is, however, no uniformity betw’cen the executive functions of one State
and those of the other Broadly speaking, the essential functions may be
enumerated as
ensure the maintenance of peace within the country The department which is
responsible for the maintenance of internal peace and order is called the Home
—
Department, or the Department of the Interior the nomenclature varies from
State to Slate
492 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Then, it is the duty of the executive to implement policies and direct the
execution of lawsIt entails the division of the work of government into different
popular House and orders fresh elections It can also convene special sessions of
the legislature whenever necessary- The executive furnishes necessary information
to the legislature regarding the needs of the country, either at the beginning of
the session, or from time to time, during the continuance of the session. The
Speech from the Throne, at the opening of Parliament in Britain, or the
Presidential address, on the opening day of the session of Parliament in India, is,
geneially, the exposition of the policy which the government desires to pursue
and the legislation in pursuance of that policy which it intends to enact In the
United States the President has the right to send messages to Congress,
embodying the various legislative actions considered expedient, including the
budget
In a Parliamcntars government the real executive, that is the Ministry, is
part of the legislature, it controls the time schedule of the legislature and, thus,
provides the rriuch needed element of leadership to the legislature It is the
function of the executive to initiate and pilot all public bills and sec them
through in the legislature All bills passed bv the legislature must receive the
assent of the executive head in order to bet ome laws He can also veto or refuse his
as.sent thereto The veto power has, however, fallen into disuse in most of the
countries with Parliamentary government, in others it is only a suspensive veto
For example, in India the President can withhold his assent to a bill But when he
does so, he must send the Bill to Parliament for reconsideration along with his
message If Parliament again passes it cither with or without amendments, the
President must give his assent thereto In Britain, legally the King may refuse
assent to any bill passed bv Parliament But this power of the King has now
become obsolete, it has never been exercised since 1707. In a non-Parliamentary
or Presidential government the power of vetoing a bill by the Chief Executive is
an effective control over the legislature, although it may not be an absolute veto,
as in Britain The President’s veto in America can be negatived by a two-thirds
majority of Congress Nevertheless, it is a potent instrument in his hands, because
two-thirds majority in Congress is difficult to secure The President also exercises
wYiat has come to be known as a ‘pocket veto’ The veto power vested m the
The increased range of activities of the State has forced Parliaments, during
recent years, to delegate wide legislative powers to the executive The legislative
delegation of authority may be ways For example, m Britain
effected in various
Parliament may legislate in general terms on some question and leave one of the
departments to work out the detailed regulations necessary to give effect to the
statute It may also merely empower a department tomake rules with regard to a
specified matter Rules, regulations, and orders so made are known as delegated
or subordinate legislation and have the force of law They arc declared
unconstitutional only if they offend against the parent law
judicial power in the executive to administer the law. D^^lcgatcd legislation has
naturally made the executive more powerful than before. This has evinced a stout
protest and Lord Hewart in England reflected the attitude of alarmed jurists in
his book, The New Despotism, and called to the attention of the public the
dangers that he believed to be attendant on this development
Other functions. The functions enumerated above arc usually regarded as
essential functions of the executive. But, as stated previously, we cannot
circumscribe the functions of a modem government No government can afford to
Ignore subjects like commerce, education, agriculture, transport, communica-
tions, etc These are bcncficient departments and without their proper develop-
ment It IS impossible to promote that atmosphere which helps to advance the
welfare of man Similarly, most of the governments now actually run certain
public utility services, and impose statutory restrictions on the production and
commodities These changes in the province of the State have been
sale of various
introduced as a result of conscious attempts to bring the economic organisation m
conformity to the moral and political ideas Much has been done to moralise our
economic system and “coordination, regulation and control, initiative and
encouragement, in many cases ownership, are regarded as essential in these fields,
and the departments concerned are little less important in the eyes of the public
than the so-called essential or major departments The scope of the modem
State has, in fine, increased enormously and with it have expanded the functions
of the executive Finer has given a matter of fact summing up of the enormity of
its task He says that the scope of the State today “hardly fails to envisage any
branch of the moral or material sides of human endeavour The record is written
on the roads, the gutters and the buildings and spells what the State has done in
order that society may have a modicum of wisdom, protection of persons against
criminals and mechanically propelled vehicles, and environmental and personal
defence against deadly bacteria The annual thousands of Rules and Orders, the
detailed and present plan of activity of all modern States, reveal how the State
concentrates upon each individual and weaves his very impulse into the myriad
threaded warp of its existence The State is everywhere, it leaves hardly a gap
Executive Leadership, The development of the executive into what may be
called a multi-functiong organ is one of the notable features of the modern
government To quote Ernest Barker, “If the growth of the legislative organ, in
consequence of the development of the cabinet system, was the notable feature of
the eighteenth century, it may be said that the growth of the executive organ, in
consequence and the corresponding extension of services
of the extension of rights
which mostly fall to the lot is the most notable feature of the
of the executive,
twentieth “ For a brief era between the decline of absolute monarchies and the
twentieth century, parliamentary supprcmacy was proclaimed, the functions of
the government were limited, and the power of the executive seemed to give way
before the “omnipresent hand of Adam Smith which brought economic and
political equilibrium “ But the normal situation is that the executive leadership is
concerned, as Chester Bernard, in the Functions of the Executive, has argued,
.5 Gilchrist, R N ,
FrmcipUi of Political Semet, p 316
6. Finer, H ,
Thtory and Practice of Modem Government p 1165
496 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIFNCE
position of the Presidentis exalted He has been justly described as a party leader,
chief legislator, and general mobilizcr of public opinion The role played by
outstanding Presidents of the present century, such as Wilson and R(X)sevelt, is
an accurate description of leadership both in the legislative and executive
branches The President has a direct access into the legislative held through his
constitutional powers to yend messages, to recommend measures, to summon
special sessions, and to veto bills In addition, he has many other means to
supplement his political strategy By the use of patronage, “Jobs could be traded
for votes By effective appeals to the voters through the spoken word, press, radio,
and lately television, chief executives have been able to dramatize their
programmes and compel consideration of their views” and get them accepted
even if the legislature is hostile The issue of executive leadership is projected in
the comparative analysis Harold Laski made about the President He said that
the President of the United States is “both more and less than a king, both more
”
and less than a pnme minister
The executive, apart from and in addition to its work of suggesting and
guiding the process of law-making through the legislative assemblies, also acts as
a legislature when it issues decrees, ordinances, regulations and orders. The power
of issuing rules and regulations is exercised in virtue of delegation of a legislative
power authorised by the legislature itself It has now become a normal practice
with all legislatures to pass laws in general terms, leaving discretionary authority
with the executive to fill in the gaps, and this is tantamount to legislating in fact
ISthe latest addition in the armoury of executive powers It may be defined as the
process by which admmistrative agencies settle issues ansing in the course of their
work when legal rights are in question According to Leonard White, “Adminis-
trative adjudication means the investigation and settling of a dispute involving a
^
private property on the basis of law and facts by an administrative agency”
The exact role of the modern executive is reflected in the increased activities
of the Slate Planning and active service, the essence of a Welfare State, need
unified action, that is, anticipating problems and finding solutions for them This
may include gearing the entire life of the nation to maximise production and
equalise the channels of distribution embracing controls over prices and wages to
check inflation or restore a favourable balance of payment account It may
involve the stimulation of economic growth, development of public works
programmes, ownership or sponsorship of industry, reduction of unemployment
to the lowest manageable level It implies control over taxation and banking
loans, over public expenditure and the total volume of expenditure in the
community ^The State has become increasingly concerned with the extension of
education, in all fields of knowledge, not only because this is desirable in itself;
Emergencies call for quick action in order to maintain the safety of the
nation from external attack Legislatures are not appropriate forums for the
discussion of military tactics and strategy Some decisions must be taken on the
basis of confidential information concerning the might and military capability of
the enemy and it is usually not considered expedient to give too many hints to the
relations in the modern era had led inexorably to enhanced importance of the
military, and consequently also of the branch of government best able to direct
the military’ Power accumulated in this area has added to the executive’s powers
in all other regards
The growth of political parties, with rigid organizational discipline, the need
for rational action in the interest of the public, and the urgency of despatch in
military and foreign affairs, in brief, have resulted in the shift of leadership in all
modern democracies Executive leadership has, in fact, at all times been
essential to the success of government But ‘‘constitutionalism and constitutional
democracy,” observes Carl Friedrich, “have been confronted with a most delicate
task: how to discover institutional patterns which would provide vigorous and
effective action, without allowing those who arc called upon to take such action
^
to turn mto irresponsible despots.”
lands Rule of law is nothing more nor less than the principle that public
authorities hold and derive their powers and exercise those on the basis of specific
provisions of the constitution or the laws made thereunder, and that every act of
every person occupying elective or appointive office is done under the authority of
law All such acts are subject to judgment and control by appropriate legal
authority as to whether they were in fact justified by law Where the action of any
public authonty infringes or abridges his fundamental nghts, that legal authority
must be a court of law As a corollary of this principle, those who act on behalf of
the government are personally answerable for any illegal act and are liable to
trial or civil action for any wrong they may do No servant of the State can claim
Diligent and responsible Opposition is, therefore, the major check which a
democratic regime provides upon corruption, defective administration and abuse
of authority Jennings has aptly said that dictators who have to appeal to the
country at frequent intervals arc the servants of the people and not their
masters
Even in democratic regimes references are often made to President or Prime
Ministerial dictatorship Whatever be the extent of the powers of the President of
the United States or the Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom and India,
9 Fncdrich, C J ,
Constitutional Government and Demoaa<y, p 385
THE EXECUTIVE 499
as Michael Curtis says, “must have known that itTs wiser to use hone>
all leaders,
than vinegar” The leader cannot use coercion, in any form too frequently Noi
should he expect his orders to be agreed to and executed automatically. A Pnme
Minister must always strive to maintain cabinet unity, to accomodate the more
extreme supporters to the House, which makes ministerial responsibility and to
carry his party with him as also the electorate when time requires that he shall
meet it Similarly, General De Gaulle with his substantial powers, had to carry
the country with him to the extent of avoiding the loss of majority support in the
National Assembly or defeat of his supporters in parliamentary elections Even a
may find it beneficial to appear limited It may, for example,
dictatorial executive
issue laws and orders in the name of the assembly, or cabinet, or similar bodies
with more revolutionary sounding names, but in practice there may all be
agencies to legitimatize the executive, not to check it
CIVIL SERVICE
As stated earlier, the term executive, in its broadest sense, includes not only
the head of the State, but also the entire body of administrative officials, high and
low. The real work of administration is done by the permanent members of the
government In fact, the work of government would never be done, if there were
only the Ministers It is true that each department of administration is headed by
a Minister, but it is not his business to run the department His business is to see
that the department pursues a definite policy and runs in a certain direction.
Those who actually run the department and implement the policies of the
government are known as members of the permanent Civil or Administrative
Service They have a permanent status and tenure and arc selected for their
administrative capacity alone They have no interest in party politics and do not
go out of office when a Ministry changes Permanency of tenure gives to the
Administrative Services security of service, and specialisation in their field of
work Permanent civil servants are the reservoir of experience and knowledge.
They furnish to Ministers and legislature all information necessary for shaping
and enacting policies on a multitude of subjects Laski says, “every State is
enormously dependent upon the quality of its public officials.”*®
The term Civil Service, therefore, covers the large number of officials
necessary to run the machinery of government This enormous mass, that goes
into hundreds of thousands in a large State, is divided into various ministries or
departments, together with a multitude of At the top is a Minister,
field officers
an amateur and a political head of the department, and immediately below him
are the departmental Secretries and Deputy Secretaries, who share with him the
direct framing and execution of departmental policy Then, there are persons of
different categories, at the bottom the most junior clerks, employed m the
carrying out of ministerial orders and doing all routine work connected
therewith TTiese orders are implemented by officials of the relevant department
spread throughout the country
from the experience of every modem State The notorious spoils system in the
United States led to administrative dislocation and a public scandal " Before
the Haileybury experiment, Civil Service in Britain had little to commend
Itself Unless the public service is beyond the reach of the political executive,
It IS inevitable that the mind of the minister should be devoted not only to the
problems of his office, but to the need of rewarding his followers Public servants
recruited under these circumstances “will use the posts they fill not for the
importance of their duties, but for lining their own pockets at the public
expense” It will deplete the public service of experience, ability, and expertness
which are so essential for the efficient conduct of public administration
Appointment of public servants, therefore, should be made under mlcs
which may reduce to a minimum the chance of personal favouritism The
pnnciple of open competition for recruitment is the only satisfactory method
which can commend itself This means that for all, except purely technical posts,
admission to the Administrative Services must be on the sole basis of being able
to satisfy suitable tests for the type of appointment vacant The Trevelan
Committee m Britain recommended that “as an indispensable means of
attracting able young men into the service, admission should be placed on basis
of competitive examinations open to all administered by an independent Central
Board” Experience has shown that the competitive examination system has
proved the more satisfactory method of selection for the civil service Another
important principle for the recruitment is that entrance to the public service
should normally be at the age, when, in a similar position in ordinary life, a
young man or woman expects to earn a living
pay to all employees doing work inquiring the same degree of intelligence and
capacity, equal opportunities for advancement, equally favourable conditions
and equal participation in retirement allowances, and makes equal demands
upon the employees” Prospective candidates are recruited in service at an early
age, during their formative penod, and are, then, systematically trained in the
technique of administration with a view also that they should possess the intrinsic
room room m the White House by a rising tide of office-seekers is hardly an exaggeration
to
From 4 March when Mr Garfield came into power, till he was shot in July following, he
wa.s engaged almost incessantly in questions of patronage” American Commonwealth, Vol I,
p 64
12 In their evidence before a commission high officials confessed that their
departments were full of idle, incapable, aye, illiterate nominees A select committee in 1853
declared that the Civil Service had become the dumping ground of the unambitious, the
indolent and the worthless
13 M yidin {^), Elements of Public Administratton, 558-559
THE EXECUTIVE 501
qualities which a civil servant should possess. The theory is that civil service has a
distinct character of its own “It is different,” as Finer says, “from business, from
an art, from teaching, from other professions. Its objectives are individual, its
spirit and methods are special ” The young people, therefore, should enter the
government service at an age “when their minds are open to influence by the
individual character of government activity ” By making civil service a career,
the government guarantees to its employees permanence of tenure of office, the
fullest freedom of advancement and promotion and a comfortable pension on
retirement
and parliamentary duties Besides the political heads of various Departments are
a number of permanent officials and the clerical staff At the head of each
Department is the Secretary who occupies a position of very high responsibility
and importance The Secretary is the key-man in the Department who helps his
political chief so that the Department works efficiently and in conformity with
the policy of the government The Secretaries have, in most cases, been so long
attached to their respective Departments that they acquire complete grasp of
affairs within their own spheres and provide a permanent brains trust to the
Ministers, who are amateurs in the art of administration Then, there are in the
Department, possibly a Joint Secretary, a Deputy Secretary, and an Under-
secretary, Assistant Secretaries, Superintendents, and many others who do
merely secretarial work of a purely routine character and transmit the orders and
instructions to field offices for implementation The civil servants, in brief, keep
the wheels of the governmental machine going and act as agents for the
fulfilment of the policy of the party in office Their rigid neutrality and rigorous
impartiality m the political issues is the first code of their official conduct and
they serve with equal fidelity, whatever be the complexion of the government. All
civil servants owe a temporary allegiance to the party m power and its
programme, no matter what their bias or personal conviction. “The first thing,”
observes Viscount Attlee, “a Minister finds on entering office is that he can
depend absolutely on the loyalty oLits staff and, on leaving office, he will seldom
be able to say what the private political views are even of those with whom he has
”
worked most closely
14 Finer, H ,
Principles of Public Admmistratton, p. 206
15 Finer, H ,
Theory and Practice of Modem Government, p 786
16 Indian Journal of Public Administration, Apnl-June, 1955, p. 96
502 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
may broadly be said to be four. First, a Department must answer for its
relates and it is his responsibility to see it through The members of the Civil
Service have to remain in attendance in the legislature to assist the Minister with
information and advice, whenever he is under fire in the House
Most modem statutes are “Skeleton” legislations Legislatures legislate in
general terms, empowering Departments to work out the detailed regulations
the
necessary to give effect to the statutes The Department will, probably,
concurrently with its preparation of the bill, work out regulations and subordin-
ate acts of legislation and shortly after the bill becomes law, will issue them as
drafted by the Law Department In the application of the rules and regulations
to specific cases the Minister or a member of the Civil Service may assume a
quasi-judicial role and decide disputes accordingly This is the third function of a
Department
Department is to implement policy When policy
Finally, the function of the
has been determined, and sanctioned, it becomes the duty of
presented
permanent officials of the Department to see that it is faithfully carried out by
the field officers appointed at different levels The Department directs, mstmets,
supervises and controls, whereas the field officers obey, implement, and report, if
necessary, accompanied by suggestions It is for the Department to accept those
suggestions or not The actual authority flows from the Department, and the
actual impact of the officials of the Department is always considerable.
Public Service Commissions. It is a cardinal principle of Civil Service
made by a specially constituted agency,
recruitment that the selections should be
called a Public ServiceCommission A Public Service Commission, as a rule, has
statutory existence and powers, the object being to ensure the integnty and
independence of its members. The members of a Public Service Commission are
appointed under special term of tenure, and they can be removed from office
under circumstances similar to those of the judges
THE EXECUTIVE 503
The functions of the Public Service Commission arc best described m the
Constitution of India.'* It prescribes:
1 The Union and the State Public Service Commissions shall conduct
examinations for appointments to the Union and State Services respectively;
2 To give advice,
influence exerted by the members of the Civil Service at the top When the policy
has been determined and finally sanctioned by Parliament, itbecomes the duty of
the permanent officials of the department to see that it is faithfuHy earned out.
The men at the top, again, decide and instruct how best the practical fulfilment
of the policy can be realised The orders arc made and given at the pinnacle.
Then follows the chain of those who act on those orders and instructions and
accomplish the results
18 Article 320.
504 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
But It cannot be denied that there is almost a uniformly high quality of men
and women who are attracted to the Administrative Service in every country
Ogg, while giving a description of the British Civil Service, remarks that amongst
the members of this service “some are impelled by a sense of civic duty, some are
drawn by the prospect of a career in a field in which the way is open for talent
and industry irrespective of family connections; some no doubt are appealed to
by a profession which promises a steady and assured income, without much risk”
The defects of bureaucracy — officialism, narrowness of conception and
departmental aspects of the matter under discussion For fourteen months it never occurred
to a single human being in the departments to mention the matter, or to suggest that it
should be mentioned Round and round, like the diurnal revolution ot the earth went the
file, stately, solemn, sure and slow, and now, in due season, it has completed its orbit, and I
am invited to register the concluding stage' How can I bring home to those who are
^
responsible, the gravity of the blunder or the absurdity of the situation
THE EXECUTIVE 505
of wide discretion and judgment which may involve invasion on the sanctities of
private life If welfare is to be real and a matter of substance, it, then, necessitates
that those whose be limited and even narrowly restricted must be
liberties are to
consulted before they come into operation “The proper use of advisory bodies,”
maintained Sir Arthur Salter, “is the right answer of representative democracy to
the challenge of corporate States ” It is, thus, essential that committees
composed of well-informed persons equipped with necessary talent and com-
manding the confidence of the people and the interests concerned should be
created for consultation and guidance Such committees may be intended to serve
the cabinet as a whole, and through it parliament as well, or they may function
simply in relation to a particular department or office The government, in short,
should be surrounded by organised committees which must consult in it all its
506
CONSULTATIVE AND ADVISORY BODIES 507
of different types and the local authorities thermcives are representative bodies.
There arc similarly associations concerned with the welfare of children or of
animals, with social services, with scientific and cultural matters and with
numberless other activities embracing the life of man Sometimes, however, there
are nval associations, each claiming to represent the same interests In some cases
there arc associations representing opposed interests Government must be certain
that if they take consultation at ail, it must be representative of all shades of
disposal, can never be refused to its subjects if it is to build its opinion in the
reasoned judgment of its citizens
reaction to its proposals Such consultation, which helps to shape a bill before it is
1 Laski, H ,
A Qammar of Politus, p 133
508 PRINCIPLES OF political SCIENCE
2 Ibtd,
pp 80-81.
i 268
4 Ibtd, p 82
CONSULTATIVE AND ADVISORY BODIES 509
and thoroughness” In 1879 Lord Rose berry wrote of cabinet meetings “the collection of
heads of departments at sparse intervals to discuss hurriedly topics for which they are often
”
unprepared
6 Beni Prasad, A Dmocratu /Vorrvi,
pp 26‘^-64 Miss Follet wrote “Democracy is
not worked out at the polling booths, it is the bringing forth of a genuine collective will, one
his complex lif» as one which
to w hich every single being must contribute the whole of ,
(very single being must express the whole of at one pint Thus the essence of democracy is
treating ” She further added, “The fallacy and selt-and-others fades away and there is only
self-in*and-through-others, only others so firmly rooted in the self and so fruitfully growing
theie that sundering is impossible
” Follet, M
P 77i^ New SiaU, pp 6 and 7
,
510 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
of Education and Board of Trade During World War I a large number of such
committees were provided by executive orders The Machinery of Government
Committee warmly endorsed the advisory committee plan so long as the advisory
bodies were not permitted to impair the rcsponsiblity of Ministers to Parliament
The general testimony is that departmental advisory committees arc rendering
valuable serv'ice not only by bringing to the departments information and advice
based on first-hand knowledge, but also “by inspiring greater public confidence in
Functions of the Advisory Committees. No one can deny the utility of the
before they are initiated in the legislature The department should submit all
The committees, m the third place, should be given the widest scope to make
suggestions Here, indeed, the Advisory Committees can make useful contribu-
tion and prove their real utility The members chosen on the committees for their
expert knowledge and representing special interests are in the best position to
suggest ideas and it is highly beneficial for a government to explore them In the
opinion of Laski, “it is one of the few ways open to us to correct the dangers of
professional conservatism A Committee of Ministry of Justice, for example, upon
which the lay mind as well as the legal mind found place, could indicate a score
”
of places in the law where the need for revision and experiment is essential
We have already discussed how the legislatures of today are flooded with
work, and with the increase in the area of State activity the major portion of
detailed and exhaustive been replaced by skelecton acts the details of
statutes has
which by the departments concerned This growth
are, in various ways, filled in
in the power and discretion of the departments, which also amounts to increase in
the powers of the permanent Civil Servants, needs to be checked and the advisory
committees are the best instruments to serve this purpose* 'Laski makes a very
concrete proposal in this connection He says, “No department shall issue orders
under its delegated powers without having first consulted the appropriate
consultative committee, and that in the event of objection from the latter the
order shall not be issued without the specific approval of the Legislative
Assembly This is a negative function and the fourth in enumeration
Committees to advise may, thus, be consulted at any stage in the process of
9 Cf Laski, HJ ,
^ Grammar oj Politics, pp 380-93
Ibid,
10 p 381
11 Ibid, pm
12 Ibid, pm
512 PRINCIPLES OF POl ITICAL SCIENCE
of the Ministers, to repeat again, must remain unimpaired Laski says that the
method of seeking consultation is not intended “to divide power in order to make
It responsible, what is essential is to make coherent the organs of reference to
which the power must defer” There is inherent in the notion of committee an
idea of a derived status, it lacks original jurisdiction
“It IS wise to guard against advisory committees being too big,” further says
Professor Wheare, “it is wise also to guard against the members themselves being
1 1 Wheare, K (' ,
CfOVfmment by Commtilees,
p 4“)
14 Ibid, p 2
15 Laski, H ,
A Grammar of Poiitus, p 381
16 Wheare, KC , Government by Committees,
p 63
CONSULTATIVE AND ADVISORY BODIES 513
many economic and political ills and the device of economic councils aims to
remove that incohercncy in order to maximise the interests of the society as a
vyhole
empowered to introduce such measures on its own initiative and to have its
proposals and views presented to the Reichstage, whether or not the Ministry
assented to them
Composed as it was of the representatives of important classes and interests
who were experts in their respective spheres, the
of society, National Economic
Council of Germany was sufficiently capable of furnishing the legislature with
expert advice and keeping it informed of the legislative needs of the various
interests which it represented In the first ten years of its existence, the Council
“rendered useful service in considering proposed economic and social legislation,
making laws in respect of economic and social problems. More or less similar
councils were also established in Italy, Spain and Portugal In France, too, a
national council was set up by decree in 1925 In 1936, the council was enlarged
and given a permanent statutory basis Its general assembly consisted of over a
hundred members representing the consumers, the labouring classes, the agricul-
ture, the commerce, employers’ associations, the educationists, the bankers, a
small group of expert economists, etc The Prime Minister was the ex-officio
President of the Council The statutory functions of this body were to investigate
national economic problems, and to advise the government thereon All bills of
an economic character, when introduced in Parliament, were to be forthwith
submitted by the Ministry of the National Economic Council All decrees, if they
had economic implications, were to be submitted to it “In addition, the ministry
may submit any economic question to it for study, and the same may be done by
any parliamentary committee Or the council may lake up any economic
problem and submit recommendations on its own initiative Any Plan, or any
bill dealing with a Plan, of an economic and social character was submitted to it
for Its advice The recommendations of the council were made to the Prime
Minister, but its reports were to be laid before Parliament
watched the operation of the economic councils in Germany and other countries
that bodies which are based on the balancing of forces between the representa-
tives of employers and workers are incapable of any real constructive achieve-
22 Ogg ,
op at ,
pp 650-5
23 Munro, op at, p 454
24 Op at, p 1 10, note
25 Intelligent Man’s Guide Through World Chaos, p 593
516 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
councils are merely investigatory and advisory. They have been given far too
little authority to achieve any considerable result Moreover, in most cases their
membership has not been such as to stimulate confidence and hope that they are
likely to develop into satisfactory planning bodies “They have been constituted
by too little of experts and too much of representatives of conflicting industrial
interests, and their members have been, for the most part, far more intent on
preserving the structure of the capitalism and preventing the growth of Socialist
enterprise than on developing any coherent national industrial plan But
Cole’s plea is for vocational representation which has hardly found favour in any
country
Referring to the national economic council of Germany, Laski said that its
26 Ibid
27 A Grammar of Politics, p 88
28 Ibid
SUGGESTED READINGS
Cole, GDH A Guide to Modem Politics,
pp 411-414
Cole, G D H The Man’s Guide Through World Chaos, pp 591 595
Intelligent
THE JUDICIARY
judiciary, comprises the third organ of the governmental machinery The welfare
of citizens greatly depends upon speedy and impartial justice James Bryce has
aptly remarked that there is no better test of the excellence of a government than
the efficiency of its judicial system The judiciary is the guardian of the rights of
man and it protects these rights from all possibilities of individual and public
encroachments The feeling in an average citizen that he can rely on the certain
and prompt administration of justice maximizes his liberty If there is no
adequate provision for the administration of justice, the liberty of the people is
jeopardized, for there is no definite means which should ascertain and decide
rights, punish crimes, and protect the innocent from injury and usurpation “If
the law be dishonestly administered,” says Bryce, “the salt has lost its flavour, if
It be weakly and fitfully enforced, the guarantees or order fail, for it is more by
the certainty than by the severity of punishment that offenders are repressed. If
the lamp of justice goes out in darkness, how great is that darkness
In ancient polity the executive and the judicial functions were combined
The early monarch was the fountain of justice But it afterwards came to be
realized that justice could not be secured if the judicial and executive functions
interpret and administer in the same hands has always been associated with
tyranny - Every citizen needs the amplest protection against the danger of a
capricious interpretation of law The modem State is, accordingly, inconceivable
without a separate judicial organ functioning independently ^nd impartially.
law must apply to all men as men and equal protection of life for every one under
the law, and equal penalties for everyone violating it. Justice must, therefore, be
administered strictly according to law and no one may be punished for any
offence, which the law does not consider an offence Punishment must only be
what the law prescribes for a particular offence and it must always remain the
same for the same kind of offence The object of punishment is not vengeance.
1 Bryce, J ,
Modem Democracies, Vol II, p 284
2 Laski, HJ ,
^ Grammar of Politics, p 129
517
518 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
but the protection of society from the criminal and those who may imitate him.
\lso independence of the judiciary is practically a universally accepted principle
of modern justice It is a crime for the judges to receive “a bribe or for any body
to offer them one, or to threaten them, or bring any kind of pressure to bear on
them It IS also wrong for the government to interfere, by trying to secure
condemnation or acquittals, verdicts must be given in accordance with the facts
and with the law governing the case, and not to suit the desires of politicians or
other influential persons" ^ This means that in modern civilised life the character,
means and methods of justice raise or debase a nation in the estimation of other
people Laski expresses the same idea rather emphatically when he says, “when
we know how a nation-State dispenses justice, we know with some exactness the
moral character to which it can pretend ” Sidgwick, too, had said that “in
determining a nation’s rank in political civilisation, no test is more decisive than
the degree in which justice, as defined by law, is actually realised in its judicial
administration, both as between one private citizen and another, and as between
private citizens and members of the government
procedure is that the parties involved in the case produce evidence Evidence
consists of oral or written statesments of witnesses With the facts determined the
next step is to apply the existing law to such facts and render decisions To a
judge It IS a matter of no importance whether, in his opinion, the law is good or
bad, just or unjust He is to accept the law as it is and apply it to the ascertained
facts A judge is, therefore, the interpreter of law
But It may happen, as it does frequently, that the existing law may be
ambiguous and it may be so worded that it is difficult to determine its exact
meaning, or that with constantly cheinging conditions, issues arc presented which
were not considered when the laws were made or the existing laws may be
inconsistent with each other and doubt may exist in respect of which two
provisions or which of two laws, should govern in a particular case It is here that
the courts have the very important function of determining what law is, what is
3 Ibui,p 542
4 Sidgwick, H , EUrmnls of Politics, p 431
THE JUDICIARY 519
formation by the courts of fixed rules for decision, which are in effect laws”.*
Apart from removing ambiguities in the law and filling in the gaps, the judges
adopt and recognise customs, and give them the decisive support of the
public power Here the judges act in a quasi-legislative capacity and judge-made
law an important feature of the judicial system in Britain, the United States,
IS
India, etc The judges are, thus, interpreters of law as well as law-makers and a
large volume of law is made up of ‘judge-made’ laws
they could appeal to the courts and the courts would issue orders prohibiting
such attempts or at least restraining their commission until the rights of the
parties were determined The orders so issued are known as “restraining orders” or
“injunctions” If the authority towhich such orders are issued disobeyed them, the
courts have the contempt In the beginning courts exercised
power to punish for
this power rather had been the cause of a good deal of criticism
arbitrarily and it
Now legislation determining the power of courts to issue injunctions and for
punishment for contempt has been enacted in most countries
The judiciary is also the guardian of a federal constitution In a federation,
the constitution delimits the jurisdiction of the various branches of government
Neither the Central Government nor the federating units can pass legislation
which IS contrary to the prescriptions of the constitution This necessitates the
presence of an agency entrusted with the function of deciding whether the
oridinary legislature has transgressed the provisions of the constitution and it is
question the validity of any law duly made by the legislature The Constitution
of India empowers the Supreme Court to interpret the constitution and decide all
cases of dispute between the Government of India and one or more States, or
between the Government of India and any State or States on one side and one or
more States on the other, or between two or more States According to Article 13
any action by the legislature or by the executive in contravention of the
provisions of the Fundamental Rights as enshrined in Part III of the Constitution
shall be void
The power of judicial review has been subjected to serious criticism The
critics maintain that the courts have expanded their authority by this process to
the decisions may be rendered, there is much tri.»h in the claim of Chief Justice
Hughes of the United States that “we are under the Constitution but the
Constitution is what the judges say it is ’’Justice Frank further expressed it rather
bluntly when he said that “The Supreme Court is the Constitution.”
Despite such a severe criticism, judicial review is the “balancing wheel” of
the constitution Judicial interpretation neutralises and rationalises and, thus,
balances the various interests and groups in the community This is a wholesome
sign of the strengthening of constitutionalism No other “constitutional jury than
such a judiciary will be sufficiently neutral and detached to exercise effectively
the function of the guardian of the constitution ” Justice Holmes of the United
States made a beautiful statement of the deeper insight into the function of
courts and judicial interpretation He wrote in his famous treatise on the
Common Law, “The life of law has not been logic, it has been experience They
felt necessities of the time, the prevalent moral and political theories, intuitions of
public policy, avowed or unconscious, even the prejudices which judges share
with their fellowmen, have had a good deal more to do than the syllogism in
determining the rules by which men should be governed The law embodies the
story of a nation’s development through many centuries, and it cannot be dealt
with as if it contained only the axioms and corollaries of a book of mathematics.
In order to know what it is, we must know what it has been and what it tends to
become ”
But with the emergence of the Welfare State the role of the judiciary has
become arduous Human liberty and human progress function not in isolation or
antithesis but in synthesis and the law has to reconcile the two concepts
Individual rights must, accordingly, be defined in the context of public purpose,
social utility and personal and social development At times property rights are
given precedence over the public good The so, but it
letter of the law may ordain
may be flagrant violation of the spirit Chief Justice
of the constitution
Gajendragajlkar, of the Supreme Court of India, while dclivenng the Ferozc
Gandhi Memorial Lecture in New Delhi (1964), observed, “If the judicature is the
custodian of the Fundamental Rights of the citizens, it is also the interpreter of
socio-economic philosophy underlying the welfare laws ” ^hc judges must realise
that the constitution is a living document meant for the welfare of living human
beings Its words, therefore, must not be interpreted in a static manner or m the
stnet dictionary sense, if the constitution is to endure long
Judges may be called upon to conduct a judicial enquiry into some serious
incidents resulting from the alleged errors of commission or omission on the part
of some public servants or agents of the government A Committee or a
Commission, presided over by a Judge, may also be appointed to enquire into
some important and complicated matters which require thorough investigation.
The Commission may even consist of a single judge as in the case of the Life
enquiryis much too frequent m India and the people are so vocal as to make the
demand even on a minor affair or even when there exists no cause for it
The judiciary may also perform a variety of miscellaneous functions Strictly
speaking, these functions are not essentially judicial in character, but have been
assigned to the courts as a matter of economy and convenience In many cases
where the ownership, use or rights, in property are in dispute, courts will take
over the administration of such property pending the final settlement This
occurs in the settlement of the estates of deceased persons, and where corpora-
tions have failed to live up to their financial obligations In these cases the court
appoints a receiver or administrator to take over the property and administer it
subject to Its orders In the case of minors, the court appoints guardians and
trustees
wisdom, probity, and freedom of decision, the high purposes for which the
judiciary' is established cannot be secured Bacon had succinctly said that there
was no worse torture than the torture of laws The torture of law can only be
removed or mitigated when judges wffio apply and interpret the law are in-
elected. The moment they assume their duties they must enforce the law as they
find ItThey must not only interpret or enforce valid enactments of the
legislature according to its intention, but when the legislature in its enactments
has transgressed the limitations set upon its powers in the constitution the
judicialbranch of government must enforce the fundamental and higher law by
annulling and declaring invalid the offending legislative enactment Then, the
judges are to decide between individuals on principles of right and justice The
great body of the law is unwritten, determined by precedent, and founded on the
eternal principles of right and morality This the courts have to declare and
enforce As between the individual and the State, as between the majority and
the minority, as between the powerful and the weak, financially, politically, or
socially, courts must hold an even hand and give judgment without fear or
favour In so doing they are performing a governmental function, but it is a
complete misunderstanding of our form of government or any kind of govern-
ment that exalts justice and righteousness to assume that judges are bound to
follow the^ will of the majority of an electorate in respect of the issue of their
decision ” The judges must, accordingly, do everything possible to create
confidence among the people in the purity, fairness and impartiality of the
administration of justice
the legislature, (b) election by the people, and (c) appointment by the executive.
Election by the legislature is not a common and accredited method of appointing
judges, because this system is a violation of the principle of the Separation of
Powers But more importantly, it makes the judiciary subservient to the
legislature Moreover, election by the legislature means election of party
candidates When party affinities intervene in the selection of judges, merit is
now prevails in some of the Cantons of Switzerland, in a few States of the United
States of America, and in Soviet Russia in the ease of lower courts. Other
Communist States, too, have followed the Soviet pattern. But popular election of
judges IS even more objectionable than election by the legislature. “Of all the
methods of appointment,” says Laski, “that of election by the people at large is
without exception the worst ’’^Popularly elected judges can never be impartial,
honest, independent and dignified Popular election means pzurty election and
judges so chosen become subject to popular passion and prejudice. It tends to
lower the character of the judiciary The position becomes still worse when judges
are elected for short periods The desire to court popularity is a temptation few
will be able to resist when their re-election is dependent on their popularity This
would create a strong temptation in judges to shape their judicial decisions and,
indeed, their whole judicial conduct in such a way as to meet the approval of
those to whom they have to look for re-election The voters, too, are not in a
The appointment of judges by the executive is the most common and the
best available method of choice, and it is in practice in nearly all countries of the
world It is claimed that the executive is the most appropriate agency to judge the
Judges chosen by the executive are likely
qualities necessary for a judicial office
to be independent of popular influence and political or sectional considerations
The opponents of this method contend that personal favouritism and political
consideration may determine the appointments and instances are cited from
Britain, the United States and India It is maintained that often the appointees
are those who had an active political career than a judicial one before their
appointment as was the case with chief Justice Warren, former Governor of
California Laski did not consider simple nomination by the executive as an ade-
quate system He suggested that all judicial appointments should be made “on
the recommendation of the Minister of Justice, with the consent ol a standing
committee of the judges, which would represent all sides of their work This
method, no doubt, represents the best guarantee we could have that appoint-
ments are made consistent with the qualities essential in a judicial officer In
Britain, and many countries in the Commonwealth of Nations, the judiciary is
generally selected from among practising lawyers On the Continent of Europe,
where court systems are unified under the Ministry of Justice, the judiciary is a
career The entrants are selected as a result of competitive examination and arc
promoted from court to court In India, too, recruitment to the subordinate
courts isthrough a competitive examination whereas in the case of courts above.
It IS according to the method as presenbed m the Constitution, but the
appointing authority is the executive
8 Laski, H ,
Grammar of Politics, p 545
9 Ibid
p 548
THE JUDICIARY 525
where judges are popularly elected, there are short terms of tenure subject to
re-election But popular election of judges and their short tenures are not politic
as they tend to rob the judge of their independence Freedom and independence
are best secured by long tenures Judges appointed for short terms are likely to
abuse their position They would make the best of their short term disregarding
all canons of justice and even the principles of decency Good behaviour till the
age of retirement method which is the best and is now generally
is, therefore, the
recommended and followed “The standard of good behaviour for the contin-
uance in office of the judicial magistracy,” said Hamilton, “is certainly one of
the most valuable of the modern improvements in the practice of government. In
a monarchy, it is an excellent barrier to the despotism of the prince, in a republic,
It is no less excellent barrier to the encroachments and oppressions of the
representative body And it is any
the best expiedient which can be devised in
government and impartial administration of the
to secure a steady, upright
laws Finally, a good-behaviour tenure is necessary to secure full and minute
knowledge of law and judicial precedents which constitute one of the most
important sources of strength in the judicial office In the course of a long and
uninterrupted judicial career, a judge can and does acquire a complete
knowledge of precedents, the nature and operation of laws as in other countries,
of the psychology that determines human conduct and the social and economic
changes which characterise a dynamic society To understand man and the
principles on which law is built is as important as to know the law itself This
obviously cannot be gained by one whose tenure is brief and precarious
Removal of Judges. Good-behaviour tenure involves the question of remo-
val of judges from office In all States a provision is made for the removal of
corrupt and inefficient judges But it must be a difficult process so as to obviate
the abuse of power and its capricious operation If the tenure of a judge is to
defjend upon the pleasure of a particular person or agency neither independence
noi impartiality can be ensured, because the slightest ill-will incurred by a judge
may result in the termination of his services It is, therefore, deemed desirable
that the process of removal of a judge from his office should involve much
consideration and should pass through the hands of more than one person or
agencies In Great Britain a Judge can be removed by the King on a joint a-Idress
by Parliament indicting him for corruption or moral turpitude In the United
States the Judges of the Suprime Court are removed by impeachment The
piocess of impeachment is that the House of Representatives prefers the charges
and the trial is held by the Senate In India, judges held office, before 1947,
during the pleasure of the Crown Judges of the Federal Court and of High
('ouits were removed from office by the Crown for misbehaviour or infirmity, on
a report of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council The Constitution of
India (1950) provides that a judge of the Supreme Court and of a High Court
shall be removed from office by an order of the President after an address by each
House of Parliament supported by a majority of the total membership of that
House and by a majority of not less than two-thirds of the members of that
House present and voting has been presented to the President in the same session
for such removal on the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity” " A
difficult method of removal, where more than one agencies intervene, ensures
security of office and it is one of the most important factors responsible for the
impartiality of the majority party. But m countries where the system of recall
exists, theindependence and dignity of the judiciary has considerably deteriorat-
ed. Judges become playing of the people and their vagaries. This method is also
opposed for the same reasons for which popular election of Judges is deemed
unwise
Salaries of Judges. Next to permanency of office nothing contributes more
to the independence of the judiciary than a fixed and adequate salary It was
judiciously remarked by Hamilton that *‘in general course of human nature a
power over a man’s subsistence amounts to a power over his will ” To give to
the fear of tomorrow must not haunt them There should exist a specific provision
confidence of the public in general and the litigant public in particular AH these
qualifications can best be secured if Judges arc selected from the bar, those who
have spent their life in the legal profession and have specially prepared
themselves for the difficult task of knowing and interpreting law
12 Sidgwick, H ,
Elements of Politics, p 481
THE JUDICIARY 527
person should not be a prosecutor as well as a judge If both these functions are
combined m the same person, there cannot be justice worth its name If the
prosecutor sits also as a judge there is abuse of judicial authority and capricious
administration of justice The most familiar example in this respect was that of
theDeputy Commissioner-cum-District Magistrate in pre-independent India,
who combined the executive and the judicial functions It is a well-recognised
complaint that there can be neither independence nor impartiality of the
judiciary under such a system The subordinate magistrates could not go against
the wishes of the District Magistrate who was also the executive authority in the
district They decided cases, very often, as the District Magistrate expected them
to do SirHarvey Adamson, at one time Home Member of the Government of
India, pointed out that “the exercise of executive control over the subordinate
Magistrates by whom is the point where
the great bulk of criminal cases are tried
the present system is defective If by the officer who is
the control is exercised
responsible for the peace of the district there is the constant danger that the
subordinate Magistracy may be unconsciously guided by other than purely
judicial consideration” Many States in India have now separated judicial and
executive functions but there still remains much to be achieved The Directive
embodied in the Constitution, enjoin the separation
Principles of States Policy, as
of both these organs of government in order to ensure justice and as a safeguard
against encroachments on the rights and liberties of the people
set up It IS fraught with the gravest danger to individual liberty and society, if
the Judges cloud their judgment with the ideology of the political party in office.
A Judge must dispense justice unaffected by the political changes in the moods of
the people The pattern and conception of justice ceinnol change every time a
government changes Tinkering with judiciary by appointing committed Judges,
on political basis, would mean the end of the Rule of Law and the democratic
way of life
IS essential that the executive should not attempt to influence or control the
procedure and judgment of the courts It is equally essential that the legislature
should grant them powers and funds adequate for the efficient performance of
their functions. It is also imperatively necessary that the courts should be
independent agencies rendering decisions according to publicly known laws and
not as instruments of the regime in carrying out its political and general purposes
For example, the Soviet Law of August 1938 prescribed that it is the duty of the
Soviet Courts “to educate the citizens in a spirit of devotion to the fatherland and
to the cause of socialism, in the spirit of an exact and unfaltering performance of
Soviet laws, careful attitude towards Socialist property, labour discipline, honest
fulfilment of State and public duties, respiect towards the rules of the Common-
wealth” The primary function of the Soviet Courts is the protection of the social
and State system of the USSR The Soviet judges, too, have never claimed to be
independent of the policy of the government Really, they take pride in the fact
that the courts participate directly in the histone venture of the construction of^
the communist society This aspect sharply distinguishes the Soviet judiciary
from that of other democratic countries which arc wedded to the principles of the
independence and impartiality of the judiciar) and the Rule of Law
Courts of Appeal. The organisation of the judiciary is not similar to either
the legislative or the executive department Courts all over the world are
organised on an ascending scale, one above another, w ith a right to appeal from
the lower to the higher courts At the apex there is a final or Supreme Court with
powers of revision or cessation, le annulling the decision of a court or judicial
,
tribunal The function of the court of appeal is to make sure that the law is being
interpreted in substantially the same fashion in all the different parts of the
judicial structure and to reverse decisions which seem to be based upon an
erroneous interpretation of the law In performing their functions courts of appeal
must have m mind primarily the general principles that seem to be involved in
any case which reaches them, rather than the concrete merits of the immediate
controversy Technical rules governing appeals generally are adjusted to this
conception The cases which reach the highest courts are normally argued there
solely on the basis of certain specific dubious points of legal interpretation In
some countries, the highest court of appeal is also vested with an original
jurisdiction and such specified cases are tried there
Trial Courts. Trial Courts primarily or exclusively conduct the initial trial
of cases In a trial court both facts and law must be considered I’he plaintiff, or
prosecution in a criminal case, submits evidence to support his contentions as to
the facts of the case In civil cases much of the evidence, particularly in countries
following Roman law jurisprudence, may be in the form of “depositions” sworn
to by witnesses outside of the actual trial In common law countries the evidence
in criminal cases must in general be submitted orally in court by the witnesses in
person. The testimony submitted orally by witness for the plaintiff or prosecution
IS subject to “cross-examination” by the defence After the evidence for both the
7 HE JUDICIARY 529
parties has been concluded, arguments are submitted by their respective lawyers
and, then, the court renders decision
In all countries there are special trial courts for petty cases involving small
civilclaims or minor infractions of criminal law A single judge usually presides
and makes the decision in such courts, and proceedings are likely to be highly
informal Other courts handle the trial of more serious cases, and judges of these
courts occupy a relatively high rank Sometimes an intermediate sets of courts is
provided for the trial of offences or of civil claims of an intermediate grade of
seriousness In most jurisdictions some trial courts with highly specialised
jurisdiction exist alongside those which handle the more ordinary cases, for
examfile, courts dealing with the probate and administration of the estate of
deceased persons, juvenile delinquency, and claims for compensation for actions
of the governmental services
In countries with federal polity there are usually two sets of Courts Federal
and State Courts The Federal Courts exercise the national or general jurisdiction
of the national or Central Government and the State Courts exercise the local
jurisdiction in each federating unit In the United States of America the federal
government has its own judicial organisation consisting of the Supreme Court,
Federal Courts of Appeal, and the District Courts Ihere at least one District is
alone,and the State judiciary The jurisdiction of these courts differs But the
Supreme Court of India, unlike the one in the United States, has appellate, civil
and criminal jurisdiction throughout India, and it performs advisory* functions
also Moreover, it has no organisation of its own in the States
to say, they consist of a bench of judges, and no judgment is valid unless rendered
by at least three jud ges “Plurality of Judges,” It is believed, “afford a safeguard
against arbitrariness and enables the court in criminal cases to resist more
effectively the influence of the public prosecutor ” There is a proverb in France,
jugc unique juge inique (a single judge is an iniquitous judge), which gives
expression to French antipathy to judgment rendered by a single judge In the
trial of serious crimes it is usual to empanel a jury of impartial citizens to
civil cases as well Secondly, in France, and other Continental countries, there is
unity of and criminal justice, which means that civil actions and cnmmal
civil
cases are for the most part handled by the same courts and not by separate courts
as in Britain and in the United States In the third place, m the Anglo-American
(ountries judges go on “circuit”, holding courts in different places for the
(onvenidue of litigants, that is, the courts go to the litigants On the Continent
of Europe the courts are “sedentary” or localised, that is, courts commonly sit
only at one specified place and the litigants take their cases to have them decided.
In Britain and the United States there is the Rule of Law. This means that
all citizens— private individuals and public officials— are equal before the law
and they are amenable to the same court, the same law and the procedure
prescribed under the law In France, and the rest of the Continental countries,
there are two sets of judicial organisation ordinary courts and administrative
courts Administrative courts deal with the controversies of public officials m
their relations both with private individuals and between themselves The
Administrative Law, which is applied in the Administrative Courts, is quite
distinct from the ordinary law which the ordinary courts apply In the
Anglo-American countries precedents or ‘judge-made’ law constitutes an integral
part of the judicial process and are applied by courts to identical cases
Continental countnes discourage judge-made law or judicial precedents Finally,
in the United States judiciary is the guardian of the constitution and it can
declare any law ultra vires. In countries like Britain courts must accept and apply
law as It emanates from the legislature They have no jurisdiction to declare it
constitutional or unconstitutional
service and is usually entered only at its lowest levels by persons who have just
completed their legal training All the higher positions are normally filled by
promotions from the lower ranks. This means judges are subject to a certain
control of the political authorities who decide and determine promotions. But
more important are the judicial powers that are still exercised directly by the
executive department, e g the Court Martial and the enforcement of Adminis-
,
trative Law The right of granting pardon still belongs to the executive and it is
the direct survival of its original judicial function
The Judiciary, too, in its turn has considerable powers of administration and
control over the executive In all democratic countries the executive is amenable
to the jurisdiction of the courts Its actions can be challenged and appropriate
remedies sought by means of a writ and if the exercise of authority is in excess of
the powers vested in it by law such an action may be nullified The rights of
courts to uphold their dignity by instituting contempt of court proceedings and
punishing offenders is a great check exercised by the judiciary on the executive.
Finally, the judiciary has to perform a number of functions which are, strictly
speaking, executive in character, e g , granting of licences, issuing of permits,
appointing of guardians and trustees, official receivers, etc
Relation of Judiciary to Legislature. The legislature makes law and the
courts interpret and apply it This is the most obviou^ relation between the
judiciary and the legislature The legislature sanctions all appropriations
necessary for the maintenance of the judicial department In this way the
legislature controls the judiciary Except in the United States and India, where
the federal judiciary is provided and its tenure fixed by their constitutions,
judicial departments are created by legislative statute and may be modified or
abolished by legislative enactment Even
United States, Congress
in the
prescribes the number of judges, fixes their salaries, and creates new courts In
many States certain judicial powers have been retained by the Upper Houses of
their legislatures In Britain, the House of Lords is the highest court of appeal,
although this function is actually performed by the Law Lords The framers of
the American Constitution, influenced by the theory of the Separation of Powers,
limited the judicial powers of the Senate, except that it can try cases of
impeachment against high executive officials Finally, judges in certain States are
appointed by the legislature In the United States the Senate ratifies all judicial
appointments made by the President
The Judiciary may exercise considerable control over legislation, wherever it
has the right, either by influence or by express grant, to review laws in order to
determine their constitutionality The power of judicial review seems to have
reached its greatest height in the United States, despite the fact that there is no
express provision in the Constitution which empowers the Supreme Court to
declare the constitutionality or otherwise of federal or state Acts The principle
on which It IS based was set forth by John Marshall in the famous case of
Marbury vs Madison (1803) Justice Marshall reasoned that the Constitution is
the Supreme Law of the land and the judges are bound by oath to give effect to
It When the court is called upon to give effect to a statute passed by Congress,
which is supreme law of the Constitution, it must give
clearly in conflict with the
preference to the latter and hold the former void and of no effect. In India, there
is no express provision declaring the Constitution to be the supreme law, despite
the newly inserted Article 144 A in the Constitution empowering the Supreme
Court to determine the Constitutional validity of a Central law or a State law.
The power of judicial review by the Supreme Court is subject to no controversy,
although Its scope is not as extensive as that of the Supreme Court of the United
States
)i2 PRrNCIPLESOF POimCAl SCIENCE
authorit) They may also declare void rules and regulations which offend the
parent law
The inter-relation of the judiciary and the legislature can best be found in
case-law or judge-made law Judges not only interpret law, but they also make it
Whenever a case before a court for decision is not covered by law it is the duty of
judges not to determine what the legislature meant, but “to guess what it would
have intended on a point not present, if the point had been present” In this way,
judges legislate to fill up the casus omissus or the cases of omission Judges also
create a law for the particular case in determining the exact meaning of law,
expanding and applying the general principles of justice or morality In
its details
Britain, Indiaand the United States, judicial decisions are cited as precedents
and are considered binding in subsequent cases on the principle of stare decisis.
Judge-made law, thus, forms a large part of the system of junsprudence In
countries where codes based on Roman Law are used, as in France, precedents
are not considered binding
Bntain the ordinary law should be everywhere supreme, and every person is
sub}ect to the ordinary law courts There is nothing which may be characterised
as arbitrary power Every action of the government must be authorised by law,
either by law passed by Parliament, or b) the ancient principles of Common Law
which have been recognised for many hundred years The test is that all actions
of government can be appealed against in the ordinary law courts This remains
the general rule, though in recent years there have been encroachments upon it
down the fundamental Rights Yet, the people enjoy maximum liberty and
judiciary is their unfailing guardian, because there exists “the rule of law” The
government have power only to carry out the law, not to do whatever they think
fit The Latin tag salus popuii suprema lex— the welfare of the people is the
supreme law —cannot be used by the government as an excuse for pursuing its
own idea of the public interest without regard to legality Anything done by
government officials either beyond law or in excess of law is subject to control by
courts The ordinary law of the land is of universal application and there are no
divisions of separate systems of law, for instance, one for officials and another for
ordinary citizens The maxim carries with it the rule that the remedies of the
ordinary law will be sufficient for the effective protection of the rights of the
( itizcns. Rule of Law, in brief, ensures liberty and security to all individuals alike
and IS, therefore, antithetic to arbitrariness and discrimination of any kind It
aicxpts all men as alike before law and the same law is applicable to all
irrespective of their station in life. Rule of law is really the essence of democracy
Dicey’s Analysis. The conception of the “rule of law” was given classical
THE JUDICIARY 533
2 “It means, again, equality before the law, or the equal subjection of all
”
classes to the ordinarylaw of the land administered by the ordinary law courts
It means that everyone is subject to the ordinary law of the realm and can have
personal liberty or of public meeting, have been set up on the foundation of the
old common law and not as thing derived from any general constitutional
theory ” Rights in Britain do not flow from the constitution, but from judicial
dec isions, as m the famous Wilkes’ case
the State during the past forty years or so has limited the “rule of law” far more
seriously It is difficult for Parliament to find time to discuss the details of bills
534 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
which must necessarily contain a long string of highly technical clauses And in
^
Moreover, whenever there is delegated legislation there is discretionary
authority If discretionary authority is in violation of the rule of law, then the rule
of law is inapplicable in any modern State When Dicey, in 1885, wrote the first
edition of his Law of the Constitution, the primary functions of the State were the
preservation of law and order, defence and foreign relations Today, the functions
of the State are more positive and they regulate the national life in multifarious
ways Discretionary authority is, thus, in every detail inevitable What it is
their judicial functions, even if they exceed their jurisdiction, unless the judge
ought to have known the facts ousting his jurisdiction
This apart, two other points may be noted which significantly restnetthe
operative part of the rule of law So long as wide social and economic gaps
continue to exist between the different segments of society, legal equality does not
in fact exist Litigation today is very cumbersome and expensive and it is beyond
the reach of an ordinary man to seek appropriate redress It also breeds
discrimination because those who have the wherewithal have the due protection
of law whereas it is inaccessible to those who sutler from the accident of birth and
are born in poor families Moreover, the public officials enjoy certain characteris-
tic rights as compared with private citizens As Jennings points out, “The Home
Secretary can compel me to make up a census return though my neighbour
cannot A sheriff can summon me to serve on a jury, though my friends
cannot
In spite of these qualifications the rule of law sfill remains a cardinal
principle of the British Constitution and government It is
of every democratic
true that delegated legislation and administrative jurisdiction are both the worst
enemies of the nile of law The development of delegated legislation and
administrative justice, however, are not only inevitable but, also, with porper
modifications and safeguards, desirable The motive at work is not that of a
despot as Lord Hewart asserted in his book, The JNew Despotism. British officials
retain a respect for the tradition of the rule of law in which they have been bred
“Then object is usually to avoid, not parliamentary control, but parliamentary
delays, not the authority of the law, but the obstructiveness of wealthy
litigants Morcovei, the question whether a department is acting ultra vires
can always be brought before the ordinary' courts In this way. Ministers and
officials can at least be prevented from exceeding their statutoiy powers.
What the rule of law precisely involves is the absence of arbitrary power,
“effective control of and proper publicity for delegated legislation, particularly
when It imposes penalties, that when discretionary power is granted the manner
in which it IS to be exercised should as far as practicable be defined, that every
man should be responsible to the ordinary law whether he be private or public
officer, that private rights should be determined by impartial and independent
tribunals, and fundamental private rights are safeguarded by the ordinary law of
the land
European Countries there are two systenns of courts One of these is a system of
ordinary courts, the other is a system of administrative courts. The ordinary law
and the regular courts are concerned with the administiation of justice as
between man and man while administrative law is concerned with the
adjudication of rights as between a citizen and his government If a citizen finds
that he has been wronged by an official of the State, or the action of that official
IS the result of bad judgment, or is arbitrary in nature, he can seek redress, but he
must seek it from special tribunals which are maintained for that purpose and
which apply Administrative Law as distinguished from ordinary law Continen-
tal jurisprudence is largelv based upon the Roman I. aw It regarded the State as
an end itself, the individual only as a means to the perfection of the great body
politic From this, it naturally followed that those who served the Stale in an
official capacity were entitled to spiecial consideration and for their official acts
they could not be made amenable to ordinary law and ordinary courts
Origin of the Administrative Law and Courts. The Administrative Law
and Administrative Courts first found their origin m France as a result of
historical circumstances and the political beliefs of the time Before the French
Revolution there was a general aversion to the control which the judiciary
exercised over the administrative authorities The [Arsons actively concerned
with the Revolutionary' movement felt that if judges were allowed to decide
controversies between the State and its administrative authorties, on the one
hand, and private individuals, on the other, it would result in judicial
interference with the operations of the government and impair the efficiency of
the administration Montesquieu’s theory of Separation of Powers had also a
gifat ideological appeal The result was that in the period immediately following
the Revolution, many laws were enacted preventing the judiciary from interfer-
ing in the work of administration Even punishment of judges, who should
encroach on administrative functions, was provided in the Penal Ccxie
The imposition of absolute prohibition on the judiciary resulted in an
unsatisfactory situation Administrative authorties were freed from all judicial
control, and for the private individual there were no other means for the relief
from administrative excesses except an appeal to their political representatives
According to Revolutionary' ideas this was sufficient guarantee against the abuse
of authority But it was otherwise as “the administration possessed a dominant
position, and it practised domination “ An inevitable reaction to this was many
developments which finally helped to improve the position of the individual in
his relationship to the administration The first step was taken by Napoleon
Bonaparte by establishing councils of juris consults At the nation.il level, the
Council of State was set up, and in the departments the Prcfcctorial Councils
Out of these developed the present system of Administrative Courts spreading to
other land as well
Administrative I>aw is Case-Law. Administrative Law, or droit administra-
te, in France may, thus, be defined “as a system of jurisprudence which, on the
one hand, relieves public officials from amenability to the ordinary courts for acts
performed in their official capactiy, and, cm the other hand, sets up a special
junsdiction to hold them accountable “ It determines
But Administrative Law is not codified. Some of the rules have been
established by the decrees issued from time to time, while the most important
and, by far, the largest part of it depends upon the decisions of Administrative
Courts Law “somewhat resembles the common
In this respect Administrative
law which has been slowly built up in the regular courts by one decision after
another ” It is essentially a case law
“The French system of administrative law, and
Justification of the System.
the very principles on which observed Dicey, “are quite unknown to
it rests,”
English and American judges and lawyers ” This might have been true when
Dicey wrote the first The Law of the Constitution, but it is
edition of his book,
not so texiay Even Dicey did not give to Administrative law its real
at that lime
meaning Legal relationships are a significant part of the administrative function
in the execution of policy Every administrator is, in effect, a law-enforcement
officer He may rightly or wrongly enforce the law He may also determine a
dispute between parties, which arises under the law and the rules and regulations
made thereunder Certainly the administrator is frequently called upon to apply
an interpretation of the law to a peculiar set of circumstances At times, in some
( ountries, he may be a participant in a legal battle in special or regulat courts to
defend or ensure his position Some critics maintain that these statements are
broader than are necessary to illustrate the scope of administrative law, but as
Finer says, “In short, admini%iralive law is no more mysterious or sinister than
simply the law relating to public administration Wherever there is adminis-
tration, there is administrative law, though there may not be separate courts for
administrative adjudication In the nature of things there are generally such
courts and are named as tribunals The inevitableness of the growth and
existence of Administrative Law and Administrative Tribunals and their place m
mexiern administration is fully established
ofl'ence
But in the light of the French experience, it is not true to say that there can
be no liberty under a system of Administrative Law and Administrative Courts.
On the contrary, French men have always considered it the corner stone of their
lilxTlies According to Carl Friedrich, the development of Administrative Law in
France and elsewhere “is a definite achievement of the constitutional era For it
does not signify the supremacy of administrative officials over the law, but its
21 Finer, H ,
The Throry and Practice of Modem Government, p 924
22 Friedrich, C J ,
Constitutional Government and Democracy, p 1 13
538 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
administrative action”. A private citizen m France gets more real redress from the
Administrative Courts than an Englishman gets from the ordinary courts
Administrative Courts are constituted of expert administrative officials and their
judgments are bound to have the nature of expert decisions There are many
administrative technicalities and departmental problems which a judge presiding
over an ordinary court of law may not be able to understand As a layman, he is
easy and inexpensive The procedure is so simple and the decisions are speedy
which the rights of the private individuals are so well protected against
administrative abuses and the people so sure of receiving reparation for injuricis
sustained for such abuses” as in France
SUGGESTED READINGS
Blachlav, F F Admimstrativ/ Ugttlalion and Administration
CHAPTER XXII
exercise that power They make people politically conscious, that is, aware of
their role as citizens This role cannot be performed simply by voting, but must be
a continuous one if government is to be kept responsive to public interest Thus,
political parties are responsible for maintaining a continuous connection between
the people and those who represent them either in the government or in the
Opposition
power ‘ Every political party is based upon two fundamental aspects of human
nature The first is, that men differ in their opinions, but, at the same time, they
are gregaiious by nature If they are to live in society they must adjust their
differences with others and agree on fundamentals of certain opinions Secondly,
they combine with persons holding similar views in order to put forward those
views in an organised manner, and to support the principles or policy which they
jointly favour and support Five conditions are, accordingly, necessary to
2 I'hat the men and women holding similar views must be duly organised
Without proper oiganisation the people make just a disorganised crowd anxl it is
1 Mac Iver, R M ,
The Modem State. p'390
2 Ir acock, S ,
Elements of Political Science p 31
539
540 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
4 That a political party should seek to carry out its policy by constitution-
al means It is the ballot box which should decide the fate of a political party and
Its claim to form the government Any organisation that aims at employing
unconstitutional methods, that is, to seize power by violence and suppress all
not the entire truth now The emphasis has shifted from ideology to
organization and this has been necessitated bv the extension in the Trane hise and
consequently the nationwide appeal a political parly should have for its
programme Roucek Huszar has aptly said that a political party “is held
together, primanly by its ideology and organisation C'arl Friedrich defines a
political party as “a group of human beings, stably organized with the objective
of securing or maintaining for its leaders the control of a government, and with
the further objective of giving to members of the party, through such control,
”
ideal benefits and advantages
Importance of political parties. Political parties are indispensable for the
working of a demcKratic government They supply the motive-power which keeps'
the wheels of administration moving Without political parties, says Maciver,
“there can be no unified statement of principle, no orderly evolution of policy, no
regular resort to the constitutional device of parliamentary elections, nor of
course any of the recognised institutions by means of which a party seeks to gam
or to maintain power I'hose who deplore the existence and intlueiKC ol
parties are certain to exist and the control must really be in the hands of the party
reason for their existence, is bringing public opinion to a focus and framing
issues for a public verdict ”^They are the instruments for carrying on popular
government by concentrating public opinion Their function is to make
candidates and programmes known to the public and attract them to those
programmes, so that they can speak with a united voice, instead of uttering an
unintelligible babel of sound If the million went to the polls without any sort of
thought and agreement, they would scatter their votes among so many
candidates possessing and professing so many divergent views and policies, thus,
creating chaos, pure and simple Political parties make the scheme of representa-
tive government workable and in advance of the election help to bring together
large numbers of men in acceptance of a common basis of action The importance
of political parties may be summed up in the words of Bryce He says, “In
popular governments, however, parties have a wider extension if not a more
strenuous life, for everywhere a citizen has a vote, with the duty to use it at
elections, each of the parties which strive for mastery must try to bring the largest
possible number of voters into the ranks, organise them locally, appeal to them by
the spoken and printed words, bring them up to the polls Ballots having replaced
bullets in political life, every voter is supposed to belong to one of the partisan
”
hosts to render more or less obedience to its leaders
It exists outside the legsl framework of the State and it is not referred to in the
constitution of any country, it has become as indispensable as the law itself The
Constitution of the United States of America does not presume the existence of
political parties The makers of the constitution shared the common opinion that
political parties were highly detrimental to national solidarity as they encouraged
strife, division, chicanery, and j>ersonal manipulation. Yet, within a few years of
the career of the Union party divisions and party spirit were sufficiently evident
In the Presidential election of 1796, there were two national parties, one
supporting John Adams and the other supporting Thomas Jefferson By 1800, the
party system had settled quite firmly in the government, even to the extent
itself
very vigorous role and today this extra-constitutional growth forms the hub of the
political life of the nation “But for the appearance of a national party system,” as
Professor Brogan realistically points out, “the election of a President really
enough of a national figure to carry out his duties, might have been impossible
And it is certain that the greatest breakdown of the American constitutional
system, the civil war, came only when the party system collapsed.” ^Gilchrist is of
the opinion that the “party system is really the method whereby the too great
rigidity of the American Constitution has been broken down ” What the framers
of the Constitution had divided into three departments, all put asunder, the
party has reunited
and taking its place, one party to give place to another party Jennings has,
therefore, aptly said tj^at “a realistic survey of the British Constitution today
must begin and end with parties and discuss them at length in the middle.” Si-
milarly, political parties in India are extra-constitutional, but they are life-blood
of the system of government established at the Centre and in the States
Even the government of the USSR
is a party government, although it is a
9 Brcgan, D W ,
Introductim to Amertcan Foltltcs, p 45
10 Jennings, W I ,
The Bfitish Constitutim,
p 31
1 1 Maciver, R.M ,
The Modem State, pp 397-98
THE PARTY SYSTEM 543
more the right to vote became extended and multiplied the more it became
necessary for party organisations, which previously had been based upon
legislative cliques, to organise the electors in order to make the candidates known
and to canalize the votes in their direction Parties, thus, acquired their new
character They became mass organisations, linking together a large body of
citizens with their representatives in the legislative assemblies They developed
institutions of their own and with a view to fighting and winning elections, they
collected financial contributions In this way the parties responded to the real
need Without them the millions of voters who composed the new electorate
would have become a disorganised crowd unable to formulate their aims or
debate the important and many issues they confronted “By means of parties, the
voters obtained a medium that, to state it in no stronger terms, afforded a chance
”
of rational and coherent action
five and twnety he shows that he has no head,” the implication being that there is
12 Duvciger, M ,
Political Parties, XXIII Introduction.
344 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
defence of the established order on the other, he suggests that people be divided
into the contented and the discontented, and into those who are sanguine or not
about possible changes By combining any ol iluse two traits, one finds four
groups of people those who are discontented with present conditions and
sanguine about improvement, the radicals, those who are contented and
sanguine, the liberals, those who are contented, but not hopeful of improvement,
the conservatives, and, finally, those who arc not contented with existing
conditions and at the same time see no prospects of better things to come,
reactionaries Then, in considering the change from one of these dispositions to
another, Lowell, following Rohmer, speaks of the tendency of men to run the
cycle from radical to reactionary as they grow old He also points out “the rarity
of {persons changing from one disposition to another diagonally opposed, the
reason being that two basic changes would be involved, that from content to
discontent and from sanguinity to despondency, a combination which is not very
’
parties is the conflict of economic interests Arthur Halcombe has correctly said
that “national parties cannot be maintained by transitory impulses or temporary
needs They must be founded upon permanent sectional intert*sts, above all upon
those of an economic character “ Differences in possessions, economic outlook of
the people and economic conditions are the vital forces behind the formation of
political parties Men of property are invariably inclined to caution, distrusting
and dreading change because it threatens their economic security Others, having
no possessions, thrive upon the hope that change will improve their lot but is not
likely to make it substantially worse Conflict of economic interests is such an
important factor in the division of parties that even Lord Macaulay so linked
together diversities of temper and diversities of interest as if they were of the same
order Some people are repelled by the suggestion that human conduct is shaped
by economic motives There may be some force in their argument that politics is
not all economics, but certainly without economics, politics is an utter mystery
Environmental effect. It is often claimed that men inherit their politics and
religion Membership in a party, as in a church, is less a matter of man’s
conviction and decision It is the pressure of his environments and particularly of
the groups to which he belongs, the family group exerting a potent influence The
young man joins a particular party, because his father belonged to it Party
allegiance, like property, is often transmitted from generation to generation In
the vast majority of cases the son enters politics on the same side as his father
Sometimes, also, there may be settled political traditions in a wider group This
may combine with the influence of group interests, but it may be largely
independent of that In the United States, for instance, it used to be said that the
people of Irish descent would traditionally incline to the Democrats and people of
German descent to the Republicans In Britain sometimes, thoughless than
the nationalist forces and to strengthen their hold on *hc country Today, India is
age to them and they advocate return to the methods, customs and institutions of
the antients Such a class of peoples are called Reactionaries. Lastly, are the
Radicals. They would
not go slow, but advocate revolutionary changes even if
suih changes could be brought about by a revolution They have no faith in the
existing institutions, and will abolish or uproot them altogether and establish
new ones in conformity to their ideals
But this is really a simple analysis of the party division A party is a synthesis
of various interests It is as much the result of mental traits of men as they are of
the interests near to their heart, of the conditions and surroundings in which they
liveand of the scKial structure of which they are the members Bryce beautifully
sums up when he says that “though the professed reason for the existence of a
party is the position of a particular set of doctrines, it has a concrete side as well
as a set of abstract dcK,trines It is abstract in so far as it represents the adhesion of
many minds to the same opinions It is concrete as consisting of a number of men
who act together in respect of their holding
^
or professing to hold such
M It
opinions
FUNCTIONS OF PARTIES
Political parties are the indispensable links between the people and the
representative machinery of government Their role is more obvious when
election is in prospect, but they need to be continually operative if a democratic
system is to work effectively It is the political parties that organize the vastly
diversified people by nominating candidates for office and by popularizing the
ideas around which governmental programmes are built They are vehicles
through which individuals and groups work to secure political power and, if
successful, to exercise that power If there were no political parties, politics would
be a sheer babel of tongues A disorganised mass of people (jan neither formulate
principles nor agree on a policy
1 5 Beard, C. A ,
American Gooemment and Pabtics, p 55
16 Bryce, J Modem Democracies, Vol. I p. 126
,
546 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
raising issues, selecting from them, taking sides and generating political heat they
educate the public and clarify opinion. As a consequence of this ordering of
competing men and measures political parties create and keep open lines of
communication between governors and governed, through which government
may work more effectively Opposition opposes and the public reacts In this way,
political parties are responsible for maintaining a continuous link between the
public and those who represent them cither in the government or in the
Opposition
The first role of the political parties is to sort out the issues for the electorate
They select candidates for election, plan and execute the election campaign and
present them with alternatives to the people between which they may choose
Parties are alternatives and the programmes which they put befoie the electorate,
made by each party out of the numerous possible issues of
represent a selection
the moment Herman Finer rightly remarks that without parties “an electorate
would be either impotent or destructive by embarking on impossible policies that
“
would only wreck the political machine
The second role of the parties is to supply the majorities without which
government cannot remain in power If there were no parties, if members of
legislatures were completely disorganised and formed only a mass of men voting
one way todav and another way lommorrow, the government could not be sure
how long It could stay in power It would, consequently, have no stability and no
power to plan a coherent polic>, national or international In fact, it would be
difficult to form a government under such chaotic conditions Parties hold the
representatives together subjecting them to the party whip and party discipline
The legislatures cannot work smoothly without party whip and party whip is
necessary for party solidarity and for carrying out a coherent policy or
programme
government They prevent the
Parties provide alternative teams to run the
same people remaining m
power too long and looking on an office as a matter of
nght A party system guarantees to the electorate that change in government can
be effected if they wish it It is always w'holesome to know that no one is
indispensable in politics and you can be replaced tomorrow A party system
always reminds the rulers that the ultimate appeal rests with the people, and they
must remember those to whom they will have to account in the future as well as
those who entrusted them with power Under a representative government you
hold your job on gcx>d behaviour only Finally, where considerable separation
and division of pcjwers exist, as under the Presidential system, political parties
serve as the necessary unifying agency In the United States political parlies have
united what the Constitution had put asunder
ORGANISATION OF PARTIES
Party organisation. If the primary function of a party is to consolidate
public opinion in advance of the election, permanency and organisation are,
then, the prerequisites of a party system If the parties are not duly organised,
they will remain vague, shapeless, mere tendencies to similar views but not units
capable of doing their real work' controlling the government But parties can
only be organised if they are permanent Short-lived parties are just transitory
phases of political developments over passing rssues or temporary problems They
aie not parties, but groups without any unified programme and policy and
without any definite influence on the electorate. And since the life of the groups n
short and precarious, they rarely develop lasting traditions and loyalties. Nor dc
THE PARTY SYSTEM 547
they dominate the government and instead become an instrument in the hand of
a clever politicians
“An organised party is almost like a small State within a big one.” It has its
active membership and its passive adherents, its local branches or constituencies,
with their branches of propaganda, fund collecting and recruiting, its election to
the party councils, responsible for its choice of leaders and officials, and the
adoption of the party policy. “By degrees which to the ordinary citizen were
imperceptible,” says Finer, “these nation-wide fellowships have come into being
and organised themselves with a gigantic and complex apparatus They possess
buildings and newspapers, printing presses and advertising experts, songs and
slogans, heroes and martyrs, money and speakers, officials and prophets, feast days
and fast days, like all religions they disrupt families and produce heretics, and
among their agencies of discipline and subordination are the novitiate and
penance
Party organisation, thus, operates incessantly and the permanence of
organisation and activity differentiate the parties of the present from the parties
of three-quarters of a century ago Before the middle of the last century political
parties were loosely organised and remained inactive before elections. They
would mobilise their men and resources just before the election and demobilise
after the polling day Today, the parties operate throughout and all through,
partly because victory' in parliamentary elections is otherwise impossible, but also
because modern State there are many local elective offices to fill Local
in the
elections arc the index of public opinion and they give a clue to the shape of
things to come The tremds of opinion expressed at local elections indicate the
electoral support the party is likely to secure at the General Elections
Every party must, therefore, keep itself abreast of the public opinion In fact,
the local party branch plays a most important part in the party organisation.
“The party branch,” says Soltau, “is a local unit of the army, provides the
recruits, and is also a centre of intelligence as to what is going on within the party
and in the country in general ” It is here that the citizen expresses his views freely
and easily and makes his mark in the party policies Ilie local influence, which he
exercises, paves a way for him to enter the arena of national policies A local
branch of the party is, in fact, a school of democracy and public life It is also the
nerve centre of information as to what is being thought and said of the party and
Its politics
Political parties are organized along different lines in every State Generally
spt'aking, inEuropean States all political parties have annual meetings of party
leaders to decide policy and plan programme The debates and discussions at
such meetings are of immense value both to the leaders and the rank and file
members in promoting and understanding of the issues and evaluating the
competence of the total leadership in the party Once the party policy and
programme have been decided members at all levels of the party are required to
strictly follow it Any deviation therefrom may make the member subject to party
discipline In Britain party discipline is particularly strict
The two major political parties in the United States are formally organized
on a hierarchical basis with a national committee, a state committee, a county
committee, and city, town, borough, village, parish and other committees The
control of this complex organization docs not flow from the top to the bottom.
I’he units at the local level are the most important I'he county executive
1 7 Finer, H ,
The Theory and Practice of Modem Government, p 363
,
party and a new party is bom on the rums of the old party This party, thriving
upon its own ideal objectives, gains ascendancy After some time this party, too,
disintegrates as a result of the same prex^ess “This means that once party
organizations have come into existence, the existence of a realizable program
(programme) is no longer neexssary A party can not only continue to live, but
may be able to displace the other party in the government, merely because its
18 Fncdnch, CJ ,
Constitutumal Cmernmenl and Democracy,
p 414
19 Ibtd
p 415
20. Bnd
THE PARTY SYSTEM 549
organization under a powerful leader is more effective than is that of the other
party. The party lives by the strength of its organization, and therefore the
organization is the main thing, the programme a side issue.”^*
It follows, then, that the older the party, the more pronounced its concern
with material interests. Hatschek deduced this law froih the development of the
parties in Great Britain and charactensed it as a peculiarity of British political
life Friedrich, however, is had he considered American
of the opinion that
parties,“he would unquestionably have concluded that the situation was much
the same here A similar trend occurs in other countries and under very different
conditions of party life ” The Indian National Congress, now split for the
second time is another example.
IS in accord with human nature and the innate qualities automatically divide the
populace into parties As a political contrivance, the party system makes
democracy workable It enables people scattered all over the country to agree
upon some common principles and to work together in support of those
pnnciples In the absence of organised political parties there would be conflicting
groups of opinion without anything common to harmonise them into an effective
working mechanism The success of a representative government largely depends
upon the energy, efficiency, and enterprise of the party system
“Without the party system,” says Maciver, “The State has no elasticity, no
true self-determination Irresponsive and irresponsible government is based
upon force rather than on the will of the people The only method of securing a
change of government, under these circumstances, is coup d’ etat or revolution
But a party government lives and thrives on public opinion Force is replaced by
appeal It regards “persuasion as more desirable than compubion, and the
conflict of ideas more creative than the clash of arms The party system
ensures sober and healthy criticism of government both inside and outside the
legislature Since it is a government by criticism, Opposition acts as a check on
hasty, ill-considered, and class legislation The party in power is amenable to the
opinions of the Opposition and it is always eager to accept its reasonable
su^estions, for the indispicnsable conditions of majority rule arc forbeaiancc,
mwicration and generosity. Both the majority and the Opposition accept the
principle of “live and let live” in the knowledge that the system of representative
democracy allows to each in turn and in time its fair share of power.
‘The party system was in particular the mechanism by which the class-Statc
was transformed into the nation State ” All States at one stage of their
development were class-States Their government wais controlled by and in the
interests of the dominant classes “The decisive distinction is between the classes
and the masses, the classes in this singificance being generally two, the nobility
and the clergy ” The authonty of the nobility rested upon the ownership of land,
the leadership in war and the prestige of birth and station. The authority of the
priesthood rested on the prestige of culture and spiritual dominance. Government
under these conditions of class rule was not amenable to public opinion. The
masses had nothing to do with the policy of the government They led a life of
21 /ftirf,p417
22 . m.
23. MacIver, R. M., Vu Modtm SiaU, p. 399.
24. /M.
550 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
that vigilance is the price of democracy. Political parties help the people to feel
that they are the masters of their own destiny They determine for themselves the
kind of government they wish to have Bryce has cogently said, “Party strife is a
sort of education for those willing to receive instruction, and something soaks
through even into the less interested or thoughtful electors The parties keep a
nation’s mind alive, as the rise and fall of the sweeping tide freshens the water of
long ocean inlets Moreover, political parties gather up the whole nation into
fellowship and “they lead,” as Herman Finer says, “in the sense of bringing to the
individual citizen a vision of the whole nation, otherwise distant in history,
territory and futurity.” The party system, thus, broadens the horizon of voters
and representatives alike by breaking sectional barriers and discounting local
interests The political parties arc really nationalising agencies. Finally, the party
25 Bryce, J ,
Modem Democracus, Vol I,
p 134
26. Finer, R, The Theory and Praettce of Modem Gmmmentf p. 275.
THE PARTY SYSTEM 551
system involves discipUnc.“It not only brings o»xier out of the chaos of a
multitude of voters, it trains the members themselves in loyalty and consistency.”
Loyalty and allegiance are its watchwords, and obedience its rigid demand.
Without this no party can exist and more so succeed in its political objective
with individual judgment frozen tight in the shape of the party mould.’^^ This
artificial agreement and disagreement divides the people into hostile groups at
regular and perpetual strife with one another. Such a bitterness is highly
detrimental to national solidarity and the integrity of the State
A party, like a broker, it is asserted, “tries to simulate a larger amount of
agreement than actually exists” Such a nature of political tics encourages
hollowness and insincerity The party system, therefore, demoralises politics and
makes it sordid It crushes the individuality of the party members and reduces
them almost to the position of camp followers. No one can rise high in politics
except through the regular channels of some party An independent citizen, who
does not tag himself to some party, is looked upon as a “crank” or a
“goody-goody ” But a party-member must bow to party dictatates, otherwise the
party discipline coerces him Thus, by insisting on slavish obedience to party
behest, independence and individuality are destroyed This is contrary to the
spirit of democracy
country It must censure the government on all matters of policy no matter what
the question may be This is not the way of government by discussion There are
three axioms which must be accepted and obeyed if government by discu'^sion is
to work successfully-"the axiom of agreement to differ, the axiom of the nile of
majority, and the axiom of compromise In the dm of party politics and the
hostility that is engendered these axioms of practical utility are forgotten.
Another evil of the party system is that it gives an opportunity to self-seeking
political adventurers to exploit the masses for their own personal interest. If there
does not exist any political party, a political adventurer will endeavour to create
one Just as every cock likes to have his own dunghill to stand upon and crow, so
does this political opportunist to ensure his berth for furthenng his own selfish
ends The mushroom growth of such parties complicates the political problems of
a country, India being a glaring example of the evil Again, party government
means “excessive pandering to the people This results in popular legislation, not
” The party system, therefore,
for the good of the country but to catch votes
debases public morals and gives rise to the ‘spoils’ system There is a regular race
in job hunting and patronage of the worst type. Merit is ignored and persons arc
dumped upon party members and their supporters The tone of administration,
27 Leacock, S ,
Elements of Polttual Science, p 312.
28 Gilchnst, R N., Principles of Political Science, p 337.
552 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
The party system, its opponents maintain, lowers the moral tone of society
by preaching falsehood and suppressing truth. The methods employed to ensnare
the voters and thereby capture their votes arc sometimes obnoxious The
language used in the meetings of the party campaigns is very often scandalous
Parties try to impress on the electorate “the truth of their views and the falsity of
those of others In this way parties arc often guilty of the sins of suppressio veri
and suggestio falsi”.-*^ Perverted party propaganda chokes reason and strangu-
lates thought It helps the flaring up of emotions Swayed by emotions and
deprived of reasoning power, the masses blindly follow what they are told to do
by their leaders It is the triumph of dcmagoguism and emergence of this kind of
herd psychology is the death of democracy A citizen of democracy is not merely
to obey, he has also to sec if his obedience is rational
Again, the party elects the leader and once he has been elected the
party-men do not only obey him, but prostrate themselves before him Carl
Friedrich points out that parties “try to secure power for their leader or leaders,
rather than for themselves For only through such leaders can the body of the
party membership hope to secure the material and ideal gains which they
seek The purpose of democracy, for the attainment of which parties are
indispensable is, thus, defeated The party system, it is further contended, keeps
many good citizens aloof from public life The nation thereby is deprived of the
intellect, knowledge, and experience of the talented persons who are either
clcction-shy or refuse to be bound by the rigidity of the party whip and the party
discipline There is another aspect of it too Under a parliamentary system only
the majority party forms the government and for that purpose talent is to be
searched within the party itself The water-tight party antagonism narrows
choice and the majonty party runs administration with men of inferior ability
Inefficiency of the ministers is the heaven for bureaucracy
The party system narrows the vision of the people Members of the party
place the party before the nation They behave as partisans rather than citizens
working for the common good Goldsmith wrote on Burke
This IS correct to a great extent When party loyally is carried too far and
allegiance to the excess, claims of patriotism are obscured and the higher call of
country is ignored. Such an attitude is disastrous especially in times of national
emergency
The party system adversely affects local life Local elections are made the
arena of party politics. Local considerations arc, thus, brushed aside and
candidates are nominated and elected on the basis of national issues and general
party differences. The election campaign assumes the same pitch and intensity as
the general elections and a scene of warring armies is presented. It is, finally,
asserted that party system has created double governments “The real governing
power without legal responsibility and is practically free from statutory and
is
29. /&tt/,p338
30. Friedrich, C.J., Omstilulwml Gemyinml and Dmocra^ p. 418.
THE PARTY SYSTEM 553
The Way Out. Some of the defects of the patty system, listed above, arc
real. The political history of every country, where party government has
prevailed, is a record of party strife, factional spirit and sectional legislation. Party
spoils arc indiscriminately distributed among party men for personal services
rather than for national patriotism. Though the extent of these defects may not
be the same everywhere, yet there appears to be some truth in Alexander Pope’s
definition of party as “the madness of the many for the gam of the few”.
Rousseau declared that any community in which parties existed was incapable of
a true common will Even James Bryce was of the view that political parties
encroached upon and undermined the democratic process In the ideal democ-
racy, he argued, each citizen is intelligent and impartial. The soundest arguments
and best candidates will win out But politicians discover that the citizen is
neither —
informed nor interested nor perhaps even intelligent Hence, the
politicians endeavour to organize voters instead of persuading them. “Organiza-
tion and discipline,” warned Bryce, “mean the growth of a party spirit which is
in Itself irrational, impelling men to vote from considerations which have little to
But there was another swing In the last decade or so political parties have
fallen, once again, developing countries. Eminent
in disrepute, especially in the
and respected leaders of many countries in Asia and Africa have categorically
”
denounced political parties and regard them as “worms upon the body politic
In many countries, as in Burma, South Korea, Pakistan and Egypt, the army
seized power professedly in order to rescue the State from the corrupting
influences of the political parties and the moral degradation to which they
reduced the citizens In other countries, notably India, a non-party democracy
was envisaged as the only means of improving public morality and making
government really representative of the people’s will The party system in India is
also in complete paralysis When the statesmen and politicians defect from one
party to another, not once but many times, and that, too, m a bid to get offices in
the government, the plea for a partyless democracy has a profound appeal
educating the public and enabling the elcctrote to determine for themselves the
rulers whom they would like to entrust the government for the time being. Again,
they are the main institutions through which the responsibility of the rulers is
improvements are made in the standards of public morality and sound public
opinion is developed A public opinion must fulfil two conditions It should, in
the first place, be an opinion which is widely held, and secondly, it should be of a
public nature l-oyalty to the nation should precede loyalty to the party Parties
organized on the basis of race, region or religion should not find place in the
body politic They promote sectional interests and parochialism Sectarian
loyalties debase public life and corrupt political morals
For the purification of the party system, it is essential that there should be
This can only be possible when party control is diffused and members at all levels
are sure that they have a say in the working of the party and the determination
of Its polic) All party-members must feel that they are integral parts of the
organization to which they belong and not merely its show-boys Their voice
counts as much any other member and they have the opportunity to
as that of
assert themselves Such a democratization of the party structure and its working
precludes the emergence of a small clique of party bosses or a powerful person
who dominates the party and concentrates all power unto himself If demcxiracy
needs political parties, political parties need a democratic spirit and democratic
processes Without them, it is dictatorship with all the evils inherent therein
The right type of political education of the masses and the presence of an
impartial and free press greatly contribute in mitigating the eyils of the party
system An unattached and fearless press helps to increase the general level of
education and intelligence of the citizens by presenting to them untwisted facts
and honest comments Two important factors help the growth of such conditions
In the fint place, it involves the education of the masses and the reorientation in
the prevalent system of education The object of education should be to produce
rational human beings dedicated to a common cause Here comes in the second
involvement and it is the right type of leadership A leader should inspire the
people by his dynamic personality, virtuous qualities and devotion He should
enlighten public opinion by and dispassionate views on all
his selflessness
problems and lead the various opinion forming groups and their instruments It is
only then that politics can be moralised 7’he future of democracy, therefore,
depends upon the and devotion which education can
ability, character instil into
the people and the capacity of the leaders to lead them
retire with the cabinet, and if necessary, they may even be appointed from
outside the party. Thirdly, a custom may be established that Ministers need not
resign from office, because the legislative measures proposed by them have been
defeated They should resign only when a formal vote of want of confidence is
carried against them in the representative chamber of the legislature finally, the
process of referendum, even to a limited extent, will at any rate reduce the
dangers of the parly system But all these changes essentially entail revision of the
principles governing the functioning of parliamentary system of government and
the factors governing the solidarity of the cabinet They do not aim to purify and
ennoble politics
place and verdict of the electorate is obtained. The party returned m majority in
the Lower House, then, forms the government
A two-party system, therefore, can be said to exist when:
the major part of
There are only two parties sufficiently strong to share
1
not present, as in West Germany where the Socialist Party did not exercise power
at the federal level until the 1%7 coalition, Japan, where the Liberal Democratic
Party has dominated post-war politics, or in some parts of the United States,
where one party traditionally wins, the regime cannot exactly be termed a
two-party system. “Perhaps,” says Michael Curtis, “the term ‘one and a half
”
party system might be applicable in such circumstances
But the difference is not in name alone There are fundamental differences in
the working of a two-party and a multiple-party system When there arc a
number of groups, say as many as nineteen or twenty, there can be no
well-defined single majority party able to form a stable government Majority can
be obtained only by a combination of groups called a bloc. An outstanding leader
is selected from the various party groups and he sets about to make the ministry
The prospective Prime Minister negotiates with such leaders of other groups as
can gather working majority This is a matter of bargaining and compromise
Every ministry under the multiple-party system is a coalition ministry A
mmistry which is the result of compromise between heterogeneous groups is sure
to break down at the slightest prextext Nor arc the ministers subject to
parliamentary loyalty and disciplme There no common party leader who can
is
bind them together into a team to play the game of politics under his captaincy
Every minister is a prospective Prime Minister Cabinets formed by this method
arc notonously weak and unstable. M
Bnand remarked on one occasion that the
day on which a French Prime Minister takes office is the day upon which one at
least of his colleagues begins to prepare his downfall
Arguments in favour of the Two-Party System. The chief merit of the
two-party system is that it ensures more permanent and stable cabinets than
those formed under the multiple-party system All ministers arc taken from one
single partywhich is returned to the legislature in a majority The political
homogeneity makes them a well-organised and a responsible team workers who
play the game of politics with singleness of purpose under the captaincy of their
accredited leader, whose undisputed authority they all accept They rise and fall
in unison and arc individually and collectively responsible for the policy whicl
the cabinet initiates and they carry out Their strength is like that of an iron rod
Practically, every ministry, under a multiple-party system, is a coalition ministry
a combination of heterogeneous political elements with nothing common in then
by way of principle Even if the neighbouring parties of a multiple-party syster
may differ slightly in their views, their differences arc often insisted upon with
vigour and intransigence unknown to most countries where the two-party syster
prevails.
there was a total of 88 Ministries, with an average life of less than nine months.
During the same period Great Britain had 18 Ministries, lasting an average of
three and a half years The natural result is that “government in France is little
more than a succession of starts and stops, of rapid, sudden and bewildering shifts
of policy with no end of confusion and waste ” When the life of the government
IS uncertain, short and precarious coherent policy becomes more difficult to
provides the only method by which the electors, at the time of election, directly
choose the government Both the parties have their well-defined programmes and
a direct appeal is made to the electorate on that basis The electors choose
between the programmes and decide about the party which is to come to power.
Two a point where they are faced by a simple
parties, thus, bring the electorate to
alternative One of the two win a majority and become responsible for
parties will
the enactment of policies, the other will be the Opposition, both homogeneous
with their clearly defined policies which they had put before the electorate at the
time of the General Election and which they sustain while nursing their
constituencies The multiple groups have no party organisation Sometimes they
have no organisation outside the legislature and, they have no programme to lay
before the electors The electors vote for personalities and not for programmes.
They do not even know who will form the government
enabling it to form the government and hold the reins of power The party in
minority forms the Opposition of which the majority is always conscious I’his
consciousness makes the Opposition most orderly and responsible in its relations
to the party in power The criticism of the government is more sober than it is
under the group system The leaders of both the parties are accommodating and
they try to adjust on crucial issues One of the writers has said that the Prime
Minister in England knows the leader of the Opposition better than his wife. It is
an organised Opposition whose function is to criticize and vote against the
ministerial party with a view to ousting it from office When there arc many
groups, there is no organised Opposition ft is all a question of manipulation;
even members of the cabinet are actuated by various more or less oppdttunistic
motives “Even if they were personally minded to hang firmly together, the
'13 l^ski, H ,
Democracy in Cruis, p 96
34 Ogg, op cit , p 470
,
groups behind them arc full of dissentients who make dependable support
impossible, and indeed may shift position or even dissolve completely almost
overnight ’’^^Laski, while summing up the advantages of the two-party system,
says, “It is the only method by which the people can at the electoral period
directly choose government It enables the government to drive its policy
its to
the statute book makes known and intelligible the results of its failure
It It
’’
brings an alternative government into immediate being
for instance, denounced it in his woiks in unmeasured terms He says that the
two-party system has been the cause of the gravest defects in the British system of
government Bi-party system, according to Ramsay Muir, has destroyed the
prestige of the legislature and has given rise to the dictatorship of the cabinet
The dictatorship of the cabinet is really the dictatorship of the majority and so
long as a government has a real majority, it can be reasonably certain of
maintaining itself in power for the full life of Parliament This almost mechanical
source of power enables government not only to propose, but to dispose whatever
they wish to dispose might even violate the solemn pledges which it made at
It
these interests should be duly represented By dividing the political life of the
country’ into two parties, we deny representation to many interests A multiple-
party system provides greater elasticity and mobility and gises an opportunity to
various opinion groups to organise themselves “It d(X!s not divide the nation into
irreconcilable groups People can associate and organise without a serious
compromise on principles ” The two-party system, its critics further assert,
“substitutes blind devotion for intelligent appreciation and choice in both the
followers and leaders ” It creates strong vested interests and party prejudices
Extreme rigidity and discipline discount free expression of opinion and encourage
spoils system
35 Jbid
p 469
36 Laski, H ,
A Grarnmar of PolUtcs, p 314
37. Muir, R,, How Uritam is Gooemed The future fm Democracy
36. ljuki, H , A Grammar of PoUtics, pp .314-15
THE PARTY SYSTEM 559
Sait, thus, poses a question“Who can be held resj^ onsible for the numerous and
achievements and derelictions of the chamber throughout
secret shifts or for the
the session^” His answer is, “Such being the case, the practical convenience of
two parties must be preferred to the logical appropriateness of many ” Finer, m
his own characteristic way, concludes that the two parties, “are better for the
happiness and duty of nations than many parties, and two parties contesting
seats every where For then lies and error may be in all places challenged, while
destruction of will and disintegration of outlook are reduced.”
which a deliberate decision can be made by the people of any State A country
docs not weigh consciously advantages and disadvantages m order to choose one
system over the otherPolitical parties are extraordinarily complex social
institutions whose character inevitably is determined by the historical traditions
of the society in which they grow Inhere are five large parties in Finland, Norway,
and I^-nmark and four in Sweden and Iceland, yet all Scandinavian countries are
noted for the dynamism and relative stability of their governments The question,
therefore, whether two parties oi many parties are more compatible with the
success of a democratic government assumes an academic interest Nevertheless
the question is a real one in so far as it relates to tendencies to greater or lesser
party divisions, rather than to change-over from one major type of party-system
to another The basic problem, then, involved
is the weighing of the merits of
simple against (omplcx disisions must also be noted that long established
It
divisions of caste, creed, class, and section are not magically dissolved by the
agency of a political party They persist and when combined with regional pride
and loyalty, tfiey seriously hinder the emergence of two stable parties
SINGLE-PARTY SYSTEM
What a Single-party system means. Dictatorships also find the political
party an indispensable instrument, but thev use it m a very different way Parties
are the necessary means of democracy But in dictatorships they become the end.
This hapjxins when electorate, parliaments and cabinets are all in their different
ways, subordinated to the exigencies and brought under the control of the party
In the same way and by the same process the party which is a part may become
the whole by the exclusion of other parties It may happen in two ways first,
both in Ckrmany and Italy the Nazi and Fascist parties respectively were given
by law a special status regarding their property and the dignity and physical
membership Simultaneous
safety of their to the promulgation of this law there
was sweeping liquidation and prohibition of other parties And Mussolini could
write in 1912 for the Italian Encyclopaedia, “A party which entirely
governs a
But Mussolini did not state the truth He owed a debt to Lenin and Stalin
for establising a single-partygovernment in Soviet Russia long before Mussolini
the
could claim that in Italy The Commumsi government did not liquidate
politital parties as a consequence of the positive law
Before assuming de facto
•jq Sait, h M ,
Political Institutions, A Preface p 520
Finer, H Theory and Practice of Modem Government p 360
40 ,
560 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
permitted, and since political parties arc associations, the domination of the
Communist Party is assured The Preamble of the Party charter, as amended by
the Eighteenth Congress in March 193y, inter alia reads, “ The Party is the
leading nucleus of all organisation of toilers, both social and State, and ensures
the successful construction of Communist Society” Article 126 of the Stahn
Constitution provided that “the most active and politically conscious citizens in
the rank of the working class and other sections of the working people unite in the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union, which is the vanguard of the working
people in their struggle to strengthen and develop the sicialist system and is the
”
leading core of all organisations of the working people, both public and State
The Communist Party was also the only political organisation listed in Article
141 as having the right to participate m Soviet elections Both these constitutional
provisions gave the Communist Party a ruling position in the Soviet Government
and positive leadership in all other organisations Article 6 of the 1977 says that
the leading and guiding force of Soviet society and the nucleus of its political
system of all state organisations is the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
A single-partv, thus, has become a whole, and has assumed what
nowadays called a 'total’ or 'totalitarian' character It is in its nature a
and the general system of parliamentary democracy It
supersession of parliament
does not expressK abolish parliamentarv’ institutions, it simply makes them
functionless Both Hitler and Mussolini w'ere in the lx;ginning champions of
popular sovereignty and advcKated fieedom of speech and expression, and rigid
limitations of the powers of the executive But both denied to their people on
coming to power the right to rule themselves through democratic institutions and
suppressed ruthlessly every manifestation of anti-Fascist or anti-Nazi thought or
action and exalted the executive authority On one pretext or the other all the
parties were liquidated and public opinions regimented “The political parties,”
proudiv declared Hitler on July 9, 19'H, “have now' been finally abolished 'Fhis is
an historical event of which the importance and far-reaching effects have in many
cases nert yet been realized by all We must now' get rid of the last remains of
dcmcx:racy, especially of the method of voting and of the dc-tision by major-
ity . The (National ScKialist) Party has now become the State ” In the November
same year an unopposed Nazi list of candidates for the Reichstag
election of the
was put before the country and all were duly elected I’hc climax was reached
when one month later “the new all Nazi Reichstag held a seven-
and-one-half-minute session and for the sole purpose of electing officers 659
Brown Shirts rose and sat down m unison when the government’s list was put to
”
vote, and then went obediently about their own business ‘Tn Russia the
Communist Party is a united fighting organisation “bound by conscious iron
proletarian discipline ” It is strong through its unity, “its singleness of will and a
singleness of action incompatible with deviation from the programme, with
”
breach of party discipline, or with the formation of factions insicle the Party
There cannot be any conflict of authority or opinion f)etween the Communist
Party and the government because both arc indissolubly joined by reason of then
membership especially at the higher levels One may go a step further and say
that so ngid is the control of the Party over the administration that all higher
and the astounding majority of lower officials in the government are at
officials
the same time disciplined members of the Party The Party, therefore, is the
A single-party government
is, therefore, totalitarian All the authority of
government concentrated in a single integrated political party It even absorbs
is
the State instead of merely acting on its behalf. The only redeeming feature of
one-party dictatorships is that they have a democratic flavour about them and by
adopting some democratic forms had taken up some of the ideas and programmes
which had grown up under democratic auspices But any single authority is by its
nature total It has no other authority at its side with which it must divide the
“is compensation and balance” between the party in power and the Opposition
party In a totalitarian State there is no distinction in any of the forms.
Opposition IS not permitted to exist and it is only one party that rules supreme.
In democracies toleration, discussion and compromise arc involved by the
presence of plurality of associations and consequently with many currents of
opinion In a totalitarian State there is a compulsory uniform society, regimenta-
tion of opinion, and the electorate is simply an instrument of opinion.
One of the great advantages of the party system, as we know it from the
democratic point of view, always provides a possible alternative
is that it
government and gives the electorate a choice between them Under the one-party
system there is no alternative government and no genuine choice before the
electors, so that the influence of the people on political decisions is reduced to a
minimum
Democratic parties are open to all whereas parties in dictatorship arc closed
to all The Communist party of Russia probably has no more
except the selected
something like three million
than 14.5 million members and the Fascist Party had
members The Nazi Party, too, had nearly three million members. The
membership is intentionally restricted and with various objects, the foremost
being to maintain the militancy of the organisation.
With excessive numbers,
562 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Finally, the leader of the Party is the head of the government, and the head
of the government dominates every power and every sphere of the action of the
State Throughout Mussolini’s autobiography are his assertions of “my com-
mand”, “my guidance”, “my sense of balance and judgment”, “my irresistible
domination” II Duce spoke the first and the last word for party and government
“Dictatorial parties are not parties,” concludes Finer, “but doctrinal despotism,
they do not spread and encourage leadership but monopolise it”‘^’'To quote
Lipson, “ -a party is by definition a part of the whole and therefore implies the
presence of an alternative and an opposition To speak of the ‘one-party State’ is
may not promote them without regard to the effect on others it is essentially
concerned with its own interests The Prisoners’ Aid Society, on the other hand, is
not concerned to reform in order that its members shall be better cared for if and
when they are imprisoned, but with the welfare of others whose ranks the
members do not expect to join The Automobile Association is a group primarily
concerned to look after its members, the motorists, while the Society for the
Prevention of cruelty to Animals has no animal paying subscriptions to it The
distinction sometimes described as one between interest groups, which protect
is
shared sectional interests, and attitude groups, which promote cause Apprecia-
tion of the two-fold distinction is more important than the terminology Taken
together, they are here referred to as interest groups
interests, they turn into pressure groups. Pressures on rulers is as old as a political
system and have always taken a variety of forms, from riots, acts of organised
violence and rebellions, social movements and political parties to the peaceful
Pressure groups and Lobbies. Pressure groups and lobbies are not synony-
mous. There is a distinct difference between the two. Pressure groups tend to
influence the legislators, the administrators and public opinion. Lobbies, on the
other hand, confine their activities essentially to the legislature while it is in
session and are concerned with the passage or defeat of a bill. Thus, the extent of
the activities of pressure groups is wider than those of the lobbies Most pressure
groups maintain their lobbies, in addition to their attempts to influence
tee system, was based upon allegations relating to powers which interest groups
arrogated unto themselves. He wrote, “It is in committee rooms that legislation
not desired by the interests dies It is in the committee rooms that legislation
desired by the interests is framed and brought forth ” James Bryce devoted
a searching appendix to the “lobbies” in his book, American Common-
wealth. ‘’0
Key writes, “The use of the term pressure conjures up a picture of a
wicked lobbyist attempting to coerce a righteous legislator to deviate from his
disposition to follow the public interest By and large the relations between
organized interests and legislators must be described in other terms, although on
occasions the crudest pressures are invoked for indefensible purposes ” Accord-
ing to Karl Deutsch, the political progress, in one sense, is the result of bargaining
among different groups and the politics of bargaining furnishes the basis of
Robert Dahl’s model of a Western system “In such a pluralistic society,” he
says, “any number can play Each special interest can set up its own group, its
own office, its own organization, each can hire secretaries, each can buy
mimeograph machines and begin to chum out releases, each can retain lobbyists
m Washington to provide legislators with ample, although one-sided, information
47 Key, WO ,
Politics Parties and Pressure Groups 130
48 Fnednch. C J ,
Constitutional Government and Democracy, p 460
49 Wilson, W
The New Freedom, p 125
,
But in a society, the United States, where almost every substantial interest
group IS organized, two serious problems, according to Deutsch, arise First, if
most interest groups are organized, “heaven help the residual groups that are
not — the tenants in the slums, the poor and some of the ethnic minorities.” Since
they had no organization and consequently lacked the bargaining power, they got
the worst out of political bargaining They did not get support from any of the
older interest groups Secondly, when almost everybody is organized, “society
reached a point where almost nothing can be done Groups with limited power
usually find it easier to veto someone else’s proposal then to push through any
positive policy of their own When this happens, politics becomes negative, and
interest groups run into veto groups ” Even when positive policies are possible, all
major proposals must be agreed to by every relevant interest group And the
larger the number of organized groups, there ismore consultation and conse-
quently more delay with the result that it becomes harder “to turn any idea into
” ^4
action
Deutsch concludes from this analysis that “Pluralistic organization can lend,
thereforeto creeping immobility The society becomes harder and harder to
move, and attempting reform and innovation becomes as frustrating as swim-
ming in a sea of molasses Eventually, it becomes so difficult to get things done
that some device must be found for breaking the deadlock ” The device is the
emergency, which does not require consultation with all the interest groups as
rapidity is the sine qua non of emergency “If there is a real emergency, we greet
It with relief If there is none, we are tempted to invent one Thus, the politics of a
highly pluralistic, highly organized society, a polyarchy (rule by many) as Dahl
would call It, ^1[>ecomes a cycle of alternating states or immobility and
”
emergency
But this IS not exactly a correct appraisal The feeling that pressure groups are
necessarily harmful, because they seek to exalt the interests of the small, though
possibly wealthy or highly organised segments of the population, disregarding the
interests of all or a substantial segment ot the people is not the entire truth It ail
depends upon the extent of influence the pressure groups exercise and the
consideration that they receive at the hands of the appropriate authorities If all
the interest groups and not only the powerful and better organised, get a fair deal
and if the internal organisations of all such groups function in such a way that
their entire membership rather than their entrenched oligarchies determine then
policies, their utility in the political structure of a country cannot be lightly
brushed aside In other words, it means “how much democracy, in the sense of
responsiblcness, there is in the internal structure of these groups, as well as in
”
their relation to government and society at large
tive decisions are reached, so that the public may snot out undue influence and in
case of any lapse it is corrected One of the short comings of the non-democratic
regimes is that pressures, which do exist in the Communist and Nationalist
systems, are kept secret and the public does not know who is responsible for
making a decision and what the decision actually is
Where they work in the open, pressure groups fulfil a necessary and
potentially wholesome function As a matter of fact, lobbying can claim two
essentially democratic procedures the right to participate in the formulation of
policy, and the right to seek redress of grievances They provide a useful link
between the people and the government and can, thus, help the administrators or
legislators to secure information on facts and attitudes AnyH-|5^emocratic
government will like to assess the reactions of its intended policy or^ogramme,
particularly those likely to be concerned with it The widespread attitude of
towards interest groups, says Eric Rowe, ‘hs due to the dependence
laissez fairc
on them by governments of modern complex countries Government leaders arc
assisted by the groups in the provision of teachnical information, in the execution
of policiesand in the defence of policies against attack by others” The
assistance provided by interest groups in these and other ways has led to groups
being represented in the formal structure of government on various councils,
committees and other advisory bodies The functions of these councils and bodies
arc advisory indeed, but they provide a meeting ground of different interests
where details can be discussed and ideas thrashed and hammered The purpose of
bringing advisory bodies early in the policy-making process is to know and assess
the general commitment an early stage The policy emerging from such
at
consultation is the agreed policy which shields the government against subse-
quent criticism and allcjw it to avoid amendments likely to inhibit the process of
government
Interest groups, quite apart from making more effective by the provision of
information and advice, are beneficial in involving more individuals in the
process of policy-making and emphasise diversity in a society which national
party allegiances tend to blur They also provide a continuous and open channel
of communication between rulers and ruled and encourage both regard for the
claims of others and protection against the claims of others which might
otherwise proceed unchecked In a representative system whereas responsibility of
a parly for the execution of a mandate is periodic, it becomes a continuous
process when supplemented by a net work of interest groups There is a
continuous policy debate, diversified influence and government by conciliation
and occasionally consensus
But the problem created by the pressure groups is that they very often force
their will upon legislators or administrators and thereby they not only lower
standards of public morality, but also distort to their own advantage policy
which is or should be designed to the public interest, or atleast should constitute
a fair tompioniisc of (onflicting inteiests or opposing groups But how far
pressure groups c^n rig the political market depends upon the strength or
weakness of the political decision-making process The type of the political
system, too, has a good deal to do with the way in which pressures operate. In a
parliamentary system basic decisions are made at the top level of the executive
rather than the legislature The pressure lobbyist would, therefore, pressurize the
executive rather than the members of the legislature In a Presidential system the
executive and the legislature are two separate branches of government and
,
pressures are likely to affect both the branches equally. Likewise, the way in
which political parties represent or reflect particular interests has a bearing on
the chances and methods of pressures Much also depends upon the type and
attitude of leadership and upon the social origin of the political elite
SUGGESTED READINGS
Barker,E Reflections on Government, Chap X
Brown, B E New Directions in Comparative Politics, Chap II
Lowell, A L Government and Parties in Continental Europe, Vol I, Chap's XXIX-XXV, Vol
II, Chaps XXXI-XXXVII
Maciver, RM The Modem State, Chap XIII
Maine, H Popular Government
McKenzie, RT British Political Parties
Michels, R Political Parties
NeuMann, S (ed )
Modern Political Parties Approaches to Comparative Politics
PUBLIC OPINION
Meaning and nature of Public Opinion. All co-operation and regulation rest
on opinion whatever be the nature and character of government David Hume
says, “It IS on opinion only that government is founded and this maxim
extends to the most despotic and most military governments as well as to the
most free and most popular” Public opinion is an organization of separate
*
It cannot be said with precision how did the concept of public opinion
originate, although the idea had existed always and it commanded
behind it
great prestige The Greeks held that there was divinity in the voice of the people
and the Romans used the term consensus populi, consent of the people, though
ihey applied it only in the juridical sense During the Middle ages the dictum
Vox populi, V^ox die, the voice of the people was the voice of god, was the
toinmon belief and formed the norm of political behaviour Nicclo Maciavelli, in
ihe Discourses, compared the voice of the people with the voice of god
But It took a tangible shape and political content at the hands of Jean
Jacquess Rousseau on the eve of the French Revolution He distinguished his
doctrine of the general will from the will of all and declared that the former must
be disinterested and concern the general welfare The general will being the
compound of the best wills of all citizens willing the best interests of the
community and its lasting welfare, it must always be followed Here are the
germs of public opinion for what it stands in essence to-day.
The idea underlying the concept of public opinion matured after the French
Revolution and it became a democratic process and a working measure of
common agreement and a driving force of governmental actions and policies
2 Cooly, CH ,
Social organisation,
p 121
3 Maciver, R M ,
The Ramparts We Guard,
p 28
569
570 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
During recent times the concept of public opinion has acquired a fresh
significance at thehands of some eminent intellectuals who have made it an area
ot specialised study They question the validity of the assumptions on which the
concept of public opinion was based and call it a traditional approach which is
devoid of realities of life
Traditional Concept. Rousseau is the apostle of denux racy and the exponent
of Its direct form. He regards representative government as a specious form of
slavery For Rousseau, law is not the will of a tlass, but the will of the whole
nation “This will”, he says “is to be discovered simply by asking the nation to
meet together and declare it Only when I actively assist in legislation am I really
a citizen and genuinely free, and since, the fewer the citizens are the more weight
may voice has amongst them ” He, thus, firmly believed in direct government by
citizens, who should themselves, in public meetings, make laws, without being
betrayed by the elected representatives He declares that England is free only on
the day of election
But Rousseau's disdain of representative government did not deter its growth
and evolution A small state became a political anachronism with the birth of the
nation-State Since then, the march of indirect democracy was slow but
discernable even in the heyda\ of absolute monarchies When the people
demanded their rights and privileges and protested against the absolute authority
of the monarchs, they succeeded in snatching from tlu ni some concessions whit h
had the rudiments of self-government The process started in England, during the
reign of King John and steadily extended its impact to other lands Each step
taken was the natural consequence of some earlier step and the final shape to
emerge was representative government with which we are familiar and accept it
as synonymous with democracy
the community and accordingly, formed the basis of public decisions This analysis
of public opinion accepted the notion of political man as a rational being, a
thinking man who discriminated between right and wrong and was guided by
the honesty of purpose in arriving at decision on public matters Such an
enlightened opinion was expressed freely and ultimately consensus reached on the
issues involved and it represented the will of the community The will of the
community reflected a single soul aiming at the good of all This homogeneous
opinion was free from all taints of factional and sectional interests
groups of men Opinions arc of publics and for political purposes There can be
no single opinion
James Bryce was the first to revolt against the traditional concept of public
opinion “The term (public opinion)”, he maintained, “is commonly used to
denote the aggregates of the views men hold regarding matters that affect or
interest the community Thus understood, it is a congeries of all sorts of
discrepant notions, beliefs, fancies, prejudices, aspirations It is confused,
incoherent, amorphous, varying from day to day and w'eek to week But in the
midst of and confusion every question as it rises into importance is
this diversity
subjected to a process of consolidation and clanfication until there emerge and
take definite shape certain views, or set of disconnected views, each held and
advocated in common by bodies of citizens It is to the power exerted by any such
view, or set of views, when held by an apparent majority of citizens, that we refer
when we talk of public opinion as approving or disapproving a certain doctrine or
proposal, and thereby becoming a guiding or ruling power Or we may think of
the opinion of the whole nation as made up of different currents of sentiment,
each embod>ing or supporting a view or a doctrine or a practical proposal Some
currents develop more strength than others because they have behind them larger
numbers or more intensity of conviction, and when one is evidently the strongest
Itbegins to be called public opinion par excellence, being taken to embody the
”
views supposed to be held by the bulk of the people
has to say, and present their own views and suggestions through various channels
of < The elite think and judge the views so expressed and
ommiinu ation
correctand modify their own, if the critics are sufficiently articulate and their
arguments are well-meaning In this process definiteness is achieved and opinion
IS crystallised If the majority of the people are convinced that the opinion that
had taken a shape is for the good of the community or the intensity of the
final
opinion, even if it is a minority opinion, is so great that there is no way out but to
accept It, It becomes public opinion But the criterion of such an opinion must be
the general welfare of the community
Alfred Lowell and Walter Lippmann were two other notable critics of the
traditional concept of public opinion and both together paved the way for the
development of the contemporary view about the meaning and nature of public
opinion Lowell argued that public opinion can never be unanimous It is always
divided and different opinions are held by different groups of people on the same
problem or problems When a particular opinion is accepted by a huge majority
4 Bryce, J ,
Modem Demoaacies, Vol I,
p 173
572 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
of the people and the minority is convinced, after full and thorough discussion of
Its pro and con, that it aims at public good, it is a public opinion Lowell
explained that if the minority docs not give free and full support or gives it
public opinion He investigated into the intcr-connection between man and his
environments in the opinion forming process He pointed out that our world being
beyond the reach, the sight, and the mind of the ordinar\ “shut in man” has to be
explored, reported and imagined, and that he really responds not to facts, but to
pseudo-environments, a most inadequate picture of the “great society '
(ienerally
speaking, he argued, man’s political ideas are moulded by the surroundings in
w'hich he lives and the information he gathers from such environments It is not
based on facts of which he mav himself be the author through the evidence
collected or seen by him His source of information is secondary coming to him
from the people living in his \icinity or emanating from various channels of
communication, and the radio He, thus, sees the world
like the newspapers
largely upon the information communicated
through the eyes of others and relies
to him and this, too, may be distorted and very often it is The result is that he
forms “a picture in his head” which it is not possible to efface This fixed pattern
of thought Lippmann calls ‘Stereotypes,” that is, thought process in formation of
opinion which is not the result of individual’s own perception and |udgement and
lacks objectivity He borrows and a borrower cannot be a c hooser
'I’he notion of rationality of man has also been questioned on the ground of
life in which men aie so inextricably enmeshed that the y have no time loi politics
even if they afe inclined to find interest From those two disabilities from which
men generally suffer Lippmann concludes that the general public is as it were
“led by the nose” by a small minority of those individuals who have the
intellectual capacity to know and understand the political problems and offer
their solutions The trend of opinion is created by this small segment of society
and public drugged with the opinions of this elite divided into different groups
is
of opinion They accept one opinion or the other which is the conscious creation
of a handful of opinion-creating individuals
Contemporary view. The contemporary view outright rejects the dogma of
homogeneity of opinion which Lippmann explained in his own charac tenstic
way mankind was within hearing that all mankind when it heard would
“all
"
respond homogeneously because it had a single soul ^'fhe contemporaiv \ icw is
that there is no single opinion but multiplicity of opinions held by difiercnt
groups and there are as many opinions as there are politically articulate groups
each commanding its own public support of that opinion A particular type of
public IS distinguished from others in its aims and objects and it offers its own
solution of political problems confronting the country strictly in accordance with
Its ideological approach The aims and objects of a trade union are different from
5 A L, Public
Lowell, Opinion and Popular Government, Cks I & II
I hose of the Employers association There may be 'ven geographical groups with
a rural or urban identification India is a cluster of religious, regional and c^stc
groups Religious groups, exclusively having members of their own community,
as Muslims and Sikhs, play a significant role in the politics of the country because
religion for them is inseparable from politics Then, there are political parties,
some national and others regional, with different labels and ideologies A group
becomes politically significant when either singly or in coalition with other
groups, is ret^lrned to power after receiving the electoral mandate and such a
majority embodies public opinion
them And it must really be an opinion firmly and convincingly held A mere
wind or gust of popular opinion cannot be an opinion of a public nature It must
have stabilising effect because public opinion does suffer from no telescopic
defects Its hori/on is vast and it lakes due cognisance of the necessities of today
and the exigencies of tomorrow A public opinion must be stable and enduring
Secondly, it should be an opinion as widely held as possible Opinion cannot be
regarded as public unless it is substantially shared by the dominant portion of the
community This does not, however, mean that it should be an opinion of the
majority Nor is unanimity required, although the more generally an opinion is
held the more public it can be said to be In fact, progress begins with the
minority and it is completed, as George William Curtis says, “by persuading the
majority, by showing reason and the advantage of the step forward, and that is
accomplished by appealing to the intelligence of the majority ” History has
examples to prove that no reform in any country met with popular
sufficient
favour at the outset In most cases a few persons took up a cause arousing very
great opposition in the beginning Their persistent efforts, however, enabled them
to enlist popular opinion in their favour Willoughby says, “in any community of
men what has assumed the character of public opinion is the result not of the
that
opinion of all its members but only of those persons, few or many, who are led to
The true worth of public opinion is that while the minority may not share
the majority opinion, but they must feel by conviction not by fear or coercion, to
accept It as it aims at the good of all and no sectional interests are involved If the
majority promotes its own interests disregardful of the interests of the community
as a whole, it is not a genuine public opinion On the other hand, if the majority
opinion is inspired by the ideals of the good of the community, it is a genuine
public opinion It means that in a representative government where the majority
party holds the reins of administration and decisions are taken by majority of
votes, the majority party should so conduct itself that the opinion held by it is par
excellence and the legislation it enacts has the spontaneity of acceptance by all
sections of the people otherwise there shall be neither peace nor contentment nor
obedience to laws nor loyal devotion to the State If the criterion of law is that it
should be the expression of the will of the people, it is a condition precedent that
it must be representative of the popular opinion
Public Opinion and democracy. It is a truism that democracy means
574 PRINCIPLES OP POLITICAL SCIENCE
almost with superhuman dignity It is true that opinion has often been perverted
and distorted by social disharmonies and it has split into sectional opinions, yet
despite Its imperfections, it is an active and propelling factor in a democratic
State The people at regular intervals are called upon to elect their representa-
tives and the electors express their opinion in favour or against certain
programmes and policies put before them by different parties If the majority
vote goes in favour of a party it gives a mandate to that particular party or
coalition of parties, who had agreed on some basic principles prior to the election,
to form government The mandate is withdrawn at the next election if the
confidence reposed in them had been betrayed In fact, no party, whether m
power or opposition, can afford to forget that to-morrow is the day of election
The ultimate appeal rests with the people, and the paity in office must remembei
those who entrusted them with power Responsibility and responsiveness to the
people keeps the government alert and removes possibilities of arbitrary exercise
of authority It, thus, ensures a certain measure of fair plav to minorities
Public opinion has also played an invaluable role in the working of political
institutions and serves as the most potent agency of co-ordination In the
presidential system, it smooths the functioning of the executive and legislative
departments and brings harmony between the two without the one being
responsible to the other What the framers of the Constitution had put as under
public opinion tries to bnng together for mutual action It also prevents or solves
deadlocks between co-ordinate legislative chambersIn Britain, the House of
Lords, though a secondarychamber has always respected the electoral mandate
The conservative majority, immediately following Labour Victory in 1945,
approved bills embracing such measures as nationalisation on the ground that
obligations and the majority party in oflficc is alive to the fact that one class rules
by sufferance of the whole nation as trustees of the public This makes them
exceedingly careful not to ride rough-shod over public opinion and violate the
decencies of their public conduct It, thus, keeps all agencies of control and
service upto certain standards of behaviour It throws out-worn laws into
desuetude and influences judicial pronouncements, bringing the administration
of justice abreast of the times
human sympathy A common man cannot be e«p. ''ted to form an opinion on the
details of all public questions, but he should be able to discern whether the ruling
party keeps to the standards of public decency by observing rules of the game
and, thus, be able to discover whether the party which he had supported before
and intends to support now is generally seeking to promote the welfare of the
community This he can do by judging the broad principles of rival policies
columns The manner in which the news are splashed and given the slant, the
tone in which they are presented and the comments offered in the editorials
depend largely on the policy of the managing agency of the daily, the intellectual
calibre, the tastes, and predilections of those to whom they arc addressed. Every
reader is deeply attached to one newspaper or the other that caters to his tastes
and leanings. The news and views projected in the daily of his choice generally
)76 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
form the basis of the opinion of the people indifferent to public affairs and the
Mcreotypcs’ of Lippmann’s conception Even those who interest themselves in
politics sift information supplied by newspapers to select that which will buttress
an existing commitment
The newspapers also provide a forum for the expression of the views and
opinions of the people on matters of public importance, policies of the
government, and ventilation of grievances Almost all the dailies reserve a few
columns on the editorial page for the expression of such views and ventilation of
grievances “Letters to the Editor” is the familar name under which they are
published A government by publicity, as a democratic government is, cannot
remain oblivious of people’s reactions to its policies and the grievances they seek
to be redressed If it does, it does so on its own peril All democratic governments
maintain their highly organised Public Relations Departments to keep liaison
between the people and the government and bring all such matters containing
comments of the press and views of statesmen to the
suggestions and grievances,
notice of the government for appropriate action Here newspapers play a vital
role in the crystallisation of public opinion
Even more sinister than government control is the influence of wealth ^Big
business has been capturing the press and treating it as a commercial enterprise
and not a vehicle of dessemination of information, knowledge and expression of
opinion The stupendous costs of production and dependence on advertisements
have rendered a large section of the press an appendage of capitalism in many
countries “Newspapers have been syndicated and sold like mechanical plants to
the highest bidders The changing whims and caprices of press magnates have
sometimes been reflected with such fidelity in the daily press as to make it a
’
laughing-stock”
To sum up, the low standards of the reading public, control by government,
influence of wealth, pandering to the interests of advertisers and the readers to
Cf Bryce J Modern Demcractes, Vol II, p 533 “Democracy may say, as Dante
8 ,
said,when he reached m his journey through hell dwelling of the god of riches, ‘Hare we
’
found wealth, the great enemy
9 Beni Prasad, A Dermcrattc Process, pp 274-75
'
57J
Radio and television arc the popular mass media of communication. They
have multiplied audiences to mijiions and opinion leadersjiave access, to.almost
every home Consequently, man sees the world through the eyes of other? imd
forms opinion as the .image opinion leaders create on his disinterested and
unthinking mind Where this mass media are a monopoly controlled by the Statp,
as in India, public opihion is clearly largcJywhatit is.madetobe. The task of,the
tontrollers is> not only to. entertain and inform the listeners but to unite the
lomm unity behind, tbc riiJers and then policies Not do opportunities exist for
equal participation and expression of independent views by other parlies' vand
sections of tfcfce opinion. 'Fbe nianusiTipts of talks and discussions are submitted
the cortirdllers much m advance of ^he sc -duled broadcasts, vetted and even
pruned^ if the subject matter is not an accordance with, the nQtmsi fixed Uy Mje
gjfiN'r/nment iri countries, where there is compeutmn, it is not hkejly ful>e gfq^t
because the initial capiUl required to launch; , medium is
m countries wherp
prohtbitiyeyexs^epl %
cKteptionally rich individnais or organisations, ^^ven
lion exists,, there is . Some control by public bodies and everywhere, jWttJh qr
wnhout official Hipport, thp modia are used 'lojqontroi mr manipuIa^teas>veUas>q .
inform, and entertam- Where all; organs, speak w^th thpir.m^^r s.. voice,, (‘xh?
(alsehood and twisted logic are morf. easily hidden*’’ But.fmer.bebeyes thqt/‘on
ihc whole, no eountfyr-whethe^i.as.m ^^land, broadc^ting under gpv^n;
pient control, oi, as in the United States, mamt^med by private enterprise-— is
leally exploiting ihe educative potehtiafities of the radio bn th^ gfdnd scale Which
" ’ ' ' . I « * 1 > . , 1 .
'
is possible
I
.
j
y . .
b ’
'
I . ). . , t '
',1,1-1 ^ . .11 ‘j.( 1
‘
Platform^ Among the most, cherished nights, >of man are freedom, pf
assrxuatioa and freedom of speech Und ' iboih the freedonife) are at the core.^ lOf thp )
•obc pedple, listen and jweigh. what they -have to say, watch 'them reacstions; and ?
10 Finer, H ,
Thf Slate in Theory and Fractice, p 385
'
I .1 ,M I
'* K/v inti s<
Ihid.
11
p 272
578 PRINCIPLES OP POLITICAL SCIENCE
ftnaJiy correct and modify their opinions in response to the cogency of their points
of views in order to elicit maximum support. But generally the audience is
recipient of opinion rather critics, and men accept it as it comes cither due to the
charismatic personality of the opinion leader or the worthwhileness of the group
to which loyalty is owed, or the superiority of leaders to whom a person defers.
Facts are seldom discusscdand realities rarely explained. The platlorm is generally
used as an opportunity to impress the truth ot one’s own point of view and the
falsity of those of others. The oratorical skill with which oervcrtcd and distorted
facts are presented flare up emotions and choke thought and reason to consider
the issues dispassionately. Swayed by emotions the mass of people follow like
meek sheep the leader who shepherds the flock to a pre-determined destination,
the conscious creation of opinion by others
brings the masses in direct contact with the formulators of public opinion
The whistle stop tours in the USA and the wide travels of many Indian
leaders,Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi and to some extent Morarji Desai,
even between elections is evidence of the importance still attached to this contact
Propaganda. The right to propagate one’s views and to convert others to his
point of view is concomitant to the freedoms of speech and association In a
plural society every organised group has its own publicity and propaganda cell
and Its main function is to popularise its platform through the medium of
pamphlets and periodical literature and disseminate inlormation and group’s
approach to the various political problems and convince the masess that the
solutions It oft'ers is in the best interests of the community It is a subtle method of
persuasion to influence opinion formation Lippmann considers it as the most
significant revolution of the modern times that is taking place in “the art of
creating consent among the governed Within the life of the new generation now
in controlof affairs, persuasion has become a conscious art and a rejiular
organ of popular government ” A popular government must conduct its
operations in mil publicity It is subject to close scrutiny and criticism, both
within and outside the legislature, and sometimes the criticism is devastating It
is the duty of the government to dcligcntly combat criticism and convincingly
put forward its own case, supported by rational facts and arguments, publicise its
achievements and the policies it intends to pursue This is done through
periodical literature issued by the publicity wing of the government and the
public statements made by ministers and spokesmen ol the ministries concerned
to allay the doubts and fears created in the public mind This is the “art of
creating consent among the government,” as Lippmann suggested
The canvas of propaganda vast It embraces national and
by publicity is
international problems that concern the nation and their international impact
The new international world order presupposes an aiert world public opinion
that closely watches and scrutmises the policies of every international entity and
its impact on the international community. It is the constant endeavour of every
government to win support even for its’ national policies on the international level
in order to command respect in the eyes of the world opinion. International
stature of every state is as much coveted now as its national respectability and
esteem
In the United States publicity and propaganda “with temptation too great”
and “with weapons” too efficient “assumed so vast dimensions that Siegfried, way
back in 1927 predicted its dangers to the political system and commented that
the “methods of organising it, crystallising it, and inflamming it to the point ot
hysteria are so well understood and the technique is so perfect that, given the
malleability of the people, there appears to be no limit beyond which they cannot
be led” His obvious reference was to the manufactured pattern of opinion with
which the people are confronted leaving no option for them to form their own
independent opinions based upon rational judgement. Sait, however, does not
agree with this conclusion He
believed that there is always a limit beyond which
the people cannot be led “Propaganda cannot succeed beyond the moment
unless It runs along with some pre-existing disposition of the popular mind or
with sympathetic social tendencies and it cannot succeed for the moment if it
conflicts senously with some pre-existing disposition or tendency Man may
be irrational in his political behaviour and conduct or he may be emotionally
swayed by his commitment to the group to which he owes loyalty or the
superiority of the leader to whom a person defers all the same, it cannot however,
be denied that man is a thinking human being and it is his innate quality He
cannot be, always and beyond a certain limit led by the nose, not even the
inmates of a lunatic asylum because there is method even in the madness of man
There is much truth in Abraham Lincoln’s classical statement that “You can fool
part of the people all the time, and all the people part of the time, but you cannot
f(X)l all the people all the time ” Man does make a choice and he has also certain
preferences to make It is the common way of life and this attitude and behaviour
transcends to his political activity as much as to his other aspects of life The real
problem of public opinion is man’s ability to judge the broad principles of rival
him and make a choice between them by discovering that to what
policies before
an extent the programme offered by a party or a group of his choice promotes
general welfare
PRINCIPLE SCIENCE
a^d the plough as part^ symbd!^ Graharft 'Wallas descr^lie’s ^his cid^lrical art of
bbliticfs as ^the crt^libn of opinion' By tfifc' deliBcfate exploitation 6f sub-
qonscious, non-rat lonaunterence
, r f . m > i >
p^ublic verdict” The evils of the party system cai> be mitigated, to a great c^tni
if citizens, are enlightened, public spinted apd yigilant. ,An
die general body of
ipdjepcrgjentand impartial press importantly contnbutes in politically educating
the people and keeps the parties alert as thqy show no, m^hee tp any and
bring into prominence the actual run pf events supported by authentic data
i
Education. The tone of public opinion depends largely on the general
character of social institutions and relationships, on the adjustment Of loyalties td
the family, to associations, to the nation and humanity It r% moulded by
education, periodical literature and the prdss, the CTperations Of the party system,
hnd the opportunities of contact between the average citizen and the administra-
tion. The more complex the environment, the greater is the need 6f educa-
tion -^-development and sharpening of intellectual Capacity, power of discrimina-
tion and ac^qmrmg social habits to accept man as man and to view the world as a
society of human beings possessing common innate feelings, desires and
aspirations. Plato and Arifelotlc recognized' the importance of edubaHon in the
body piolific and regarded it as one of 'the' fnndamehtal 'problems of' politics
ROuSScau too, had perceived its impOitance and sought' to reorgahiie edudation,
“Never was its reorganisation and diffusion more urgent than in art age which is
called upon to entrust problems of unprecendented magnitude japd c^vmplexaty to
”
the average man
ilgnoranc^i m motion, said Goethf >
is the rnoivt terrible lorce in nature The
human rnind “refuses to be satisBed with negatives, longs for positive opinions
and, in the absence of ^noy^ledge and, tia^med judgement, clutches at prejudices,
(^ogmas anti catchwords.” Education prt vents the paralysis, of mind, ign^es
thoughts and probity, chisels ideas, banishes emotmns, strengthens thp wiH and.
power of conviction and iipproves the equality pi leadfrship A rational man m a
rational society, punfidd and ennobled by,eduption,.has thqjcapacity to express
wuhout fear pr favour, his opinion, tp own nght apfl.eschf;^ t^‘^,,ehood, i^uch.a
climate enhances the quality of expectations, and behaviour ol the pepple and
their leaders That Is the gift of ledpcation and Plato,, Aristotle, ^d ,^usseau had
this virtue of educat,ion in view when tbpy emphasi^sed it&j,rqportanpe;in. poetics.
Education is, therefore, not, a , mere preparation -for » v)ooatioa and
transmission of culture, ft j)sa yiatonpf the meanmg.of life, the -starting point of a
tpiptpal ventqreJ at,€itudeof nund can be mculeaied m primary! and
Jbe nght
scijopd^ry tSChpols by th^^Teachcr, who -is more important than anything else i
the school stage Colleges and universities are its temples and they should be able
...... I vv>.- 0
c^, mfn*^ yfkom 4 w, ^ Jrag?
to see life steadily and as a whole,
fp .fca^e j3i!e,^wl^c wQfW, its tbc pf ^iit o( t^^ir
minds i^ucation js, thet^ore, an e;tercise in intellectual expansion and not a
traiiTjin^' into dhy' conformity wilh' the beliefe or ^bgtnas 'whether religious,
politick |t should he pcrmea^^^^^ by the scientific spirit of'
or nationalistic'. ‘
'
But this type of mstruction is not the order of the day^ Nor is a teacher fim
dedicated to his profession, ide does not pulsate v/ith a setose ,df idut,y,, to, instd,^n
his students the noble ideals of education that it is a quest for knowledge and,
search for truth He is a mercenary and his mam concern is tq impact inistructipp
that may equip, studeats for a vocation. At, the higher Centres of feducalipn, most
of the teachers are committed to one ideology or/the other and their mode of
instructionand approach, toward students isiin conformity Co their own leanings
or commitments. When students get out from these seats of learning* the orbit of
nxmds is over-shadowed by the ideas their teachers had designed Ao mtil in
tlieir
them* They do npt see the world with an open mind and the colourof their visjon
determines their social and political attitude and behaviour, Democracy is
tampered with such ideas and so do they effect public opinion. Herman. Finer
deplores this tendency and correctly observes, “if the teaching policy in schools
and colleges ^sumed important dimensions and a character of indoctrina|tion,
they could not possibly resist invasion irt various ways by tfie managers, bos^sess
and officials of political A, narrow path rnust be trodden that of
parties
education, not party propaganda— and a high' tempei;ature will stimulate the
attack of political disease germs from tlie 6ut,side upon the^^ies academic^’ ,
publir-adain. The term parhanieni is. den ved irom ^heTrench word* jWlHer which
means to talk and- parlement a meeting ’for discussion .Rarhament *»>, .thus,
essentially a, deliberative body whefTe* public? affairs .of high jimpfirtarue are
debated and final dcjcisionsarnved at including the l^iws of the Statu tLegisJature§
art mimcrows bodies representing different’ shades ipf opinion* and different
interests representmg various sections of the comm unityulf layViis-to be the mirror
of public opinion, It is necessary that it should be considered, threadbare, its
contents and ends examined and thrashed to the minutest detail. In this respect
legislature is par excellence a deliberative body
But the opposition must be responsible and it should play the game of
politics according to rules It is a prospective government and the ruling party
recognises its duty to govern openly and honestly by meeting cnticisrn not by
coercion or suppressing the opposition, but by rational arguments that may
command approbation of the people at large A like duty is a clear obligation of
the opposition too If the opposition behaves irresponsibly, frustrates the channels
of discussion and debate and chokes all other reasonable outlets of opinion, it not
only makes mockery of responsible government but eliminates the chances of
public opinion to crystallise Such a climate or irresponsibility offers an
opportunity to the government to act arbitrarily and even make a point for resPrt
to emergency India and few other Asiatic countries arc monuments of this
gloomy picture of governments. Sometimes, the behaviour of members of a
legislature, belonging to the ruling as well as opposition parties, is shameful To
take a single example, shouts, shreiks and din lasting 40 minutes during ‘Zero
hour* in the Rajya Sabha (the Council of States), upper chamber of Parliament of
India, on 7 August, 1980, forced an exasperated Chairman, who is also the
V^cc-President of India, to observe that he would like the proceedings to be
televised “for the whole country to see” what the custodians of public do and how
they actually behave in Parliament where decisions are taken on vital issues of
public importance.
public taste. The newspaper its readen what they want and what they
gives
dcserve.’^imilarly, the platform no sure index. Venues of meetings are packed
is
the investigator, the nature of questions asked, the manner of conducting the
interview and total detachment of the person who makes the enquiry. Lowell has
correctly said that statistics, like real pies are good if you know the person who
made them, and are sure of the ingredients as “by themselves they are strangely
likely to mislead, because unless the subject is understood in all its bearings some
element can easily be left out of account which wholly falsifiies the result.”
general election All parties tnm their political sails to every wind of popular
opinion and adjust their policies accordingly. The party in power, particularly,
keeps a ‘weather eye’ on popular reactions on the measures it adopts and the
policies It pursues A clear drift of electoral opinion from its support may even
sow a spirit of rebellion before which even a government with vast majority is
impotent Nor the party in pow'er is insensitive to the reactions of its tollowcrs. A
legislator tenaeriy nurses ms constituency and keeps himself abreast of the
direction m which opinion of his constituents moves. If he feels that the
22 Sait, E M ,
Democracy,
p 517
23 tvowcll, A L, “The Philosophy dT Politics, American Political Science Review Vol. IV,
p 10
k '
which' also finds cdho in the lobbies of the legislature and it is the primary
its
?4 Anderson, TJ ,
Ptinciple<: nf Poiittcal Science, p
SUGGBSITD READING*;
Angel 1, Nopnan. ^
lhe.Publ\i Mind ,
<
Public Opinion
liiwell,' Public Opinion and Popular Ciivfrnment ,
, i) . J,! \
The RnvtparU We 'iiuafd < *j
;
!>
WiUpughhy^iWrVy. ^
The Nature of tb( ^tak ^
, tcu" ;
,
CHAPTER XXIV
LOCAL GOVEttNlVlENt
decision at the place, and by the persons, where and by whom the incidence is
most deeply felt ” This constitutes the real probfem of local government and
from this problem emerges the need for decentralisation. Decentralisation means
distribution of governmental powers and responsibilities between the Centre and
the local areas in which the country, if it is small in size like Britain, or the
provinces of a big unitary State, or the states of a federation, are divided for
administrative convenience The provincial or state government is the central
government for all local areas within its jurisdiction. Decentralisation is, thus, a
centrifugal movement which aims at entrusting local organs created in local areas
with powers local in character, the presumption being that people belonging to
the locality can know best and appreciate their own problems and needs and can
solve them best The entire problem of local government is the problem of
personal touch with the affairs concerning the locality and their solution If the
local people arc denied association with local life, they would not only stultify
their talent, energy, initiative and enterprise, but they lose all sense of
responsibility
that thev are purely local in character and need local solution in deference to the
requirements of the people inhabiting that locality The extent of the territory
covered and the number make any difference in the
of persons ruled over do not
nature of local government The Corporation of Calcutta or Bombay exercies its
authonty over a vastly greater number of people and considerably more extensive
area than the Municipal Committee of Patiala or Kapurthala And yet both are
the units of local government performing more or less identical functions and
occupying the same constitutional position.
Sidgwick says that the term local government in a unitary State means
organs, which though completely subordinate to the central legislature,^ are
independent of the central executive in appointment and to some extent in their
and exercise a partially independent control over certain parts of public
decisions,
financeAs regards the constitutional relationship between the central govern-
ment and local government, the latter derives its powers from the former and is
subordinate to the authonty that creates it But though a subordinate body, yet it
has certain independence of action within the sphere assigned to it. It can make
its own rules and regulations, or by-laws, to perform its functions ana to control
Its finances.^
This brings into prominence the question of the functions of local bodies
According to Maclver the State seeks to fulfil three types of functions In the first
place, there are some functions which concern and affect the whole community
and are of national importance. All such functions must belong to the national or
central government There are other functions which are of a universal
character, but which for their efficient fulfilment, or on other grounds may be
assigned to the provincial governments. Lastly, there are functions which are of
peculiar concern of the locality, for example, water supply, sanitation, mainten-
ance of hospitals and libraries, running ^ public utility services, like supply of
electric energy, tramway or omnibus transpon. These services have reference to
the local needs and it seems reasonable that the locality should have dir«*ct and
fairly complete control over them. The efficient performance of all these functions
requires local expenence and knowledge of local details. As Laski put it, *'Local
Self-Government offers the best opportunity to the people to bring local
knowledge, interest and enthusiasm to bear on the solution of their own local
problems.”
It IS not, however, possible to rigidly separate the functions of local bodies.
“Local interests,” as Maciver says, “merge into national interests in variant
^
degrees,” particularly with the emergence of the Welfare State there arc hardly
any matters of local concern that are not matters ol national concern Subjects
like education and health, for example, are local in character and require local
solution, but they are really of national importance and the central government
cannot remain unconcerned about them. The control of local government over
subjects which vitally concern the locality can never be absolute in this era of
conscious, consistent and sustained process of economic and social planning. The
problem of local government is, therefore, not to draw sharp Imes between the
functions of central and local governments The real problem, as Maciver says,
“is to assure at once the reality and responsibility ot local government ’5 So long
as the local body does not exceed its powers or is not found guilty of some flagrant
piece of negligence the central government should not interfere in its perfor-
mance Professor Jenks rightly remarked that “so long as the local authority docs
Its best and keeps within the law, however mistaken that may be, the central
government has no right to interfere, even on the request ol the persons sufferuig
”
the consequences of the mistak#^
Functions of Local government. The functions of local bodies, broadly
speaking, fall under two heads direct services to the public, and indirect
functions Under the latter the local bodies are reouired to conduct election of
their members, to provide legal advice and action, to assess property for taxation,
to plan, to control and audit local finances The functions periormed under the
heading direct services are important in the interests of public welfare and are
sub-divided into three groups:—
2 Social and Physical functions. The local bodies look after sanitation,
provide a proper system of sanitary drainage, conservancy arrangements and
other conditions necessary for preserving public health Closely connected with it
IS the provision for medical relief and other arrangements for checking the spread
of diseases and epidemics. Then, come services like construction, maintenance
and repairs of roads, lighting of streets and thoroughfare, promotion of local
safety against fire and other accidents and regulation of structures and traffic.
W^VS-iaHPpJlKi
nigvlatifff# (°p4 ?upp|*cs th); 9»gb,hj^y WiWte^?- .. .r ,
'
b. .. Sirnie ra«yor Ipaal bodies render oeitaio public utility service* sueh fls
provision of vrattH* supply, (gas^ eJeetfiO ttght,ibus;OF'tram aiod local tfa^n services
ITherr fi^ been ja jndm^n'kable itKpan^iOn ip ;tbie aetivitios of tlocal Bntpin
Itod the 'United States, But tbc scopc of these functions is sourneiwhat iininiedi .m
(ndia In the undertaking of jambiuoufr civiq sqbcmfcs, desired ^ to inculcate
aesthetic, cultural and economic activities, the Acts creating local bodies do not
offer sufficient scope, , , '
, . ^ t ,( . j
‘‘grassrrpots”, democracy, a phrase whi<^ has become popular, Local bodies serve
as a rtrammg Jground , m the art of -self-government and .the c^tpenence and
knowledge acquired m local governance can best be utilised for, the wider affairs
Ydjege,” s^ys ,$ryce. “hasjejirnt the firsi Ipsson of the duty meumbept on a, citizen
p(.a great coipitiy Local tpstitutions train men, not, only tp wprk fpr others but
aip wor^effectivelySyjth others, The citizcps deyeipp commop sense, reasonable-
ness, judgment and sociability, the qualities of
moderation, aocomipqdation apd
social dependence, which are so essential for the success of democracy It is a
pWicesS of* political sbcialteatiOh tie ToCqbeVilkl eSpfecMIy argued- tfh at local
govemhient was vahiable' because assoemted citizens with cach other and with
it
When all problems of administration are not central prdblcfhs the dbvlous
inffliwof?! IS that those functions of gOMemment^hich affect teamlyfOCfSolely the
mhabitai}>ls-«f hmiied portion of a ooUntry^should be placed under the speaal
ar
control of.tlun.section Of' the- community^. Local knowledge bnngs about a closer
adaptauon-pf admmrstraHYie ^tivAtwTor itbere i$»a: consciousness of.tjommon
common noed^..i‘^Neighbou?hood,’’«ays Laski,f‘4nakiDSius automati-
cally aware of mterests' which impinge 'Upon us more idtrectly ubon
othersi^h The central gavertimeift-bveryofteirviidifferent ct>these interests^ anduf
it interests itself in them at all, its transactions are subject to red-tapism which
7 Laaki, H ,
A Oramimr of Poltltcs, p 41
8 Ibtd.
'Sfe
I
John Stuart i^ill and l^eiTc^quevfflre'^rgued thkt lodal in^tUtiohs'bf
"^pth
govemrneht prbmbte' virtue ih their’ bhizens fHe sinalf uhil of gov^Witodrit',
Which '^hey h^oid^'fosteres civic mdrahty'by Unkihg thedkefciSc df libKtidaV]^^^^?!"
with the ednsepWnde flowing therefrorri A ditij^fen o!f a ideality fdets that
trustee of ‘^h‘e pub!i(5: gdod' He'deiC^^ttds 'his 'authodty’bf gdy'erhinghirii^ff'td^life
fellow citizens and' ^sesses whether they are deserving or uhwdtthy 6i that ^tmsi
If they betray the trust reposed in them the confidened Is'Withdrawn ahd ’dthdrk
Who' are deemed' woi^hy of the jdb are entrusted wit*h it It is a cOrttititiousplrocess
of tcspdnsrbihty atid vigilance which is theessetice of a democratic a!tattgdfncnt^l ‘
and above all itiefficienly At the same' time, centralisation meaTrs^ the presehcb
arid functioning of tfsttorighiireaucracy BureaUctacy may create andyurovide’fdl
condition^ of an effective and efficient 'gbvcrnrhcbt,’ivhich is, rid dd'Ubl, the natrire
of a good government But' a'gotki gdveirrittierit^ ho ^listitutc for sefif- ' iii
govertiment Unless local bddies dire entrusted’ with active poWetS, the^cdhtirlil
authority will not irieieiy stifle all’ loddl’ initiative, but de^ii*6y '
*
th^
Welhspring df local knowledge iand- local ukterestw-iithtnit which it tsaonpi pOssibly
Bovdrmrierit:;
•'m PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Russia IS the home of socialism, both national and local The town Soviets,
which are the Russian prototypes of Indian Municipal Committees, besides
exercising the usual municipal functions, regulate also the entire political and
economic life of the local community Commerce, industries, retail trade,
cooperation, housing, land partition, criminal justice, recruitment and mobiliza-
tion, protection of the revolutionary regime, supervision and application of the
national progress, etc ,
all come under its junsdiction The Soviets also supervise
and control all the organs and institutions of government functioning within
their area, and may voice the dissatisfaction of the local community with any of
them when necessary They act in the dual capacity of agents of the central
government and the representative bodies of the local community
Compared with local bodies of advanced countries, the functions of
municipalities in India are less extensive principally in three directions, namely,
police, trading cntciprises, and the big group of social services comprising health,
housing, sickness and unemployment insurance Some of these functions are not
even legally permitted to the municipalities Apart from the legal restrictions, the
main difference between Indian municipalities and their foreign prototypes is
that in respect of legally permitted functions, like education or water supply, the
actual standard of development here is very low Then, the government of the
local bodies in India is neither local nor is it self-government. They have not the
means to extend their activities even if permitted by law Their own resources are
not sufficient They have to depend to a large extent on the financial help of the
State governments through grants- in-aid, loans, etc. The authority that pays
must also control and direct The autonomy of the local bodies, accordingly,
vanishes under all encroaching control and direction of the Deputy Com mis-
LOCAL OOVERNMENT 591
tioner. The Control of the State government is ubi mitous and a minor lapse may
mean supersession of a local body. The action may even be politically motivated.
What the entres of local government say is true to a great extent, particularly
in a country like India where the vision of the people is blurred by the bamers of
localism and regionalism. To love one’s home and locality is the natural instinct
of man and there is nothing wrong in it provided it does not inhibit men in
performing their higher duties towards their country and its people as a whole It
IS our membership of the State which bestows upon us the benefits of devolution
m our
of authority and the privileges of working for others with others living
neighbourhood Once this becomes the norm of the political behaviour of man,
local government fulfils the purpose of common consciousness of common good.
It binds the people living in different areas in a community of feelings and
interests and in these feelings narrow localism finds no place
Willoughby suggests a concrete reform He says that local officers should be
appointed by the State or provincial Government, but a local advisory council in
each area, consisting of the eminent and trustworthy citizens, may be associated
with them The advisory council should be given the responsibility and duty of
advising local officers with local problems, to bring to the attention of their
superior officers all cases of lapses on their part and failures to perform their
duties properly and diligently, to suggest to such authorities proposals which they
deem and to protest against the action of the government where they
advisable,
believe that their areas are not receiving equitable treatment But this is not the
real solution of the problem Nor does it advance the cause of local government
which aims to inculcate the spirit of intelligent and creative citizenship.
Whatever be the defects of local government, “grass-roots” democracy froms
a vital element of democracy for the modem State. The absence of healthy local
Robson has aptly
political roots of the disaster said, “Democracy on the national
The position in thC Oriitdd 'Sfktes i^ rather s^pprtdhble ahd there cdOipl^ li^
administration the mystic hands of the Deputy Commissioner and the Commis*
Sioner, as representattves of the state governments, make' ai direction to control
their functions ’’ ;
- -J .,,>,•>> . ;
•
r*
;
knowledge, most •rmporikht, the need of unffonmity least ’evident, and the
cooperation of pnvaee and govcrnmciital' agencies. I fkelyi to tcB'tnostiflWhere Jthe
Interests Icdnoerekcd are ckrarly ’common to all parts of the dtate or where thb
advantagds of; uniformity re Overwhelming cbntrbl over (the odrainisdration
shojubd be national and not local But;atngid sepairatum of local interests is rarely
^fuaplete . A carefully adjusted cooperation of local and oehtral. oigons* Biiaften
required to obtain the. best bcsults JBxpcrienoc'had sHowjai.that the central
! ,
(
points out, “the central government has grcau»- enlightenment derived from
greater general knowledge, wider experience and more highly trained intellects.”
But such a control should be exercised with a view to the efficient discharge of
local duties and responsibilities. Undue interference and direction is bound to
destroy local initiative and local responsibility Excessive central control may also
encourage favouritism in the local services, thus, vitiating the very idea of local
While we do not discount the practical utility of central control over local
bodies, It may, however, be emphasised that the degree of control should vary in
proportion to the efficiency of a local body. Were all local bodies of the same
standard of efficiency, the problem of supervision and apportionment of functions
would have been easier But this is not so. Everywhere the central government is
continually faced with the difficulty that all local bodies are not equally efficient.
This may be essentially due to the differences in the size of local areas and
resources of local bodiesThe smaller municipalities, howsoever noble the ideal of
public spint of the citizens may be, cannot be expected to maintain the same
services as the larger bodies They have to depend on the doles of the central
lost Its validity There are no local functions in that sense now The making and
maintenance of local roads, lighting, drainage, cleansing, etc ,
have under modem
scientific analysis, been found to involve important national aspects as well.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Clarke, J Outlines of Local Government
J
Cole, GDH Local and Regional Government
CHAPTER XXV
594
THE FINANCES OF THE STATE 595
IS to be incurred and then proceeds to find out funds so as to bring the necessary
revenue A government, we may say, arranges for cloth according to the length of
the coat it proposes to have
(ii) For earning his income the individual must work He cannot order or
compel others to contribute towards his income The State, on the other hand,
issues an imperative and thereby compels persons to pay taxes The State works
only whenundertakes an economic enterprise If an individual’s income is not
it
services, like the railways, the post and telegraph service, where a profit may be
deliberately aimed at Generally, every State devises means to have a balanced
budget, that is, the total revenues must equal the total expenditures But
balanced budgets are d»fficult to obtain and they are no guarantee of sound
financial policy Sometimes it is a surplus budget and at another time the budget
IS deficit Some statesmen are of the opinion that it is advisable to have surplus
budgets in order to meet deficits in bad times
(iv) The public and the private expenditures are governed by the same
principle of maximum satisfaction In actual practice, governments seldom follow
the principle of maximum social welfare Party politics and other political
considerations influence public expenditure m a modern democratic State
(v) Finally, the State should not, and usually it does not, discount the
future at as high a rate as an individual Individual expenditure is generally
governed by immediate and not by far distant considerations The long-period
factor IS especially important m the services rendered by the State It may even
undertake schemes and incur expenditure which are to benefit only future
generations
THE BUDGET
Definition. We and howsoever
said that every State performs functions
broad or limited the functions it undertakes, it must tackle the two-fold problem
of obtaining funds to pay for the services it renders, and to manage the
expenditure to be incurred thereon Public funds are raised primarily through
taxation, although there are also other sources of revenues Generally, expendi-
ture is controlled through a detailed financial plan known as the Budget The
Budget IS a detailed financial statement, drawn in advance of the fiscal year to
which It applies, which lists in detail all anticipated expenditures and revenues,
in a balanced accountant’s statement. The fiscal year in most of the countries
begins on April 1, and ends on March 31, of the following year
No State ever had a financial system entirely planless, but until comparati-
vely modem times, well-coordinated schemes were the exception rather than the
rule. Toward the end of the eighteenth century Bntain, recognizing the necessity
for reviewing fiscal policy as a whole, introduced what may be considered the
596 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
earliest modem
budget The use of the word budget in public finance originated
“The Chancellor of the Exchequer opened his Budget,” which
in the expression
was applied in Parliament to the annual speech of the Chancellor of the
Exchequer explaining his proposals for the balancing of revenue and expenditure.
By a budget must present a complete picture of the Government’s
definition,
finances Long-term financing of major public schemes constitutes the capital
outlay budget, and should show in detail the cost of the capital schemes and the
methods by which the cost is to be met The expenditure for the current year, for
ordinary running expenditures of the Government, and for such extraordinary
expenditures such as is necessitated or likely to be required as relief, etc.,
constitute the current budget. This must likewise show the means of raising funds
to meet the expenses, whether by taxation, miscellaneous revenues or otherwise
The budget must also give a clear picture of the public debt Although a
complete statement of the total debt need not be included, if sound financing is to
be effected, a condensed statement of it should be made, with statement of the
obligations to mature during the financial year
submitted to the Director of the Bureau of the Budget The Finance Ministry
examines the estimates in its relevant branch and determines the reasonableness
of the demands It is the work of the Finance Ministry to prepare a coordinated
statement of the needs, itemized by various Ministries or Departments, and a
statement of funds required to meet them Often the Finance Department has
wide discretionary power to change the requests submitted to it
In the United States, the President transmits the Budget to Congress with
his message outlining his financial scheme The Constitution establishes the
supremacy of Congress by specifymg that “no money shall be drawn from the
Treasury but in consequence of appropriation made by law ” The Constitution
also provides that all bills for raising revenue shall originate in the House of
Representatives Usage has added to it that the appropnation bills are also
initiated there The Senate possesses co-equal powers with the House of
Representatives in accepting or rejecting financial bills
other than the provision of army, navy and police, and that a defence of quite a
different kind was necessary The community, as a whole, must unite to enforce
right against might, to protect the economically weak against the economically
strong, to prevent the exploitation of the poor by the rich and to restrict the
growth of poverty and disease It came to be acknowledged that certain services
of public utility could not be left to private enterprise The State, in brief, has
positive functions to perform
1. The first object of the public cxp)cnditure is the provision of services yielding
indivisible benefit. In this category are included maintenance of law and
order, defence, safeguards against spread of diseases and epidemics, etc.
1. Robinson, M.E ,
Pitblu Fmanct, p. 7.
598 PRINCIPl ES OI> POLITICAL SCIENCE
minimum wages, better and more sanitary houses, free and advanced educational
and highly developed facilities and medical aid, it produces better
facilities, free
fed and more contented citizens who arc a real asset to the nation But this can be
possible only when the guiding principle of public expenditure is the attainment
of maximum social advantage According to Dalton, ‘The two chief conditions of
an increase in the economic welfare are, first improvement in productive powers,
and, secondly, improvements in the distribution of what is produced ”
PUBLIC REVENUE
The provision of adequate revenue to meet the ever-increasing expenditure
of the modern State
is obviotisly a matter of considerable difficulty and intricacy.
(ii) Revenues from private income, including taxation in all its forms
2 Irregular Revenues. These are miscellaneous sources, casual and irregu-
lar in nature such as fines, penalties, gifts, forfeitures, etc
I'axes are usually classified into direct or indirect, although these classifica-
tions are sometimes over lapping and are not always mutually exclusive Direct
taxes are those paid by the individual direc*'y on the basis of his possession or
receipt of property They may be based on real or personal property, tangible or
intangible, owned
a sf)ecified time, or received during a specified period
at
Indirect taxes are those which are levied on particular articles, or transactions,
and whicli may be borne by others than those from whom the tax collector
receive payment
(i) of the earlier theoiies was that the contribution made by every
One
citizen to meet the expenditure of the State should be proportionate to the
benefits received by him from the State A tax was, accordingly, regarded as a
payment made by each individual m return for benefits received from govern-
ment There was, as such, a direct quid pro quo in a tax
The benefit theory' is held to be unjust and impracticable It is obviously
inconceivable that the weakest members of the society, who may be assumed to
benefit most from the services of the State, should be made to pay the heaviest
contribution. But as Bastable points out “If security is to be sold like an ordinary
600 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
good which yields a large income with comparatively little protest. This policy of
taxation is consistent with the maxim attributed to the French Minister Colbert
”
“Pluck the goose with as little squealing as possible
The advocates of this theory deliberately use the fiscal machine to reduce the
gap between high and low incomes, or would employ and such other
tariffs
2. Op at., p. 299.
THE FINANCES OF THE STATE 601
(i) “The subjects of every State ought to contribute towards the support of
the government, as nearly as possible in proportion to their respective ability;
that is in proportion to the revenue which they respectively enjoy under the
protection of the State In the observation and neglect of this maxim consists
what ”
is called the equality or inequality of taxation
Equality here involves equality of sacrifice, and not equality of the amount
paid The poor and the rich both should pay what they can pay and equality and
justice demand that no one should pay more than what he is able to pay.
(ii) “The tax which each individual
bound to pay, ought to be certain,
is
and not arbitrary. The time of payment, manner of payment, the quantity to be
paid, ought all to be clear and plam to the contributor, and to every other
person.”
A tax should not be arbitrary Every one must know well in advance what he
has to pay, when he has to pay, and where he has to pay. When he knows all this,
a tax-payer can adjust his expenditure with the least inconvenience. The
government, too, becomes certain, as far as possible, of its receipts
(ill) “Every tax ought to be levied at the time or m a manner, in which it is
”
most likely to be convenient for the contributor to pay it
A tax should be collected at the time when the tax-payer has the means to
pay If public authorities demand payment when it is not convenient for the
tax-payer, it becomes burdensome and there is probability that it may not be
paid at all. A convenient tax is justified on the grounds of productivity and good
government, and also from the point of the tax-payer, particularly when he
belongs to the poor class in the community. The greater the convenience the less
waste of time and of resources involved in collection and payment
(iv) “Every tax ought to be so contrived as both to take out and keep out of
the pockets of the people as little as possible over and above what it brings into
”
the public treasury of the State
The machinery required for collecting taxes should be simple and economi-
cal so that the cost of collection and the loss to the individual and the community
should be small in proportion to the proceeds It is, therefore, necessary that an
able Finance Minister should always sec that the cost of collection docs not
exhaust the major portion of the receipts. Similarly, a sound system of taxation
should scrupulously avoid all taxes which discourage saving and hamper the
growth of capital
Following are a few more principles for a good system of taxation which may
be added to Adam Smith’s canons enumerated above
(v) From the point of view of the government a tax should be productive of
revenue But no tax should be imposed which may tend to diminish the economic
resources of the community A tax may be immediately productive of a lai^
revenue, yet under certain conditions it may ultimately result in a reduction in
the nation’s income.
ones. always cheaper to collect a few remunerative taxes than a large number
It IS
between the government and the tax- payer A simple and intelligible system of
taxation creates confidence, a better appreciation of the needs of government and,
at the same time, it injects political consciousness into a citizen
PART III
THE FUNCTIONS OF
THE STATE
CHAPTER XXVI
Having studied the origin and machinery of the State, we now ask the question ;
what IS all that machinery for^ What is it to do^ In other words, what arc the
proper functions of the Stated The answer to this question is the real issue of
Political Science and, yet, this issue has not so far foynd a satisfactory solution. It
IS no answer to say that the State must act for the general welfare or common
interest There is no activity of the State and no action of government, down to
the most ruthless and tyrannical, which has not been defended on the ground of
general welfare Gan we, then, lay down any general principles by which to test
the activities of the State and say with definiteness that the claim of general
welfare is justified by the results^ Here we return to the same old question with
which we began our study of the State what is the purpose of the State? The
purpose of the State can best be understood if we clearly understand the
good life The nineteenth century German theory, represented in its highest
development in the writings of Hegel, regarded the State as the highest creation
of reason and morality The individual is moral because he is a member of the
State He should, accordingly, render complete submission to the State It is, m
fact, the moral duly of the individual to obey the Stale in whatever commands it
may issue There is no limit to its functions A dictator, too, will pay scant
attention to the distinction between the State and society There is no sphere of
life which his State will not cover To Hitler and Mussolini there was nothing
above the State nothing beyond it, nothing besides it The same are the demands
of Soviet Russia and other Communist States of her pattern
The State exists within a society. Their geographical areas may be the same
1 Maclvcr, R M ,
The Modern i^tetie, p. 5
605
606 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
and their membership may also be identical But they are distinct in origins, aims
and functions. Society is natural and instinctive; the State is the creation of will
and reason “The organization of the State is not all social organization”, as
Maciver says, “the ends for which the State stands are not all ends which
humanity seeks, and quite obviously the ways in which the state pursues its
objects are only some of the ways in which, within society, men strive for the
objects of their desire ” The State is, thus, not co-equal and co-extensivc with
society Its functions do not embrace the whole range of human activity It exists
for one single purpose whereas society exists for a number of purposes, “some
great and some small”, as Barker puts it, “but all in their aggregate deep as well
” “
as broad
Though we do not equate the State with society, yet the State provides the
framework of the social order The State, as Laski says, is a way of regulating
human conduct and it presenbes rules of behaviour by which men must regulate
their livcs.^The State, as such, represents the highest form of social organization
It exists to regulate and cement social relations It binds people together and
enjoins upon them certain uniform rules of behaviour without which a
well-ordered social life is not possible Society, in brief, is held together by the
State But the State is an agent of society and as an agent of society, it has certain
rights. Like all other rights, the rights of the State, too, are relative to its
functions The State is, accordingly, not exempt from the imperative “Thus far
and no further”, to which all agencies of society are subject
The distinction between the State and society is all the more necessary to
understand, because the will of the State is in actual operation the will of
government The sovereignty of the people is, no doubt, a dogma of democracy
and It is the basis of all political decisions, but in actual practice it is nothing
more than an indication m a vague manner of the general direction in which the
sovereign people wish to see events move The effective source of State action is
the small numberof men who constitute the government and whose decisions are
legally binding upon the community If the State and society were to be identical,
all human relations and social activities will ultimately be at the mercy of the few
men who constitute the government and act on behalf of the State In the name
of the general welfare and common interest the government may prescribe
anything Its interference in the social order may become all-comprehensive, and
instead of acting as an agent of society for the maintenance of rights of man, it
may begin creating nghts “as the lordly dispenser of gifts”
The Purpose of the State. The government, says Laski, “are the trustees and
governors and it is their business to glean the needs of society and to translate
those needs into terms of effective statutes The purpose of the State finds its
personihcation in them ” The purpose of the State is the ultimate aim for which
It exists The aim of the State is two-fold the promotion of individual welfare
and the realisation of the collective ends of society It is a means to an end and
not an end in itself and being a means, it has to perform certain functions But
moral means must be adopted to achieve desirable ends Every act is in
pursuance of an end and the end is merely the result of a scries of acts that arc
undertaken as means The functions of the State, which are the means, must be
justified in relation to its primary end The end of the State is to create conditions
2 "Barker, E ,
Principles of Social and Political Theory,
p 42
3 Laski, H ,
An Introduction to Politics,
p 15
THE LlMITb Uf
only the clumsy and stupid, as Maciver says, who seek to attain their ends by
force Force holds nothing together and when it is made the basis of the State, it
crushes the personality of men and destroys the very social order which the State
is supposed to build and sustain By its very existence the State performs a service
and, as such, and commands But “ft commands only because it serves, it
it orders
owns only because it owes” The State owes to its members a duty to build and
sustain that universal framework of social order within which their lives may seek
out the ways of their fullest development The State is an organisation of force to
the extent that it performs its functions adequately and efficiently in creating^
an atmosphere in which human purpose can be realised without undue
interference or disruption The mere fact that the State retains force and reserves
to Itself Its use deters individuals and groups to use force in the attainment of
their ends therefore, a potential instrument and the State should not use it
It is,
unduly Let force remain subservient to the common welfare and common will If
It becomes master, it will destroy not only “material goods but also the cultural
4 Maciver, R M y
Tht Modern State, p 420
608 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
gains, the spirit of truth, the work of the mind, the fertility of thought.”^ Hitler’s
Germany and Mussolini’s Italy are its glaring examples.
protect and promote the well-being of its citizens, the State is compelled to use
force, then, forceshould be justified by its value to the society. The State, in brief,
does not possess force without conditions As an agent of society, its purpose is
service and those who serve strive for results rather than exalt for power.
imperative ‘thus far and no further’, that is to say, what the State should do and
what It should not do Men’s views on this problem have varied widely at
different periods of history and from one country to another In the Europe of
Middle Ages, life was essentially ruled by customs and traditions, whose control
was no less rigid than that of the State But there was no State in the real sense of
the term The State and the Church both ruled together, the former in the
temporal and the latter in the moral sphere The functions of the State were to
maintain law and order, to dispense justice and to conduct dealings with foreign
States There were no good roads and the only method of transport being the
horse, the average individual lived in a small and isolated community, in which
he was far more conscious of the impact on his life of his employer, the lord of the
manor and the priest, than he was of the State
centuries, the rigid mediaeval system of control, basedon custom and tradition,
gave way to systems of private enterprise These were encouraged by governments
themselves as increased production increased the national resources and so did
the national power and prestige Industrialization, however, had its own
problems changed the social and economic structure of society and brought
It
into existence the new relationship between the employer and the worker
replacing the mediaeval relationship The pace was accelerated in Britain which
was the first to establish a national State In France, the rhythm of change was
differentand feudal relationships persisted right up to the Revolution of 1789
Russia was on the other extreme and here pre-industrial civilisation persisted up
to the revolution of 1917 The process of transformation to modem industrial
capitalism in the nineteenth century so radically changed the nature of Britain’s
civilisationthat enlightened public opinion demanded from the Government
enactment of labour regulations which should create hygienic labour conditions
m the factories and save the industrial labour from the spread of disease
Nevertheless, in Britain of the nineteenth century, politicians and economists
believed that the State should interfere only in so far as intervention was
5 Ikd, p, 423
6 ljuki, li.],A Grammar p 37
7 m p 28.
of Politics,
THE LIMITS OF POLITICAL CONTROL 609
From laissez faire to welfare. When Marx published the first volume of his
Das Kapital or Capital in 1867, the picute of society was not fundamentally
different He concluded that the Siaic was using its authority exclusively m the
interest of the economically dominant class He argued that poverty was
unnecessary and it was the result of special economic and political conditions It
could lx* got nd of by changing those conditions, but the economically dominant
class, which was and used the machinery of the State to
also the ruling class
prepetuate its own would never attempt any change to remove poverty
interest,
State to step in and to interfere in what had been hitherto the citizen’s private
affairs, with the object of removing injustices of the capitalist system They
protested against the six lal and economic anarchy which the capitalist system had
produced and proposed that land and capital be placed under social ownership in
order to ensure a more equitable distribution of the means and appliances of
happiness From the economic point of view they argued that the industry would
be more efficient when it w'as scxialized, and from the moral point of view it
would ensure justice Witli the social legislation of the nineteenth century, there
was born a concept of positive State interference which was to develop during the
following century into the social service State, with its comprehensive svstem of
scxial securitv from the cradle to the grave
Since then the provinit of the State has extensively increased Governments
in all countries have now fully realized that chronic want among their people is
an economic and a political danger to the State, for the economy and the
liability
general system of government stand in integral relations to each other and the
contours ot one w ill inevitabl) be shaped by the outlines of the other But all
governments do not perform identical functions They vary with the degree of
social and economic development of the people and adjust themselves as their
needs and requirements demand No government can tor long remain unrespon-
sive It must ultimately undertake tasks which are dictated by changing
conditions, though one government may be more alert in sensing the needs of
time or demands of the pc’ople But w'hatever the government does must be
explained and justified in relation to the pnmarv end of the State, the common
good Common good cannot be divorced lioni the individual good Common
good really means the all-round perfection — physical, mental, moral, religious,
economic — of all individual members ol the State, and even the rest of humanity
an exclusion is for their own all-round perfection This means that tlie conception
of the ‘police State’ has been finally abandoned and with it the old classification
of the functions of the State Today, the State is accepted as a ‘welfare’ or ‘Social
State’ with new significance of functions it is required to perform These are
divided into three mam categories Protective or Police, Welfare or Ministrant,
Economic and Regulatory
1 Protective or Police functions. Protective or Police functions are those
indispensable and essential activities of the State upon which its existence
depends, such as the preservation of external security and the maintenance of
internal peace and order If the State is to exist as an independent sovereign
State, Its first duty is to secure universal order within its frontiers and to
safeguard itself from all probabilities of foreign aggression For this purpose, the
State must be equipped with military forces of all kinds and m possession of
modern weapons Defence of the State also necessitates manning the industrial
resources of the country and applying nation’s scientific knowledge to the task of
defence As long as we live in a world where war is an ever present possibility, the
defence activities of the government will be many and varied and they will, as
such, impinge on all aspects of the lives of citizens
the State must keep adequate police force and make laws universal in application
with a view to regulate the conduct of its citizens The offenders should be
punished and the crime repressed The government, accordingly, administeis
civil and criminal justice, and protects cttizens in the enjoyment of their life,
liberty and property and other civil and political rights The State, today, also
exercises contiol over certain aspects of the family life of the individual such as
prescribing conditions for marriage, divorce, inheritance, adoption and care of
children, provision for the maintenance of wife, etc These are essential conditions
of a happv familv The Slate is a system of relationships between individuals and
family is the basic and moral system of such relationships
Another function closely connected with the maintenance of internal peace
and external security is the development and management of the majoi agencies
of transportation and communication Well developed means of communication
and transpcjrt make the State a viable unit, knit the people in fraternal bonds of
togetherness and enable them to share one another’s weal and woe They are, in
brief, the nerve centre of the country’s social, economic and political life They
There are other essential functions that all except the very simplest
governments undertake They include the establishment and maintenance ol
certain standards with which all subjects of the State must comply in their
dealing with their fellow citizens This function may extend to the regulation of
markets, the control of weights and measures, minting and coming of money, the
control of prices, etc These functions are so primary that they found their due
place in the Athenian list of State functions
2 Welfare function —Order and Protection. But these are mere police
functions and no State can afford to remain simply this Being an organ ol
society, it IS the primaiy duty of the State to serve the purpose for which it came
into existence It must create those conditions and provide for an atmosphere in
which every man gets an opportunity for the development of his faculties so that
he may grow and expand to the best of his capacity and ability This is the real
THE LIMITS OF POLITICAL CONTROL 611
essence of order, which the State is charged to maintain Order should not be
merely for order’s sake It should serve to ensure jus jce and happiness for all by
regulating the dealings of citizens with one another, by checking disorder and
high-handedness of one class of people over others, and by maintaining all those
rights which are fundamental to the existence and spiritual uplift of man When
the government does so, the order which it maintains becomes a part of the larger
task of the State, or to put in the words of Maciver, “It is not order for the sake of
order but. order for the sake of protection and of conservation and development/’
To protect the weak against the strong is the modern interpretation of the
mainienance of order and, consequently, it is an essential function of the State. It
means that the policies of the government should be so determined and its laws so
formulated that equal opportunity is provided to all to grow and expand and no
one IS denied the basic necessities of health and decent living simply because of
the accident of birth or misfortune which is beyond man’s control To express it
in the words of President Roosevelt the Stale should strive to establish a social
order which should ensure “freedom fiom want” and “freedom from fear” for all
These are welfare functions and a government which claims to be responsive to
the needs of the people cannot afford to ignore them“This expansion” in the
functions of the State, Maciver remarks, “has done much to change the very
conception of the Slate, so that from being, in the eyes of those subject to it,
mainly an instrument of power it has become, so far as its internal activities are
concerned,m large measure an agency of service” The State has a collective life
and the attainment of common purpose depends upon the welfare of every
individual
d'he welfare of the people involves in the first place, their phvsical welfare It
IS now generally admitted that the State has a definite responaibihty for the
physical welfare of its membets, because the happiness and prosperity of a nation
are diiectly dependent upon their physical fitness and vitality The public health
schemes, on which every State today spends large sums of money, are both
preventive and curative The idea of prevention is largely of the twentieth
century origin Diseases must be fought and checked, hygiene developed and the
medical aid guaranteed In industry, hours of work must be limited, conditions of
work in shops and factories must be fixed, and security against sickness and
underemployment and unemployment ensured It is impossible to
disability,
make a complete list of those departments of collective life which may eithf be
regulated or controlled by the State in order to maintain the health of its
members Good health is both a prerequisite for the success of the personality of
the individual and a necessary condition for the enjoyment and exploitation of
success of the individual himself as well as that of the State itself Healthy
citizens are the health of the State, the sinews of its prosperity, prestige and
res pec t
last hundred to hundred and fifty years, from two absolutely different causes
France and Prussia were the pioneers of State education on the ground that the
State could not leave the making of citizens to private hands “It must mould the
young to the proper shape, give them the right point of view, exclude dangerous
ideas and risky experiments ” It was, therefore, not a concept of the Welfare State
and the plea for the development of human capacities which induced France and
Prussia to adopt the system of State education
But the most important function of the Welfare State is the creation of
conditions which assure social justice by removing social iniquities cieated by
capitalism Poverty and unemployment have been problems in all except the
most primitive society These problems did not become less acute with the
advance of civilization, on the contrary, industrialization involved profound
changes in society it many new problems Intervention of
and brought with
money economy created the w^age-system and urbanization, and labour mobility
weakened the communal ties, leaving the worker to rely primarily upon himself
and his ability to earn For the great majority, therefore, constant employment
became a necessity and the unproductivity of old age a grim prospect ITen,
there were the regours of underemployment, uncertainty of employment,
permanent or temporary disability involved through accidents and sickness and
the horrors of the wage-system
effects of business cycles. Britain was the first tc insure workers against the
hazards of unemployment A national compulsory unemployment insurance plan
was introduced there in 191 1, and during the following quarter century, most of
the major European countries passed similar laws The Beveridge Plan in Britain
attempted to provide what has been called “the cradle to grave security” and m
pursuance of that Old Age Pension, Unemployment and Sickness Insurance,
Maternity and Accident benefits to workers were put into operation The Labour
Government devised a scheme of National Health In the United States there are
Old Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance, and a Plan for Public Assistance for
needy old persons who could not benefit under the insurance system, children
who had been deprived of support and care because of the parent’s death,
disability, or absence, and needy blind persons The Social Security Law of 1935
functions including a part in the running of the economic system The State
must, therefore, help all those forces that work away from it or against it So long
as the activity of the State has relation to the common life and it promotes the
welfare of the people by securing and protecting as effectively as it may a social
order in which justice, social, economic and political, informs all the institutions
of the national life, it is a relevant activity of the State and it must undertake.
It means that the State should be a direct agent of the economic life of the
Titmuss, Richard M ,
Essays on “The Welfare State^\ p 54
614 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
direct its policy that wealth, its sources of production, and its means of
distribution shall not be concentrated in the hands of the few, but shall be so
distributed as to subserve the common good. It is not necessarily the Socialist
State, but, in fact, the modern State which has become a direct sharer in the
economic activities The old self-rcgulating, self-restoring mechanism has comple-
tely failed necessitating the positive intervention of the State in order to restore
by whatever measures the social equilibrium
The uviervcntion of the State manifests itself in many ways It adjusts its
tariff policy to assist nascent, indigenous industries and renders help to those
some parts of the country In some cases the State has appeared as a competitor
to private enterprise and in others it excludes private enterprise It owns and runs
vanous social services as the railways, canals, postal, telegraph and telephone
systems, electricity, water, transport and even industrial undertakings
values, and by pioducmg glaring contrasts between extreme wealth and extreme
poverty, where conditions are such that two- thirds of the wealth are owned by an
insignificant percentage of the population and the ownership of property is
regarded as the badge of a class This class, which becomes a class of vested
interests, mans the political power and directs the whole machinery of
THE LIMITS OF POLITICAL CONTROL 615
government in furthering the interests of its own class alone. The result is social
and political and twenty-three centimes ago Aristotle attributed
instability,
revolution to “the dlsproportional increase in any part of the State. When the
rich grow numerous, or properties increase, the form of government changes to
oligarchy or government of families”
The modern capitalist State is confronted with two other problems of vital
importance which characterise the prevailing system of production. The first is
the hugeness of the scale of production which involves the hugeness of productive
machine in men and equipment, and the extreme complexity and delicacy of the
financial organisation on which it rests. Hugeness of the mechanism of
production entails rationalization of industry and the emergence of monopolistic
organizations The whole process of this hugeness is pregnant with dangerous
results Hunger for foreign markets necessitates resort to imperialistic policies
leading to international hostility and wars Within the country it means
displacement of capital and labour, manipulation of prices to the disadvantage of
the consumer, speculation and over-capitalization and social evils and illegal
practices to kill competition
The second problem is the blindness with which and in which private
enterprise works The capitalist production is largely unorganized, unrelated and
purposeless, because private enterprise is haphazard and is inspired by selfish
aims and immediate benefits Each producer works on his own and from his own
point of view What the individual producer does, so does every industry. No
industry cares to relate Us production to other industries and the total needs of
the country as a whole Each works for its own individual profits and
maximisation of Such an unco-ordinated production results into periodi-
profits
cal breakdowns and widespread disorganisation which paralyse the economic life
of the nation, causing widespread unemployment and distress
Just as a man’s livelihood is the basic factor of his existence, so the basic
factor m any society is, as Tawney puts it, “the way it earns its living ” Political
activities rest on a foundation of economic activities Jihey go a long way in
determining the nature of the State, by what class of men it will be governed, and
in whose interests politics will be run No State can now afford to remain
oblivious of the forces which industrialism has released and the capitalist system
has established The old system of political control has become absolutely
irrelevant The social control of economic forces is the essential need of the
modern State If it does not do its duty, these forces would become so dominant
as to destroy the basic unity of society “Hence, the need for new integrations, in
which men will feel they are employed m worthwhile occupations and will be
”
able to relate their lives to understood and accepted ways of life
One way of the new integration is the nationalisation of production on
which certain States have entered By nationalisation is meant the taking over by
the State not only the public utility services, like postal, telegraph, telephone, and
railway services, but the department of production, hitherto the field of the
activities of competing and combining individuals and their establishments. The
deliberate intention in nationalisation is and the profit
to destroy competition
motive, which is the raison d’etre of private enterprise and on which the industry
had been built In Soviet Russia, all land, its natural deposits and principal
means of production are owned by the State and operated by the people on
behalf ol the State. There is absence of exploitation and oppression and, thus,
new social relations have been established, not on individual interests but on
616 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
co>operation and mutual assistance All are workers and everyone works for
himself and for a society composed of workers There are a few more countries
which have followed the Soviet pattern Others, which have not followed Russia
in completely nationalising the whole productive and distributive process, have
made a start with some of the key industiics with an expanding programme In
these countries in which nationalisation is only partial and exists side by side
with free enterprise in other industries, distribution remains free, sometimes
within the limits of rationing and price control The essential feature of such a
system is that the State controls the whole output of certain commodities, decides
how much shall be produced and of what quality, even fixes the price and
determines the scale of consumption In this way, the State substitutes its decision
for the forces of demand and supply
The policy of nationalisation resorted to by many States within the
framework of the capitalist system has been the subject of active political
controversy and in many cases the opposition parties are pledged to the reversal
of nationalisation Their main plea is that every extension of State activity means
limitation on the freedom of its citizens This is true But when the activity of the
State is directed to the furtherance of the cause of the economically and socially
weak. It really enhances the freedom of the members of the State as a whole
When the Stale ventures an enterprise with a view to minimising inequalities in
the distribution of wealth and frees society from the parasitic control of absentee
capitalism it does not restrict the freedom of its citizens, but, on the other hand,
secures for each citizen those material conditions which will give him the fullest
opportunity possible of a full life When the State does not tolerate an economic
system in which men are mere must devise means for a
tools sacrificed to profit, it
change, and when the community cannot benefit by such a system, it becomes
The advocates of private enterprise ignore the important fact that the State
with Its command of resources and its universal reach can build for the future “in
ways that no partial organisation can exert” The State does not discount the
future and it suffers from no telescopic defects It does not exploit the natural
resources, limited in quantity and the free gifts of nature, for the gain of the
immediate and of the few to the detriment of the future and the many It can,
thus, venture upon many constructive schemes and projects whose benefits will be
shared by the future generations and all alike It really means planning the
resources of the nation and planning their utilisation lor the wider interest of
society
people depends on the proper utilization of the na+ural resources. The welfare
some kind of economic planning Then, the real issue
service, therefore, turns into
lies between those who stand for economic planning within the framework of a
capitalist society and those who regard this task as impossible under capitalist
system and aim to abolish it and substitute by a socialistic order
Need for Planning. Whatever be the system of society no country can afford
to do without planning The necessity for planning is to be found in the inability
of a non-planned economy to meet the needs of the modem world Soviet Russia
was the first to experiment with Five-Year Plans and by 1932, the world
witnessed a phenomenally rapid industrialization under a most extensive
programme of construction and exploitation of natural resources By the time the
Stalin Constitution could become operative in 1936, crises, poverty, unemploy-
ment and destitution had disappeared from the Soviet land and Stalin could
proudly claim, “it is pleasant and joyful to know that the blood our people shed
so plentifully was not shed m vain, that it has produced results.” The
Constitution guaranteed to the people full economic security During the same
pericxl capitalist countries with unplanned economies were undergoing a
paralysis or, at the least, a temporary breakdown of their systems, with
proliferation of social diseases, falling prices, unemployment and stagnation both
in the economic and political life In a word, the capitalist countries suffered the
bitterest consequences of destitution in plenty Then, all economies, planned and
unplanned, alike, experienced War with its insatiable demand
for materials and
men, and the consequent pressure to conserve and plan After the War, all had to
plan for reconstruction and Russia did it admirably well In others, the
inequalities of wealth and unemployment deepened In fact, they became
intolerable in a professedly democratic society Security of employment is the
dominant demand of our times, and if for no other reason at least for that, there
is no escape from some degree or form of planning
The result is that few countries are without plans today At one extreme is
the Plan of the USSR which controls the use of virtually all resources and
labour in the country and determines the distribution of resources for different
purposes At the other is the United States which has a plan for achieving auid
maintaining high levels of employment with minimum government interference.
In between are various kinds of planned and semi-planned economies and the
Five-Year Plans of India occupy a place of precedence in this category.
What is Planning? Planning has no place under pure capitalism, for it does
not allow much room for the capitalist trinity— soveieignty of the consumer, the
tyranny of the price system, and the quest for profits In a planned economy, the
economic architects, who are the government authorities, generally determine
what use is to be made of and thereby impair the
the limited resources
sovereignty of the consumer, the basic clement of capitalist economy Their
targets are determined according to an objective decided and planned by the
government and, thus, price and income movements do not regulate the
productive process And since what is to be produced and the quantity and
quality of the produce are determined by a board in accordance with the policy
of the government, the planned economy supplants the entrepreneur, who is the
human magnet in the capitalist machine
It has been suggested that democratic planning is the only alternative to
Communism which is one hundred per cent planning as it gears the whole life of
618 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
carrying out the plans, and adjusting and devising so that things happen in the
right way and at the right place and at the right time It is the very essence of
democratic process to permit the questioning of any end at any time Carl
Friedrich has significantly said that demtxratic planning, “dedicated as il must
be to achieving the greatest satisfaction for as many as possible, cannot neglect
the reactions of all those whom a given policy aft’ects
Planning and Freedom. The most serious doubts concerning the planned
economy revolve round the issue of liberty Is it compatible with freedom^ The
U.S S.R is still to prove that its planned society can co-exist with the other
fundamental liberties The Soviet Constitution grants the right to speech, press
and assembly and other civil rights, but they must be consistent and in
accordance with the socialist way of life Vyshinsky makes this point clear He
says, “In our State naturally, there is and can be no place for freedom of speech,
press and so on for the foes of socialism ” Writers of the eminence of Friedrich A
Hayck,*^^ and Walter Lippman “ have vehemently criticised planning They
plead that it restricts the liberty of the individual and introduces statism
Lippman points out, “Not only it is impossible for the people to control the plan,
but what IS more, the planners must control the people They must be despots
who ”
tolerate no effective challenge to their authority
freedom. The true background of freedom has always been conformity rather
9 Friedrich, C J ,
Constitutional Government and Democracy, p 491
1 0 The Road to Serfdom
11. The Good Society
THE LIMITS OF POLTflCAL CONTROL 619
than chaos. But m our search for freedom we rely u^^on the traditional conformity
which the liberal age had inherited from the old community culture of the
Middle Ages Such a concept of freedom is untenable now. Our search for
freedom involves a search for a new conformity And it is “identification with
other members of the society, collective responsibility and the necessity for
possessing a common background for our attitude and behaviour”. This can be
achieved within the framework of free parliamentary institutions
welfaic of all Freedom must be responsive to the social needs and there must be a
careful balancing of social and individual interests
Our conclusions are now definite There
no State which pursues the path
is
freedom from fear, the two basic principles of social justice The measures
required to carry such a programme may give to the government important
powers over the private sector But there is no justification to regard them as a
dangerous advance on “the road to serfdom” so long as they are responsive to the
needs of the community “The government of the new liberal society,” Wilson
says, “will be economically and culturally creative ” Here democracy joins hands
with pragmatic collectivism Ernest Barker says, “Individualism and collectivism
are not the banners of two separate armies, composed of two separate bodies of
men them both, and we all serv'e under both ”
All of us fly Planning should,
therefore, be adequate to the scale and complexities of modem life It should be
flexible, continuous, in short, dynamic The guiding motive ought to be the
expansion and liberation of human personality in proportion to the available
resources Planning does not postulate complete socialisation of the means of
pioduction It does, however, presuppose an extension of social control of
economic activities It is the correct selection of ends which should be the
characteristic psychological element in the social process Such a planning would
represent a concerted effort to accelerate the democratic process
What the State should not do. Having conceded that democracy is
compatible with some amount of collectivism and that the welfare service turns
into some kind of planning and planning is a democratic process responsive to the
changing needs or desires of the community, there are certain tasks which the
State should not do If the State does, “it only,” as MacIver says, “ruins the
”
material
12 Barker, £ ,
Principles of Social and Political Theory^ p 273
620 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
( 1) Public Opinion. Our first obvious conclusion will be that if there is one
department of life from which government is automatically debarred, it is the
formation and expression of opinion In the days of class-bound oligarchies
governments did not deign to explain their policies to the people as a whole nor
did they generally need to prepare the way for the reception of these policies
Democracy, on the other hand, is built upon the belief that truth comes out by
clash of opinion with opinion, and that every citizen has something of value
to contribute and he must not be hindered m bringing it out “Men who are
prevented from thinking as their experience teaches them,” says Laski, “will soon
cease to think at all Men who cease to think cease also to be m any genuine sense
citizens The instrument which makes them able to make effective their
”
experience rusts into obsolescence bv disuse '^Community, no less than the
individual concerned, suffers from any attempt on the part of the government to
restrict the liberty of the formation and expression of opinion, for S^ithout freely
thinking persons there is no community The State, therefore, as Maciver bluntly
says, “should not seek to control opinion, no matter what the opinion may be
• 3 Laski, H ,
A Grammar of Politics, p 120
14 Maciver, ILIA The Modem State, p 150
,
15 Ilnd,
p 153
16 Ladci, H , An Introduction to Politics, p. 35
THE LIMITS OF POLITICAL CONTROL 621
a moral code than to impose a religious code The legal code can never be
identified with the moral code, as State dictated morality is no morality T H
Green stated the truth when he said that “the only acts which the State ought to
enjoin or forbid are those of which the doing or not doing, from whatever motive,
IS necessary to the moral end of society
” The moral end of society is the
Customs. The limits of the State action are again revealed when we
(4)
turn to customs What habit is to the individual custom is to the community.
Communities, like men, get into the habits of doing things in a given way.
(histoms glow spontaneously, entrench themselves in the minds of the people and
pass on from generation to generation The State has neither the power to make
customs nor the power to destroy them, though it may indirectly influence them
by changing the conditions out of which they spring It had long been recognised
as a rule of empire that a conquering State must not interfere and seek to change
the customs prevailing among a subject people In democracies, the possibilities
arc generally there to abrogate the customs practised by minority gioups But
experience shows that whenever and wherever such an attempt had been made,
the minorities have stubbornly resisted the coercion of law, reating very often
disorderly conditions difficult for the government to control and steer th»*ough
1 7 Barker, E ,
Principles oj Social and Political Theory, p 105
622 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
“Custom, when attacked,” sums up Maclver, “attacks law in turn, attacks not
only the particular law which opposes it, but, what is more vital, the spirit ot
law-abidmgness, the unity of the general will To quote Maclver, again, “the
mam body of social customs is beyond the range of law, and is neither made nor
“
unmade by the state
(5) Cultural Homogeneity. Similarly, the State should not provide for
cultural homogeneity and perform functions connected therewith as Plato
proposed The cultural heterogeneity of the modern State, the diversity of creeds,
opinions and schools of thought professed and practised by its citizens, every
State must endeavour to maintain It should really be the function of the State to
guarantee and to safeguard the cultural liberty of its diverse groups This is
and any effort made to destroy it may even imperil the national unity which
homogeneity may aim to establish The State reflects the culture, “but does not
create it Culture is the work of community, sustained by inner forces far more
"
potent than political law
SUGGESTED READINGS
Allen, CK Democracy and the Individual
Childs, H L Public Opinion, Nature, Formation and Role
CcJccr, F W Recent Political Thought, Chapter XIV
Ehrnmann, H W Democracy in a Changing Smiety
Theories, Old and New. We discussed in the last Chapter the limits of
political control and demarcated the functions which the State should and should
not do The sphere of State activity all through the ages has been influenced by
many factors including the environmental conditions and circumstances, social,
economic and political needs of the people and their attitude towards the State
In this and in the following Chapters we discuss some of the important theories,
old and new, regarding the sphere of State activity All these theories tell us
about the relation of the State to the individual, and the extent to which it
society There are various other theories which aim at reconstructing the existing
social order, but all of them are the product of socialistic ideas and emphasise the
importance of economic interests in the State Some of these theories minimise
the role of the State and advocate decentralisation while others magnify the
State and make it a highlv centralised unitv of contiol
IDEALISM
because the State is more of an idea than the actual State in the ordinary sense of
the word A better description of it is the absolute theory The doctrines
underlying the theory or what purport to be its doctrines have been said to
provide the foundation of many totalitarian or reactionary systems of govern-
ment Originally, the theory is the product of the teacliings of Plato and Aristotle,
but m Its modern typical form it was expounded by the German philosopher,
Hegel In Britain, the Idealist theory was made popular by TH Green, who drew
his inspiration from Kant and Hegel as well as from Plato and Aristotle Its most
complete statement, however, is found in Dr Bosanquet’s book, The Philosophi-
Origin of the Absolutist Theory. The Idealist theory' of the State is derived
from two dift'erent sources which find a prominent place in Greek thought Plato
and Aristotle, in the first place, never differentiated between the State and
society They regarded the State as a self-sufficing entity identical with the whole
623
624 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
of society existing for itself and by itself. The only relation which subsisted
between one State and another was of indifference or hostility As the State
represented and contained within itself all the individual’s aspirations and
fulfilled all his social needs, it was an ethical institution The true State was a
“partnership in a life of virtue” Secondly, Plato and Aristotle started with the
premise that man is by nature a social animal He cannot live a life of isolation
unless, of course, he is a god or a beast It is only by living in society that a man
can develop his personality and realise all that is best in him Apart from society
he IS nothing and has no significance Society alone provides him with all what he
needs and consequently makes him happy and virtuous, in the proverbial words
of Aristotle, “The State comes into being for the sake of life, and it continues to
exist for the sake of good life ’
The State is, thus, an unavoidable necessity, for it
Statement of the Theory. From this bare truth about human nature and the
sound doctrine that the end of the State is social morality, modern Idealists
developed a philosophy which magnified the State into a self-sufficing entity
They considered the State an organic unity and held it as the highest expression
of social morality Since the State is a moral organism, every individual is its
inseparable part and he depends for his existence upon it In addition to the
obvious benefits of security against violence and redress against injustice that the
individual receives from the State, he owes it a debt of gratitude for granting him
all those moral conditions which enrich his personality and develop his faculties
to their full stature In sum, the State exists to create and maintain those
conditions in which free and moral life is possible It is “the reality”, as Hegel
says, “of the ethical spirit” It is the divine idea that exists on earth, the march of
God on earth By this conception the State is able to convert into duties to itself
whatever rights may seem to belong to individuals “This substantive unity (of
the State) is its own motive and absolute end This end has the highest right over
the individual, whose highest duty is in turn to be a member of the State ” The
orders of the State have a moral sanction as they come from a moral leviathan
To put It all this in the words of CE M Joad, “Since the state is regarded as
representing and containing with and
itself all the individual’s social aspirations,
at thesame time fulfilling all his social needs, whatever claims the state may
make upon the individual are held to be based upon an absolute authority ” The
State IS, thus, made omnipotent, infallible, omniscient, just and the guardian of
morality Its claims on citizens are, therefore, prior
In this way, the modern Idealists idolize the State and glorify it to the point
of edification They regard the State as a vehicle of all individual development
and progress The individual apart from society has no meaning He has no
natural rights Rights flow to him because he is a creature of society and the State
IS and guarantor of those rights It guarantees rights by creating
the creator
conditions necessary for the full moral development of individual’s personality
The State is, thus, made the source as well as the guardian of the social good Its
authority is unlimited and its competence unrestricted The Idealists, as such,
place the State “upon a pedestal at the foot of which its members are expected to
bow down and worship it
” They teach that the State can do no wrong and its
laws can never be unjust Its authority must be obeyed without demur and
1 Aristotle defined the State as “the union of families and villages, having for an end
”
a perfect and self-sufficing life
wicked and iniquitous The German political philosophers earned to the extreme
th( ( laims of the State and asserted that the State is power, “therefore fall down
and worship it ” War, they said, is necessary to increase the power of the State
and there is nothing which should limit its expansion
Hegel’s Philosophy. In developing his theory, Hegel, the renowned Professor
of Philosophy in Germany, whom many have hailed as the outstanding
philosopher of the nineteenth century, starts from Rousseau’s conception of real
freedom In his view men enjoy as members of society a freedom which is more
real than that which they abandoned in the hypothetical lawless state of nature
to enter s(x:iety js subjective and it
Hegel differed from Kant’s idea that freedom
resides in the individual’s conscience and
and that it is negative as it
intention,
manifests itself in duty alone He held that freedom must be positive and
objective or outwardly expressed “This freedom, which became possible only m
society, is an externalization or objectification of all that is highest in the
conception of freedom in the individual’s heart, a conception which but foi
society would remain unrealized In the State man has fully raised his outward
self to the level of his inward self of thought This real freedom which exists in,
and, finally, in the whole system of social institutions and influences that make
for the development of personality The State, according to Hegel, makes possible
the conditions for freedom and men enjoy real freedom only by living in it,
without It they are completely in subjection Freedom, he adds, is the outstanding
characteristic of the modern State He criticised the Greeks because they did not
recognise that the State must rest on respect for personality Their acceptance of
slavery w as a proof of their failure here
the history of freedom History culminates in the State in which the spirit finds
”
Its final embodiment, “nothing short of thv State is the actualization of freedom
Man, thus, finds his freedom w'lthin the State and by reason of his identity with
It It is only the State that can command the individual to do the rational thing
constituting his true freedom The State tr nscends the individual and absorbs
his moral being, but this is only in order that the individual’s freedom shall be
rational In brief, the State is man in his fulness and perfection of development
Hegel gives to the State, in this way, a real personality and a real will and the will
of the State he names the General Will
Hegel’s general will is not the sum total of individual wills The State is an
entity above and apart from the people who compose it It is a new personality
and “it IS in the General Will and in the personality of the State that the will and
personality of each individual are made to transcend themselves” It follows,
then, that the actions of the State in so far as they proceed from the general will
cannot be wrong and unjust There is no higher rationality than the State No
one may disobey itscommands The commands of the State give man his only
opportunity to find freedom and when he obeys the dictates of the Slate he really
obeys his own real will
natural growth and, thus, a whole. The whole is greater than the parts, because
parts are intrinsically related to the whole and have meaning only in so far as the
whole gives them meaning It is an end in itself “In this end,” he says, “freedom
attains its highest nght. This end has the highest right over the individual, whose
highest duty in turn is State ” So the State is “the march of
to be a member of the
God in the world, its power of reason realizing itself as will
ground or cause is the
When thinking of the idea of the State, we must not have in mind any particular
State, or particular institution, but must rather contemplate the Idea, this actual
”
God, by Itself
Hegel’s State is, therefore, supreme and sovereign. It has the right of absolute
decision and no one can question such a decision Hegel allowed no place for
individual freedom against the State In his system the inalienable rights of man
as an individual “were utterly obliterated” Since man finds his freedom within
the State and by reason of his identity with it, social freedom, freedom through
the State was Hegel’s ideal Men do not, he insisted, value individual freedom as
highly as has been supposed What they actually want is real freedom and this
they can have only through the State “The State restrains and represses, but in
so doing It enlarges the freedom of society as a whole and, thus, enlarges the
liberty of the individual ” The State must, accordingly, be regarded “as the
”
ethical whole and the actualization of freedom
Hegel’s conclusions complete the whole doctrine of the Absolutist theory of
the State The State, to Hegel, in the words of Garner, “is a ‘Gcxl State’,
incapable of doing wrong, infallible, omnipotent, and entitled to every sacrifice
which Its interests may require of the individual By virtue of its transcendent
character and of the sacrifice and devotion which it has a right to demand, it
elevates and ennobles the individual, whose tendency is to become selfish and
self-centred and carries him back into the life of the universal substance He
exalted the State to a mystical height and at all times, particularly during war,
the State may lawfully exercise complete authority ovei its citizens In an
emergency, it may do what it pleases to choose, and as to what constitutes an
emergency it is for the State to decide It may even ask its citizens to place their
lives at Its disposal The Absolutist theory of the State finds its complete
expression in the omnipotence of the State in time of war Hegel himself says that
“the state of war shows the omnipotence of the State in its individuality”
But Hegel regards war as an evil, though not an absolute evil He justifies
war, because it illustrates the “movement of God in and the way in
history”
which supreme power passes from one nation to another His justification of war
IS due to his deep veneration for the nation-State He docs not believe in the
Germany and Italy to preach and practise militarism and even brutalism
Hegel’s idea of the nature of the State may be summed up thus
(1) The State is the divine idea as it exists on earth, it is the march of God in
the world
(2) The State is an end in itself It is not only the highest expression to which
”
the spirit has yet attained, it is “the final embodiment of spirit on earth
There can be no spiritual evaluation beyond the State
(3) The State is an organism It is a whole which is far greater than the parts
4 Garner, J W ,
Introduction to Political Science, p 232
THEORIES OF THE SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY 627
(4) The individuals derive their rights from the State They have, no right
dgdirist the State In case of conflict between the two, the rights of the
State must prevail over the rights of the individuals
(5) The unchecked by any moral law It is itself the creator of morality
State is
(6) Whatever the State does is right It can never be wrong and unjust. It is
only in the State that man can find his freedom When the individual
obeys the commands of the State, he actually obeys himself
(7) The State being omnipotent and absolute, the will of the State cannot be
bound by international law Its own welfare is the highest law
(8) War is an evil, but not an absolute evil He justified war as a virtuous
activity since it preserved the ethical health of the people in their
indifference to the stabilisation of infinite institutions
(9) As the State is the march of God on earth, to obey the State is to obey God.
And as the authority of God is unlimited, unrestricted and absolute, so is
much different from Hegel’s General Will He calls it “the common consciousness
of a common good”, “a sense of possessing common interests, a desire for
common interests on the part of the people” It will be obvious that Green's
General Will, as Wayper says, “is the will for the State, not the will of the State”.
It, therefore, leaves no margin for the rulers to preach and practise militarism and
burtalism in the name of the will of the State as Hegel’s disciples preached and
practised
Rights, according to Green, are the outer conditions necessary for man’s
inner development The supreme right of every rational person is the right to
become what a man should be Natural nghts have no other significance for
Green than that they help a man to become a moral and ideal human being
dedicated to himself and the society of which he is a member Having said so
much Green betomes Hegelian in his conclusions Green believed that without
the State man is not man at all It is only in the State that he can fully express
himself, and his nature can develop to its full capacity Hence he must look to the
State not as a necessary evil which is the result of his viciousncss, but as a natural
and ethical necessity which is the result of his own inherent virtue The political
life of a man. Green concludes, “is a revelation of the Divine Idea”.
628 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
There was a realisation in Green of the majesty and might of the State
Rights, according to Green, exist because of society, and of a society in which
some common good is recognized Every right is, thus, derived from some social
relation Though the State does not create rights, yet it may still be true to say
that the members of the State derive their rights from the State “The State is the
complex ot social relations out of which rights arise, so far as those rights have
come to be regulated and harmonized according to a general law” Green
concedes the right of resistance to the authority of the State and here he
essentially differs from Hegel, but he makes the path of resistance so difficult that
ultimately it may be considered a denial of the right He is emphatic that
resistance can never be justified merely because legislation runs against personal
inclinations He warns men that in resisting the authority of the State they must
not forget that the\ will probably be wrong and the State almost certainly right,
for “the State will be speaking with the wisdom of the ages, and men ” He
repeatedly reminds the resisters that they must not forget that resistance may
lead to disastrous results, “since it may tempt men to unleash the bonds of that
mighty demon anarchy” He commands them, whatcvei constitutional system of
government exists, to put up with the undcsired laws until they are repealed by
constitutional means Where the constitutional government does not exist, men
should feel justified to resist the authority of the State when certain conditions
obtain But it still and consideration before it is resorted
requires serious thought
to “We must not sacrifice,” says Green, “what is almost the whole for the sake of
a part, we must not risk social chaos, and the disturbance of the existing system of
”
rights, for the sake of adding a new element of the system
Like Hegel, Green is very much concerned with the problem of freedom
Freedom, Green says, does not consist in being left alone to do what one likes It
all depends on what one likes to do Man is free only when he is following his
“true” good and his “true” good is also “social” good, because individual good
can only be achieved when the good of others is also realised Freedom, then,
Green says, “is a positive power or capacity of doing or enjoying something worth
doing or enjoying and that, too, something we do or enjoy in common with
others ” Freedom is, and it is of doing something worth doing,
therefore, positive
and that, too, in common with others Freedom for Green w'as not unlimited Tne
conclusion is obvious True liberty, according to Green, can only be realised in
the State For both, Hegel and Green, man is most free when he identifies himself
with the State Hegel emphasises the individual’s complete identification with
“Divine Spirit” and the “Divine Spirit” finds its embodiment in the State For
Green, the State is a natural and ethical necessity which is the result of man’s
ow n inherent virtue
But Green never regards the State as an end itself It is a means to an end,
and the end is the full moral development of the individuals who compose it He
emphasises the importance and worth of every man and stands for the
maintenance of his dignity and will consequently forbid his exploitation for any
purpose whatever “The life of the nation,” he so very often repeats, “has no real
existence except as the life of the individuals composing it
” He unequivocally
intentions and motives The State cannot make men moral, it is to remove the
obstacles which prevent men from becoming moral Morality consists, according
to Green, in “the disinterested performance of self-imposed duties”. The functions
of the State are, accordingly, negative and not positive. Here Green talks as an
Individualist would do
At the same time. Green is not completely an Individualist, for in order to
remove obstacles the functions of the State become positive m content For
example, Green holds the State responsible to see that mental and physical
malnutrition are removed Hence, it should make education compulsory, do away
with chances of intemperance by checking the growth of liquor shops, and forbid
reckless beggary by providing certain pursuits, which people may take up “To
uphold the sanctity of contract,” he says, “is doubtless a prime business of
government, but it is no less its business to provide against contracts being made
which from the helplessness of one of the parties to them, instead of being
security for freedom, become an instrument of disguised oppression ” Paradoxical
as It IS, Green justifies the existence of capital, but he is against the continuance of
the institution of landed property Green stands for the happiness of man so that
everyone should contribute something to the common good and to attain the
both, he justifies the intervention of the State Here the functions of the State
become positive He considers that the punishment for those who violated laws
should be proportionate and reformatory in order to create conditions which
make moral life possible
of the State is unlimited because of its own nature and the nature of assciations
In the other the exercise of the State’s supremacy is limited by its own nature and
”
the nature of asscx:iations
If Green’s State must preserve the rights of the various associations within it,
Itmust respect the rights of the community of humanity outside it Unlike Hegel,
but like Kant, Green believes in a universal brotherhocxl of men An international
eexie, he believes, is the obvious extension of ethical system accepted within the
State “Both spring from a common source— man’s desire as a moral being to
fulfil himself” He condemns war as it violates the right of man to a free life It
may be justified only as a “cruel necessity” — one wrong to correct another
previous wrong.
Green, it will appear, is more near Kant than Hegel In his views on
individual freedom, war and is more Kantian than
international morality, he
Hegelian According to Green, the State is neither absolute nor omnipotent. He is
Hegelian inasmuch as he emphasises the moral value of the majesty of the State.
630 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
between the real will of the mdividual and the general will of society, and the
State as the supreme expression of the general will Actual will, he says, is the
constant will of man, that is, his will when he acts from moment to moment as a
conscious individual But this will is created and amended by the considerations
of what he wants at all other moments and adjusts to the will of others, it
becomes the real will The real will of ihe individual is bound up with the wills of
other individuals with whom he lives in society and it becomes the general will
Man alone is nothing and his fulfilment cannot be achieved apart from the
general will The State is the perfect embodiment of the general will, because for
the common life society depends upon the relationships which the State
maintains “By the State, then, we mean,” wntes Bosanquet, “society as a unit
recognised as rightly exercising control over its members through absolute
”
physical power
But the State as a political organisation using force, is the narrow sense in
which Bosanquet defines the State His State is the supreme community, the
guardian of morality and, consequently, the supreme ethical institution It is
synonymous with society and represents the synthesis of life “The National State
,” says Bosanquet, “is the widest organisation which has the common
expenence necessary to found a common life ” The State promotes common life
which IS a moral life and what it directs is always moral But Bosanquet is near to
Green regarding the nature and the sphere of State action Both believe that the
State IS an ethical institution and both agree that the State cannot be used
directly to promote morality “Art, philosophy and religion,” says Bosanquet,
“though in a sense the very life blood of society, are not and could not be directly
fashioned to meet the needs and uses of the multitude, and their aim is not in
that sense social ” Having said so, Bosanquet further says, “It (the State) has no
determinate function in a larger community, but is itself the supreme communi-
ty,the guardian of a whole moral world, but not a factor within an organised
moral world Moral relations presuppose an organized life, but such a life is only
within the State, not in relation between the State and other ccommunities ” The
immoral acts of an agent of the State, therefore, cannot be ascribed to the State
THEORIES OF THE SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY 631
But the distinction between the acts of the Sta.** and the acts of its agents is
unreal. Government is, no doubt, the agency of the State, but the State is abstract
whereas government is concrete, a reality The acts of government are really the
acts of the State Ernest Barker logically sums up the whole issue when he says,
“If a citizen can treat his own State as legally responsible for damages, it is
difficult to see why a State, which can undergo legal responsibility, should not
also undergo moral responsibility, if there is anybody of moral opinion to
affix responsibility ” Bosanquet’s State not responsible for the acts of its agents
The assumption of the identity of the State and society on which the Idealist
theory is based is obviously false We carefully distinguish the State from society
Once this distinction is realised the Hegelian concept of the State is rejected
Similarly, the contention that the State is above the principles of morality and
that It IS the State which prescribes morality is untrue Morality is a subject of
conscience and MacIver states a bare truth when he says that State-dictated
morality is no morality No moral prescriptions of the State have any effect upon
conscience unless they appeal to man himself Even if it be conceded that the
State contains within itself and represents the social morality of all its citizens, it
The Idealist theory attributes to the State a personality of its own which
transcends the personalities of those who compose it This doctrine has been
rejected as absurd Duguit and MacIver consider it fanciful as it preaches the
omnipotence, absolutism, and divinity of the State It sacrifices freedom of the
individual by subordinating him to the all-embracing power of the State.
Unlimited power of the State dwarfs the personality of the individual and makes
him and society the poorer for it It is true that man can develop his personality
only while living in the State, but admission of this fact does not necessarily mean
the omnipotence of the State The State being an agent of society is a means to an
end and not an end in itself It exists for the welfare of man, man does not exist
for It and its glorification Nor is there any truth in the distinction of the real will
and the unreal will “It is only a device for giving an appearance of justice and
(Icmocracv to what must otherwise appear purely aibitrary and tyrannical acts
<il sovereign State " Referring to the Hegelian glorification of the State,
Hobhouse says, “The State is a great organisation Its well-being is something of
larger and more permanent import than that of any single citizen Its scope is
vast Its service calls for the extreme of loyalty and self-sacrifice All this is true
632 PRINCIPIES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Yet when the State is set up as an entity superior and indifferent to component
UTILITARIANISM
Origin eff LItilitarianism. In England the early part of the nineteenth century
IS marked by the growing ascendancy of that type of thought to which Hegel had
been violently opposed Its theoretical basis is the psychological individualism of
the previous age and it is Jeremy Bentham But it
essentially associated with
would be hardl\ consistent with facts to say that it began with Bentham The
founder of Utilitarianism was David Hume and it was professed by Priestley,
Hutcheson and Poley, though its origin was from Helvetius and Baccaira Hume
opposed the rationalistic school and their philosophy based on the conception of
the law of nature Morality, he asseited, was based on expediency and utility was
the touchstone of all institutions Reason, he thought, was an inert principle and
passions, arising from a sense of pleasure, motivate the actions of men With this
spring of knowledge, Hutcheson, for the first time, used the formula of the
number, upon which Bentham’s utilitarianism
greatest happiness of the greatest
hinges Bentham also borrowed some of his ideas from Joseph Priestley But to
Bentham goes the credit for giving a systematic exposition of Utilitarianism and
made widely known and admired the conceptions which are its characteristics
Utilitarianism Explained. Utilitarianism is not a cult based on the abstract
principles of Idealism of the eighteenth century For an absolute Idealism it
aims to use the ascertained facts of life in such a way as to promote the progress
and advancement of society and make life really worth living It joins and blends
the happiness of the individual with the happiness of others with whom he leads
a life of togetherness It does not separate the individual from society and the
individual good from the social good Utilitarianism, accordingly, discards the
laissez faire theory of State action It stands for promoting the happiness of the
people, both individual and social, in order to obtain the greatest good of the
greatest number It enjoins on the legislators to devise and pass such laws that
increase the pleasure of the people and lessen their sorrows and pains The State,
for the Utilitarians, is a human necessity for the promotion of general welfare
happiness of the greatest number Both accept pleasuic as the ultimate end of the
individual, but to the Utilitarians pleasure must add to his moral stature and the
actions of the State should be so directed as to keep that end in view
Utilitarianism has, thus, an ethical appeal
the happiness and satisfaction which the individual enjoyed from the exercise of
public authonty Such a happiness and satisfaction of the individual produced
results of general welfare and it meant the greatest happiness of the greatest
number The Utilitarians rejected the dogma of natural rights Bentham
regarded natural rights as “simple nonsense, natural and imprescriptible rights,
”
rhetorical nonsense upon stilts
man and the sole content of human good This is how he explains “Nature has
placed man undei the government of two sovereign masters, pain and pleasure. It
IS for them alone to point out what we ought to do, as well as to determine what
634 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
the number of persons affected The value of a thing was more or less according
to the number of persons taking part in a pleasure or pain
Bentham had no faith in the Social Contract theory of the State Political
society and rights and duties of the State, he believed, did not flow from the
consent of the people, as the Contractualists had professed The ultimate reason
for men submitting to political authority, he asserted, was the present utility
“The business of government,” he affirmed, “is to promote the happiness of the
society, by punishing and rewarding ” It had no other justification for existence
The test of a good government is how it rewards and punishes If the government
does not employ effective means to promote happiness of society, “it nullifies its
very title to authority” People obey law because it aims at four ends security,
substance, abundance and equality It is the general habit to obedience, born of
utility, that gives a law its permanence and makes it effective, thereby promoting
the greatest happiness of the greatest number Bentham believed neither in
natural law nor natural rights Rights, he asserted, are created by law
The very basis of utility implies limits upon the power of government
Government has the authority to act to produce the greatest happiness of the
greatest number, it may legitimately do nothing else Moreover, m many
instances the action of individuals may voluntarily be directed to this end, and
here government ought not to interfere Bentham also said in the Fragment on
Government that men should be informed by government with respect to what is^
being done and why They have a right to know and a right to protest and
oppose In addition, government ought to be responsible, and the only way to sec
that It exercises responsibility is to have a system that facilitates the “frequent
and easy” interchange of position of Governors and governed Bentham was,
thus, out to remove the distinction between the governors and the governed and
SPHERE OF STATE ACrTIVITY— UTILITARIANISM 635
Bentham and Mill also agree that we ought to strive for the greatest
happiness of the greatest number But Bentham justifies it on the ground of
self-interest, while Mill bases it on the social feelings on mankind, the desire for
unity with our fellow creatures He tells us that Utilitarianism requires a man to
be as stnctly impartial between his own happiness and that of others as if he were
a disinterested and benevolent spectator “In the golden rule of Jesus of Nazareth,
we read the complete spirit of the ethics of utility To do as one would be done by
and to love neighbour as oneself, constitute the ideal perfection of
one’s
Utilitarian morality ” Indeed, the greatest happiness pnnciple is meaningless and
without rational significance, unless one person’s happiness is of exactly as much
importance as another’s “Bentham ’s principle of utility,” observes Maxey, “in a
society of wolves would exalt wolfishness, in a society of saints it would exalt
saintliness Mill was determined that saintliness should be the criterion of utility
”
in any society whatsoever
Mill regarded individual liberty as the supreme possession of man and would
permit governmental interference to the minimum. He would allow the
636 PRINCrPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
individual to develop himself on his own lines and liberty, for him, included the
freedom of thought and expression, freedom of conscience and association. But he
would impose two limitations on individual liberty (1) the individual was not
free to do harm to others, and (2) he must share labours and sacrifices to jsccure
the society and individuals against harm Accordingly, he laid down a concise
test of the functions of the State His general proposition was that the State
should not interfere with those acts which affected the individual alone, but the
State may act in the interest of the general welfare when the acts of the
individual affect others as well as himself
All the same, it cannot be denied that Utilitarianism demolished the theories
of natural rights and Social Contract and the mystic Idealism of the German
philosophers brought political theory to the practical realm of life and,
It
according to Green, “whatever the errors arising from its Hedonistic psychology,
no other theory has been available for the social political reforms containing so
much truth with such ready applicability ” It rescued the individual from his
absorption by the State and had been the harbinger of important reforms in
Britain for the greater part of the nineteenth century Bentham placed the
individual before the State He was convinced that individual initiative and
freedom were the essentials of happiness, and that State interference must be
jealously watched In the same way, he asserted the necessity of men as equals
While rejecting the claim to equality on the grounds of a “Natural Right”, he
showed that equality was a political “good”, because it was the only practical
way of dealing with large number of people
The Bentham entenon of utility also served to simplify the problem of
sovereignty The legislature and the executive existed, he said, not by right of any
contract or divine right, but simply to create or to maintain general happiness
The law was certainly to be a command, but it was at the same time to be useful,
otherwise the individual has a moral right of rebellion The State, to Bentham,
was, for all practical purposes, a service State
INDIVIDUALISM: TRADITIONAL
Nineteenth’century Individualism. Laissez faire, the alternative name by
which the traditional theory of Individualism is known, recognises the individual
and aims to establish that the State should leave him
as the centre of all social life
alone to determine his own destiny and the fullest and free development of his
capacities and interests The advocates of Individualism maintain that it is for
him and by him that the whole social structure exists and derives its being
Individualism, in brief, exalts the individual to the position of reality in life
As society itslf is nothing but the totality of individuals themselves, the State
exists to protect and restrain, not to foster and promote The State is a necessary
evil and it continues to exist so long as man does not attain perfection Its
functions arc, accordingly, negatively regulative or protective, which include
protection from foreign aggression, protection of individuals against each other,
that IS, from physical injury, slander, personal restraint, protection of property
from robbery and damage, and protecticm of individuals against false contracts or
breaches of contracts Some theories extend the functions of the State to include
the protection of the weak and imbecile as also the prevention of epidemics, but
others, as Herbert Spencer who subscribed to the doctrine of the ‘survival of the
fittest’ opposed it vigorousls
Development of the Theory. Towards the end of the eighteenth century the
prevailing dextrine of Mercantilism, which advocated a policy of active
governmental regulation and protection of industry and commerce, received a
final blow' from the Physiocrats The Physiocrats, the French School of
Economists headed by Quesnay, maintained that the production of national
wealth, like individual enterprise, should go ns own way, unhampered and
unhindered by legislative They regarded private propert) and
interference
freedom of contract as the most obvious and essential phenomena of an ordered
scx'iety Their policy w'as thai of “let alone”, and of natural liberty, summed up m
the famous phrase “laissez faire, laissez passer”. Accordingly, the Physiocravic
doctrine considered a governmental policy good to the extent that it respected
private property, permitted free competition everywhere, and recognised an
absolute equality of all indi\ iduals before the- law
The new doctrine obtained a firm hold in France and from that country it
spread all over Europe But the t iced of laissez faire became a more authoritative
and accepted doctrine as a result of the teachings of Adam Smith and other
English classical economists Adam Smith has to his credit the achievement of
taking the raw material supplied b> others, of adding to it from his own genius,
and of moulding it into such a form that without losing any of its scientific value
his book (Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations,
published in 1776) achieved immense popularity and was widely read, Adam
Smith and his followers advocated that natural economic principles, fixed private
property, and free competition were the essential features of a rational economic
system This doctrine was in accord with the then prevailing Utilitarian ethics
and Its authors tried to show how the natural economic and ethical principle
Adam Smith. It goes to the credit of Adam Smith to influence the economic
ideas of Mill and even Spencer To Adam Smith enlightened self-interestwas the
rule with every individual as it ultimately led to the good of the community itself
Every man, he asserted, would do that work for which he had an aptitude and
was personally interested if he was left to himself If every individual, he argued,
was allowed to follow his pursuit as and what he deemed best, he would be a
greater gainer and that would ultimately result in the good and prosperity of the
community as a Adam Smith based his arguments on the concepts of
whole
‘division of labour’ and ‘free competitive forces’ and concluded that even if a few
amassed wealth because of their superior ability, greater energy and enterprising
spint, still It would not be baneful as on the whole the wealth of the community
had increased and civilisation advanced
J. S. Mill. John Stuart Mill was certainly a great individualist and, in fact,
the high priest of Individualism His essay on “Liberty” is an eloquent
enunciation of the pnnciples he preached and a matter-of-fact analysis of his
reasoned conviction The object of his essay on Liberty, writes Mill, “is to assert
one very simple principle, as entitled to govern absolutely the dealings of society
with the individual in the way of compulsion and control, whether the means
used by physical force is in the form of legal penalties, or the moral coercion of
public opinion That principle is, that the sole end of which mankind are
warranted, individually or collectively, interfering with the liberty of action of
any of their members, is self-protection That the only purpose for which power
can be nghtfully exercised over any member of a civilised community, against his
will, IS to prevent harm to others His own good, either physical or moral, is not a
will be better for him to do so, because it will make him happier, because in the
opinion of others, to do so would be wise, or even right These are good reasons
for remonstrating with him or reasoning with him, or persuading him or
entreating him but not compelling him, or visiting him with any evil in case
for
he do otherwise To justify that, the conduct from which it is desired to deter him
must be calculated to produce evil to some one else The only part of the conduct
of any one, for which he is amenable to society, is that which concerns others In
the part which merely concerns himself, his independence is, of right, absolute
”
Over himself, over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY— INDIVIDUALISM 639
Mill objects to the interference of the State on three grounds Firstly, things
are better done by individuals than by the government A person specially
interested in a particular business or industry and having an aptitude for that
kind ol .work can better do it than “the hired servants of the government”.
Secondly, even if the individuals may not do the particular thing so well, on the
average, as the officers of government, it is nevertheless desirable that it should be
done by them rather than by the government as a “means to their own mental
education a mode of strengthening their active faculties, exercising their
judgment and giving them a knowledge of the subjects with which they are
fair
the worth of the State in the long run is the worth of the individuals composing
It If It does not provide them an opportunity to develop and expand their mental
faculties. It IS neither good for the individuals nor for the government But Mill,
during his own lifetime, recognized the need of some sort of state regulation. This
change in his ideas was necessitated by the socio-political conditions then
prevalent in Britain
protection of life and property, and the prevention of invasion by foreign powers
Tbc assumption of any other functions by the State, said Spencer, was an
invasion on private rights
According to Herbert Spencer, the individual has but one right, the right of
equal freedom with everybody and the State but one duty, the duty of
else,
protecting that right against violence and fraud He, accordingly, protested
against all legislation for the regulation of commerce and trade, against sanitary
legislation, such as quarantine, vaccination and registration laws, against public
education, against poor relief by the State, and even against State managed post
offices and currency issued by the State Spencer, m fact, condemned what he
called the worship of the legislature and asserted that as the “great political
superstition of the past was the divine right of the kings, that of the present is the
divine right of Parliaments” The State has, in briei, “no business to interfere
with the wise seventy of nature’s discipline, which makes us better when we do
things for ourselves — —
and what is more makes the things which we do for
ourselves better done than those which the State does for us” Herbert Spencer
admires and advocates the law of the survival of the fittest, according to which
the State should allow the poor, the weak and imbecile, the insane, the ignorant
and the inefficient to go to the wall
Case for and against Individualism. Following is the summary of arguments
in support of and against individualism of the nineteenth centurv
weakens his sense of responsibility, saps his energies and cripples his character
The individual can develop his personality only in an atmosphere of perfect
freedom of action The policy of laissez faire means the free play of the forces of
competition, which is the law of nature “Nature submits to him who most
energetically and resolutely assails her She grants her rewards to the fittest,
develops in the individual the highest possibilities, sharpens and strengthens his
powers of initiative, and increase his sense of self-reliance Civilization and
national progress depend on individual’s faculties of self-help and self-reliance
The highest civilization “has been developed under individualism, a system
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY— INDIVIDUALISM 641
which has produced more material and educatu nal progress than could ever
have been produced under paternalism.” Self-interest is a universal principle in
human nature and each individual knows his own interests best The considera-
tions of justice, therefore, demand that man should have a natural right to be left
industrial competition alone, however intense, for by such competition the best
individuals come to the top,” and, thus, the good of society is promoted
Besides the ethical and scientific arguments of Mill and Spencer, Individua-
lism has been advocated on economic principles Adam Smith is credited for
influencing the economic ideas of Mill and Spencer To Adam Smith enlightened
self-interest was the guiding principle with every individual and each would do
well the work in which he was personally interested, if he were left to himself.
This would ultimately lead to the good of society as a whole Trade and industry,
Adam Smith maintained, flourish best if left to private enterprise In an open
competitive market all factors of production adjust themselves to the forces of
demand and supply Free competition stimulates production, regulates price and
encourages free flow of capital and labour The freedom of each to do as he
pleases with his land, labour, capital and organisation is in the general interests
of all and consistent with Bentham’s doctrine of the greatest happiness of the
5 Gamer, J W ,
Politual Science and Govemmnt, p 461
6 Mill,J S y
Political Economy, Wol II, p 561
^2 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAt SCIENCE
greatest number. Hence, from the economic standpoint it was urged that a policy
of laissez faire would be in the highest interests of society, and artificial
restriction imposed by government would put out of gear the entire economic
structure
The wisdom of
supporters of laissez faire appealed to history to establish the
non-interference was maintained that whenever the State had tried to control
It
and regulate the social or economic life of the community, it had miserably failed
in Its attempts All props and supports of the State to industry, like bounties and
end which they were intended to secure Referring to those who were responsible
for this sort of legislation, Buckle observed that “they went blundering along in
the old track believing that no commerce could flourish without their interfer-
ence, hampering that commerce by repeated and harassing regulations, and
taking for granted that it was the duty of every government to benefit the trade of
”
Its own people by injuring the trade of others
The theory of laissez faire was warmly advocated in the nineteenth century
and It practically became the political creed of every civilised government But
soon Its defects became obvious and there was a great reaction against
Individualism Its critics argued that
The assumption of the Individualist theory that the State is a necessary evil
is essentially wrong It is preposterous to suppose that the State came into
existence for the sole purpose of keeping in check the selfish and evil propensities
of man The State, as a matter of fact, originated m the bare needs of human life,
and IT continues in existence for the sake of good life It is the necessary medium
of individual progress and, as Burke put it, the State is “a partnership m all
science, partnership in all art, a partnership in all virtue and in all perfection”
llic functions of the State in a complex and highly integrated scx:iety like ours,
cannot be merely repressive and “negatively regulative " It has a higher task of
protecting, encouraging, and fostering the common welfare The Individualists
err in maintaining that civilization increases by leaving man alone to manage his
own affairs On the contrary, advancing civilization demands increasing state re-
gulation ” The higher the state of civilization,” observed Huxley, “the more
completely do the actions of one member of the social body influence all the rest,
The argument that man is the best judge of his own interests is true only to a
very limited extent Society is a better judge of the intellectual, moral, and even
physical needs of the individual than he himself can be The Individualists placed
too much reliance on the individual and expected too much from everyone They
assumed that every individual was “equally far-sighted” and possessed “equal
capacity” to know and do what was really in his interests They also assumed that
every individual had an “equal power” and an “equal freedom” of choice to
satisfy his needs But all these assumptions ignore the differences in intelligence,
capacity, determination and resolution of different men coupled with the
complexities of one’s social position Self-interest is, undoubtedly, the motive of
every man, but his interests and motives cannot be separated from the interests of
society Being a social animal, he adjusts his interests in such a way as they may
not conflict with the interests of his fellow-beings Man is born in society and he
lives and dies as its member, he cannot, therefore, be so self-interested as to be
altogether oblivious of his social obligations If he is, the State, as the guardian of
the rights of all, has the right to regulate individual activities And, then, all
himself
The mam thesis of laissez faire rests upon the forces of free competition
Competition may be good for those who are economically strong, but for the
weak It IS a positive handicap Workers are the worst sufferers and their misery,
starvation, ill-health and inefficiency are the direct results of the so-called free
competition There can be no competition in a society in which there exist
glaring and Moreover, the competitive methods of produc-
galling inequalities
tion involve the use of machinery, division of labour, localisation of industry and
demarcation of functions Free competition leads to the formation of combina-
tions, pools, trusts and cartels. All these methods of capitalistic production really
retard competition, create condition of over-production, and bring about
disequilibrium between demand and supply The producers produce heedlessly
and without any reference to the social values of the commodities. The opponents
of Individualism, accordingly, maintain that all this waste and maladjustment
644 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
can be avoided if there is planned production. Proper planning also secures for
every one equality of opportunity and equality of reward. The argument that
government is least competent to undertake economic enterprise is disproved by
facts The State has now stepped in to fight against individual selfishness, apathy,
and inelficiehcy which Individualism has produced
But every rose has a thorn and in the case of the laissez faire doctrine, il has
proved to be a thistle Whenever and wherever it has pricked, it has made the
individual and the society bleed profusely When millions of individuals take
independent decisions in the act of production on the basis of their owr
calculations, the result is ruinous A typical example is that of periodical
depressions which put the entire economy of
the country out of gear and shake
the political stability of the country too Economics and politics go together and
if not all, most of governmental problems have far-reaching economic implica
tions
the survival of the fittest paves the way for a privileged class to grow and socici
definitely comes to be divided into two classes— ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots'; the vei
rich and the very poor The State does not move “The central concept of laissi
faire that upheld State inaction as a virtue formed an umbrella beneath who
shelter economic organisations could luxuriate and thrive.”
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY-MODERN INDIVIDUALISM 645
But economics is politics too Those who amass wealth begin to man the
State as well. They machinery of the State to their own advantage
divert the
Political democracy becomes an absolute farce Hence, the net result of
Individualism was to employ the powers of the State what business deemed its
interest The functions of government were deliberately limited, and, as Karl
Marx observed, capitalism contained m itself the seeds of its own destruction
To sum up, Individualism is not a tenable creed, because it rests upon false
assumptions and pure Individualism in the conduct of government is not
possible “As a matter of political justice it rests on a mechanical attempt to
divorce individual and social rights completely On an economic basis it
overlooks the plain advantages of cooperation and regulated efforts As a
scientific law it will not stand ” The truth of this statement is manifest and,
today, we do not find any State which is simply a police State and follows in
entiiety the practices dictated by Individualism
MODERN fNDIVIDUALISM
Factors promoting the growth of Modern Individualism. The reaction
against Individualism of the nineteenth century was fully witnessed by 1880,
when Its authority began to wane, and by the end of the century it had t*cen
largely superseded by the Absolutist and Collectivist theories of the State And
when the Absolutist and Collectivist theories of the State were taken to the
extremes there was again a reaction in favour of Individualism, though in a
modified form CE M Joad correctly says, “But the reaction against Individua-
lism has produced a reaction in its turn The wheel has turned full circle, and the
present dissatisfaction with the State has promoted a revival of individualist
thinking akin in spirit, though not in form, to the Individualism of the nineteenth
”
century ^
Modern Individualism is a name given to certain modern tendencies
which exhibit a reaction against the nature and characteristics of the State as
attributed to it by the Idealists and the Collectivists It represents a revolt against
the intellectualism of the Hegelian philosophy and the omnicompetence of the
State It IS, also, a protest against the despotism of the bureaucratic governments
of World War I Finally, modern Individualism is a deep reaction against the rule
of the majority in a parliamentary system of government which is characterised
as tyrannical and a complete defiance of the interests of the minorities The
fundamental difference between old and new Individualism is that the former
emphasises the importance of the individual and raises him on the pedestal of
political glory whereas in the latter the emphasis is on groups and associations
which honeycomb the life of man The individual, it is claimed, is nothing
without group life The modern Individualists even attack the concept of the
sovereign State They regard the State as one like various other associations and
would not give it a status higher to that
8 Joad, CE M ,
Introduction to Modem Political Theory, p 32,
646 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
independent of one another in their origins The State, therefore, cannot claim a
special prerogative of superiority over other associations They are equal and
.leordinate to one another The State is only one among other forms of
associations and it has no superior claim to the individual allegiance The only
difference between the State as an association and other associations is that the
membership of the State is only a matter of necessity and, as such, compulsory,
w hile the membership of other associations is a matter of choice and, accordingly,
optional But both strvc the same purpose and strive to attain the same objects
The second factor is the sense of frustration created by the conditions of the
World War I The belligerent States made exacting calls on the people and their
resources in an all-round effort to win the War In the name of the State, its
independence, sovereignty, and integrity, extreme sacrifices were demanded from
the people and thev gave a willing and enthusiastic response to all such calls in
the beginning But the heavy which the prolonged War had taken,
toll of life
together with the uncertainty of the results of War, produced a feeling of hostility
against the State and government which had brought so much incessant misery,
sorrow, affliction, devastation, destruction and destitution to mankind The
people even began questioning the utility of the State and familiar with the
teachings of Hegel and their own experiences with the demands of Governments,
they could see what this “march of God on earth” could contribute to the uplift
of man and society
They, thus, resented the enormity of the powers which the State had
assumed for itself The enormous extension of governmental activity and the
consequent curtailment of the liberty of the individuals meant increase in the
number of officials and in the scope of their authority It began to be believed
that It was the growth of a new despotism which need be curbed, and, hence,
public resentment against the State and its authority Even the foundation of
traditional political obligation was shaken
The people had also lost faith in the Parliamentary system of government
The War and war-time psychology gave rise to a quickened apprehension of the
majority rule The mechanical way in which the majority party supported the
government, the irresponsible way in which the majority behaved towards the
minorities, and the mob psychology displayed in the legislature, in the press and
on the platform all created strong feelings of a serious threat to the individual’s
freedom of mind The people felt that the representative system of government
had in practice degenerated into a tyranny of the majority rule It was,
accordingly, realised that the transfer of legal sovereignty to “the majority of the
moment under the name of the State was no guarantee of universal happiness”
The way out was suggested in decentralising the powers and functions of the
State over as wide an area as possible
above the personalities and wills of the individuals who compose the State. All
groups possess, equally with the State, personality Loyalty of the people to the
groups sometimes outweighs the loyalty which they owe to the State Laski
rriuji tains, “The only state to which I owe allegiance is the state in which I
discover moral adequacy” and adds, if the individual’s “church conflicts with the
state, he chooses and he alone can choose, where his allegiance should
go Viewed, as such, modem do not consider the State as
Individualists
indispensable, it can be scrapped off the moment a suitable machinery to replace
It is devised
Norman Angell in his book, The Great Illusion, contends that men are
united by a community of feelings based on economic interests, since they always
do what pays them best But they are led to take a wrong view of what pays them
as the competing States baffle them misrepresenting the issues and fostering
national feelings Once they begin realizing that it pays them better to think and
feel as members of the universal economic society, whose attrioute is peace, they
would discard the division of society based upon territorial boundaries whose
attribute is war Angell asserts, “People who act wisely as individuals act like
fools as citizens, and the world suffers in consequence ” He regards the State as
book, Great Society, shows a similar “distrust of the power of the over-developed
State ” But he devotes himself mainly to the problem of representative
government He says that the modern centralised State, with Parliament as its
chief organ, is hardly an effective instrument for the expression of the popular
will He regards the present system of representation as very much defective,
because the electorate is hypnotized by the popular press and drugged by the
demagogue Wallas, accordingly, proproses, in the first place, that representation
should be both on vocational and geographical basis, the former for a second
chamber and the later for a lower chamber Secondly, he suggests certain
safeguards against the majority oppression.
consisting of two kinds of groups, the producers and the consumers They attack
the political basis of the modem State and emphasise democratisation of society
by the functioning of autonomous Guilds
Miss Follctt, in her book, The New State, gives a new meaning to modem
9 Laski, H ,
An Introduciim to Politics, p 30
648 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Individualism, and the sub-title of the book, “Group Organisation, the Solution
of popular Government” is significant of this meaning Miss Follett agrees with
the pluralists and others who contribute to the theory of modem Individualism
on the importance of the groups But she does not accept “the group as the unit of
politics ” The pluralists glorify the group whereas Miss Follett emphasises “the
group in relation” as the object of our study “if that study is to be fruitful for
politics”The individual, the group, and the State all play their respective parts
In the introduction of her book, Miss Follet says, “ But the individual, the
group, the State —
they are ail there to be reckoned with— we cannot ignore or
minimise any one ” She, therefore, does not agree with those pluralists who either
intend to lose the individual in the group or those who abandon the State for the
group “No government,” in her considered opinion, “will be successful, no
government will endure, which docs not rest on the individual, and no
government has yet found the individual ” And the individual of Miss Follett’s
dreams does not believe in the old and fallacious idea of “self-and-others” as the
basis of his social existence He seeks “self-in-and-through-othcrs” for the
expression of his personality The true man is found only through group
organisation, because “the potentialities of the individual remain potentialities
until they are released by group life Man discovers his true nature, gains his true
freedom only through the group Group organisation must be the new method of
politics because the modes by which the individual can be brought forth and
”
made effective are the modes of practical politics
As regards the State, it is, according to Miss Follett, not made by external
acts, “but by the continuous thought and action on the people who live its life
The life of the State is moral ordering and the power of the State is a moral
power accumulated through the spiritual activity of its citizens The spiritual
activity of the citizens can be achieved through the creative power of man as
brought into visibility and actuality through his group life ” The State, thus,
unifies the manifold interests of the individual It is the “ordering of his infinite
senes into their right relations that the greatest possible welfare of the total may
be worked out” This is the function of the State and it is morality in its essence
and completeness
Diflference between old and modem Individualism. Modern Individualism
differsfrom the old Individualism in certain fundamental aspects The former
regards the group and not the individual ^
its unit for political purposes This is
essentially due to the fact that Individualism of the nineteenth century failed to
provide necessary protection to the individual against exploitation and oppres-
sion by the power of privately owned economic interests, and public opinion
expressing itself in the rule of the majority ‘^Thc group is organised for two
purposes in the first place, to protect the individual against the oppression of the
majority, and secondly, to promote certain interests and ideas which its members
have common The enormous size of the State prevents a fuller expression
in of
the common will and the development of individual personality The smallness of
a group, on the other hand, adequately provides such opportunities The group is,
therefore, considered as the best medium for the development of real personality
of the individual and the only effective guarantee of that personal liberty,
concern for which forms the most valuable element of the old Individualism as
expounded by Mill
FASCISM
Fascism Analysed. Fascism, too, is the product of the First Great War. It is a
tragedy of human life that “two diametrically opposite babies be bom of the
same parents. On the one hand, the Pluralistic theory initiated an era of
iconoclasm against the Absolutist State, on the other hand, sowed the seeds of a
totalitarian State which was to be far more autocratic than any State we had so
far seen ’’‘•As Ebenstcin observes, “stripped to its essentials, fascism is the
totalitarian organisation of government and society by a single-party dictator-
ship, intensely nationalist, and impenalist ” ‘^Fascism
racialist, militarist,
presents a complete repudiation of the assumptions, ideals and methods of
democracy, Liberalism, and Socialism Liberalism and democracy look to the
interests of the individual. Socialism looks to the interests of an economic class,
for Fascism, society is the end, individuals the means and its whole life consists in
using individuals as instruments for its ends The ideology of Fascism is
moral or religious Civil life, according to the Fascist creed, begins with the State
and all are in the State and no one outside the State It commands all and it is
essence of the State to govern A citizen’s obligations to the State are more
important than his rights Fascism proclaims the rights of the State, pre-eminence
of Its and the superiority of its ends No aspect of social life escapes the
authority,
discipline of Fascism It repudiates pacifism and glorifies war “War”, said
Mussolini, “alone brings up to its highest tension all human energy and puts the
gtamp of nobility upon the peoples who have the courage co meet it Thus, a
doctrine which is founded upon this harmful postulate of peace is hostile of
”
Fascism
defeated Her gains from the spoils of the War were not commensurate with he^
sacrifices, and Italy had consequently to withdraw her delegation from the Pans
Peace Conference It was in these critical times that Mussolini, with his Fascist
creed, stepped in to rescue Italy from collapse. It is beyond question that Fascism
changed Italy In 1929, seven years later, Mussolini, as head of the Fascist
government, boastfully spoke of the “immense panorama of material and moral
transformations which we have accomplished ” Fascism gave to Italy a strong
and centralised government which exacted disciplined obedience from her people
and established her international reputation as a first-rate power It ended the
war between labour and capital which, before the rise of Mussolini to power, had
threatened to plunge Italy into chaos There was a phenomenal development of
Italy’s industrial and, especially, agricultural resources Finally, Fascism taught
the meaning of nationalism to Italians and inspired them with a new faith in new
ideas
TTie Structure and Policy of the Fascist State. After the famous “March on
Rome” Mussolini accepted the allegiance of the King and became the Premier.
1 1 Coker, F W Recent
,
Political Thought, p 475
12 Ebenstcin, W Today
,
*s Isms, p 95
650 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
For a brief period, he made some attempts to preserve the institutions and
practices of Parliamentary government But, Mussolini made it clear from the
very beginning that he would ignore Parliament, withheld from him the
if it
1 3 Cfikrr, F W ,
Recent Political Thought,
p 49
14 }Atn\\.Q My Autobiography,
p 296
15 Ibid, pp 144, 162, etc
16 Coker, F W ,
Recent Political Thought,
p 470
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY — FASCISM 651
independent managers and editors by persons who will applaud, without serious
qualifications, the Fascist rule
to be definite and real We want to come out of the cloud of discussion and
theory ” Despite this emphasis on realism, Fascism has certain theoretical
assumptions which formulated its general social ideals Its aim was a fundamen-
tal reorganisation and invigoration of Italian life and, to that end, a restoration of
the strength and prestige of Italian governmental authority In the fulfilment of
these aims Fascism displayed a striking combination of realism and mysticism. Its
clarion call was action first, theory afterwards The methods which it adopted in
the pursuit of its ends were not fixed, as they were not based on any reasoning
They were highly flexible and could easily be adjusted and made workable in
attaining its objects, so, naturally, they could not be consistent with one another.
The State or nation, according to the Fascist assumption, is an independent
entity with a real will of its own This real will of the Stale is quite distinct from
the popular will which democracy owns The Fascists deemed popular sovereign-
democracy, and democracy they denounced because it
ty a fictitious creation of
gave power to the masses lo decide innumerable issues about which they had no
knowledge to exercise a sound judgment The democratic notion of the equality
of men was held to be wrong, for it was a mechanical process of “levelling human
beings to one plane”, thereby denying to them the “noble training” of nature
Here it seems that Mussolini emphasized the law of the survival of the fittest.
Fascism, in brief, not only accepts the fact of human inequality, but goes further
and aflirms inequality as an ideal
By society the Fascists meant a nation and a nation to them was the State. A
nation, they explained, was based on “biological” similarities It had a life more
continuous, permanent and important than the lives of its members The State
was the organic structure of the nation The State was, thus, the primary
expression of the fact of nationality and it stood for absolute sovereignty, both
moral and legal The interests of the nation must take precedence over the
individual interests and those of other groups “A war for the preservation,
expansion, or exaltation of a nation may be supremely justifiable, even though it
may frustrate the special interests of every les.ser group and destroy the lives of the
nation’s most worthwhile n/ens ” Thus, Fascism did not concede to the people
(
liberty, equality and other rights, it rather scorned them The individual had
rights only in so far as the State conferred these on him His will counted when it
coincided with the will of the State Liberty was not understood as a right, but as
a duty The State and its laws were the supreme manifestations of liberty The
citizen gained true personality by merging himself in the State The
and liberty
Fascists, accordingly, substituted for liberty, equality and fraternity, three words
of a higher and more noble significance duty, discipline and sacrifice, which
“encourage a man to employ all his faculties in an efficacious participation in
”
national life
17 Ibid, p 471
652 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
all its members, and the interests of the nation must always precede and
predominate over any sort of private interests, determine the Fascist principles of
governmental structure and policy Political authority, it was advocated, must be
aristocratic because “only a minority of the nation has the capacity to perceive
and give effect to nationaf interest” It should, at the same time, be autocratic, if
It was to inspire respect and exact obedience Sovereignty was not vested in the
people, but in the nation-State and only the few selected had the right to speak
for the nation These selected few possessed the ability to sacrifice private
interests to the national welfare, and they were capable of pursuing the right way
to that end by virtue of their inherited character and cultural training They
were, therefore, supreme guardians of the destiny of the nation To reduce it to a
simple formula, Fascism claimed that only the few could rule, only the few could
make decisions, when there was leadership, there was virility Government by the
elite is a principle of Fascism and the concept of leadership expressed the extreme
form of the elite principle
claimed, “is coward’s dream,” and imperialism, according to Mussolini, “is the
eternal and immutable law of life ” Italian expansion, he said time and again,
was a matter of life and death “We are forty millions squeezed in our narrow but
adorable peninsula Italy must expand or perish ” This is tantamount to
preaching war “We are charged,” said Mussolini in 1925, “with having imposed
upon our nation a war discipline I admit it, and I glory in it ” He said on
another occasion, “war alone brings up to their highest tension all human
energies and puts the stamp of nobility upon the people who have the courage to
”
meet it
The Fascists considered all economic questions from the standpoint of
national utility The production and distribution of wealth were primarily
matters of national, not individual concern, because the nation must be
economically and politically consolidated “The productive energies of the nation
must be maintained at their highest possible point in order to supply the means
for maintaining vinlc citizens and preserving the national strength.” The
Fascists, therefore, managed and regulated the economic life of the country while
maintaining individual responsibility and freedom of enterprise Fascism rejected
both laisscz fairc and State ownership Private ownership of property was
allowed, because economic self-interest was considered to be the most powerful
incentive to productive activity. But this interest must be held in constant
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY— FASCISM 653
subordination to the national interest The Fascist government was within its
right to intervene at any time and in any way whenever it appeared to them that
private initiative had failed in serving the national security and prosperity.
Corporativism. Originally, the Fascist party was favourably inclined to
Syndicalism and it had advocated the right of each syndicate, or trade union, or
workers to take over and manage production within the particular field of its own
activityBut from 1926 onwards, or even earlier, it turned its original syndicalism
into the new form of corporativism It proclaimed the doctnne that in each
branch or category of production a corporation should be established. There were
two features of this corporation In the first place, it was to be composed of
syndicate (or trade union) of workers and the syndicate (or association) of
employers concerned with that branch of production In the second place, the
corporation was not to take over and manage production, within its branch, to
the exclusion of private property and private enterprise It would simply
“regulate” the working of private property and the conduct of private enterprise,
”
“under the aegis of the State
Corporativism was essentially based upon the Fascist creed of “organicity”;
completeness of the life of the nation in its totality Since the nation must work as
a totality and not a series of conflicting group interests, corporativism defied both
liberalism and socialism The former made the individual an end himself whereas
the latter attempted to place the allegiance of the worker with all other workers
throughout the world Fascism insisted that the allegiance of both employers and
workers must be to Italy first, and the class conception of solidarity was resolutely
denied “No worker in the name of class loyalty can impair the general
productive power of the State, no employer can injure the workers and
consuming population in the interests of a profit that is pernicious from a
national point of view, the government as the symbol of organic unity of all must
”
insist that the objective national allegiance is preserved
Various laws were passed from time to time for organization of the
corporative state By was complete The corporations were
1934, the structure
vested with legislative powers that fell competence Each
directly within their
corporation was headed by a cabinet minister and it provided a basis for
co-ordination in national economic activities In 1936, Mussolini announced the
end of the Chamber of Deputies From 1928 to 1939, the corporations provided a
list of parliamentary candidates, which after revision by the Grand Council of the
Fascist Party was submitted to the vote of the national electorate After 1939, the
corporations themselves served as electorate and elected the members. In this
way, the corporations directly provided the great majority of the members in the
new Chamber of Fascist The Fascist Party, thus, enunciated the doctrine that
the corporation was the proper any system of national representation.
basis for
“This was the answer,” as who thus saw his
Barker says, “to the Democrat,
cherished system of quantitative representation on a territorial basis displaced by
a new so-called ‘qualitative’ system which professed to elicit the last elements of
the nation through the sieve of a vocation method of choice.”**
Claims made for the Italian system of Corporativism. The Italian system of
corporativism has been lavishly praised It is claimed that it provided a new
conception of the functions of the State It is superior lo the laissez faire and
Socialism as it reconciled the State and the individual to one another by
18 Barker, E ,
Refections on Government, p 331
654 PRINCIPLE^ OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
reconciling them both to the corporation In the corporation the producers and
the worikers find their expression and conciliate their differences, the State
standing by them and aiding them in their task Secondly, corporativism is, or
can be, distinct from any political regime A totalitarian State is not only its
climate, although it is the Italian product Finally, corporativism is the
democratic device of the twentieth century By reconciling the differences of all
factors of production in the field of economics it brings them on a common
pedestal and introduces a new system of representation which does not depend on
geographical constituencies and ever hostile political parties, “but on the
”
essential national cadres and their complementary interests
Nor does the third claim hold good The corporations were not based on a
firm foundation of the freedom of the trade union The corporation was
determined and controlled by the State Persons suspected of non-fascist
tendencies were rigidly kept out and corporations were dissolved even on the
slightest suspicion of anti-national activities The system was, therefore, not a
source of popular representation was neither a pattern of industrial democracy
It
NAZMSM
Rise of Nazi-ism. World War I was claimed to be a fight of democracy
against autcKracy was hoped that after the cessation of hostilities the world
It
would emerge safer for the growth of democratic institutions But soon after the
Treaty of Versailles nearly three-quarters of the people of Europe found
democratic governments either destroyed or in danger of destruction Italy was
the first to experiment with a totalitarian State after Mussolini’s famous march
on Rome m 1922, Primo di Rivero was declared father of Spam in 1923 Then,
followed the defeated Germany which had presented to the world the best
specimen of a Parliamentary government through the Weimar Constitution
The unsettled economic and political conditions in Germany did not provide
a satisfactory climate for parliamentary institutions Nor had she any democratic
traditions She was groaning under the humiliating terms of the Treaty of
Versailles Deprived of her colonies, committed to a programme of heavy
disarmament, officially forbidden by the treaty to raise a German air force for
years to come, and huge reparations which she had not the means to pay,
Germany had become a third rate international power Within Germany itself
there was complete economic collapse The flight of gold from Germany and the
reckless policy of inflation resulted in inconceivable depreciation in the value of
the Mark and unprecedented rise in prices There was widespread unemploy-
ment, the number in 1932 reaching the peak figure of six million.
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITV—NAZMSM 655
economic and political chaos Then, there was a restless nationalistic fervour
throughout the country It was at this psychological moment that Adolf Hitler
appeared on the scene He was skilful in playing with the emotions of the people
and promised to destroy the much resented Versailles Treaty, secure military
equality fof Germany, repudiate reparations, expel the Jews who throve on the
misery of the Germans both during the War and after, suppress radical labour
movements, provide employment for all, and take vigorous steps to pave down
inequalities in the possession of wealth Hitler’s appeal was for all classes of
population Hungry people wanted employment and food Labour needed work
and security of employment Landowners and the industrialists were in search of
some one who could guarantee them their wealth in face of the spreading
communistic ideologies and methods
Hitler’s movement, was known
as the German Workers’ Party.
to start with,
Next year, it was named German Workers’ Party and later
the National Socialist
the National Socialist Party The change in the party name was relevant to the
needs of the time and psychology of the people The National Socialist label was
sufficient to enamour both the socialists and the nationalists The Nazis, as they
came to be known, rose to power partly by means of the violent acts of their
“storm troops” and partly through an adroit propaganda Hitler was called upon
by President Von Hmdenburg to form a coalition government in November
1932, but this he refused The invitation was again extended to him in January
1933, which he accepted Hitler was appointed Chancellor with a cabinet of
Nazis and members of the centre and old nationalist groups But he secured the
dissolution of Reichstag and elections were proclaimed to be held on March 5. A
few days before the date of the elections a mysterious and disastrous fire had
consumed the Reichstag building This was held to be the work of the
Communists who, it was alleged, had flashed the signal for a general rising It
exasperated Hitler and his Nazi party In opening the election campaign Hitler
denounced the “crime of 1918”, and unequivocally promised to destroy Marxism,
Communism, and class warfare He was an avowed opponent of parliamentarv
democracy as well and, accordingly, committed himself to end it and “find the
way of reorganising the new unity of the German nation ” He, also, pledged “to
reawaken a popular veneration for the great traditions and to educate the Youth
in reverence for the old imperial army as the emblem of the nation’s greatest
”
achievement
In the confusion caused after the Reichstag fire, President Hmdenburg, on
February 28, suspended many fundamental rights of the citizens guaranteed by
the Weimar Constitution, viz., articles prohibiting arbitrary arrest and imprison-
ment and guaranteeing private property, the sanctity of the home, the secrecy of
private correspondence and freedom of speech, assembly, and association It was
in this atmosphere that the March elections were held which the Nazis and their
Nationalist allies won by a slight majority of two per cent votes
The Structure and Policy of the Nazi State. When the new Reichstag mei
on March 28, it gave blanket powers to the Nazi cabinet under Hitler, for a
period of four years date that the typical Nazi programme was put
It is from this
too^ had in aims and tactics approached nearly the Italian model. The
government soon dissolved the Communist, the Socialist and other opposition
parties. A law was made making the National Socialist Party or the Nazi Party
the only legal party in the country. Opposition newspapers were suppressed and
the press, the radio, the theatre, and the cinema were placed under the control of
Dr Gocbbels, and Propaganda Thousands of
Minister of Enlightenment
political suspects exile and the Jews excluded
were imprisoned or driven into
from public life of the party and the government The ideal of Nazi-ism, one
Reich, one people, one leader, was achieved
Thus, in rapid strokes the Nazis achieved a totalitarian State The story,
however, was completed by the November 1933 general elections of the
Reichstag. The Nazis secured 92 per cent of the total votes cast and on first
December the National Socialist Party was incorporated into the machinery of
the State Soon after the federal system of government was abolished and each
unit of Reich was placed under the charge of Hitler’s personal representatives
vested with virtual dictatorial powers Then^ the Upper Chamber of the
legislature at the centre, Reichsrat, was abolished On President Hinden burg’s
death in 1934, Hitler became the President and the Chancellor combining into
his person the supreme executive and legislative powers The Reichstag was
summoned occasionally and that, too, for registering the decisions of Hitler One
single instance illustrates it. After the November 1933 elections, “the new
all-Nazi Reichstag held a seven-and-one-half minute session for the sole purpose
of electing officers659 Brown Shirts rose and sat down in unison when the
Government’s list was put to a vote, and, then, went obediently about their own
business ” This was the climax Hitler, the Chancellor and Fuehrer, became the
undisputed ruler of Germany The Fuehrer spoke the first and the last word for
the party and the government
place, It advocated the purity of race, the purity of language and the purity of
literature According to the teachings of Nazi-ism “there are to be no more
human Germany, but only Germans
beings in With this extreme nationalism
ol the Nazis may be connected an intense devotion to German paganism in
religion and the theory that the German woman was considered valuable only as
a breeder of pure Nordic children and the preserver of the Nordic race
The exclusiveness of the State, in the second place, meant achievement of
economic self-sufficiency The Nazis emphasised economic self-sufficiency in the
name of national unity and solidarity Nazi economic policy was neither pure
capitalism, nor socialism, because both the creeds divided the nation into hostile
camps General welfare was placed above private interests The capitalists and
the workers were controlled in the name of the State Big and heavy industncs
were allowed to continue under private enterprise, but the scale and nature of
production was determined by the State The leader of the party decided what to
produce, where to produce, and when to produce Private
how to produce,
determination and choice had nothing to do with it Both the producers and
consumers had neither any choice nor any preference There was no separate
organisation of the labour, and strikes and lockouts were strictly prohibited by
law Wages and prices were fixed Commodities were controlled and rationed
Imports and exports were permitted with the government permission
The Nazis did not glonfy the State to the same degree as the Fascists Hitler
rejected Mussolini’s idea that the State is “a spiritual and moral fact in itself’
The State was not regarded as an end but as a means and its highest purpose was
to preserve and promote racial unity, racial purity and racial development The
Nazis transmuted in the volk or nation what the\ had denied to the State They
agreed to the dictum of Kant and Fichte that the individual possesses no rights
but duties and the true freedom of the individual, they claimed, consisted in
subordinating himself to the volk and working for its welfare Nazi writers
frequently spoke of the volk as a sort of metaphysical supernatural entity having
a spiritual reality apart from the existence of its members Hitler always said that
the individual is nothing, das volk is ever hing He ordained for the Germans
three simple rules of conduct duty, discipline and sacrifice When the individual
has no rights, no freedom of choice and no private initiative, it matters not
whether the exaltation is that of the State or the volk. The results are the same
Hitler was the head of German nation as well as of the State
Nazi-ism is Democracy according to Hitler was
the antithesis of democracy
a decaying corpse as was “stupid, corrupt and slow-moving” Parliaments, it
it
19 Hitler first chose the Jews as the targets of German aggression, “once given a
jews from Central and Eastern Europe to the gas chambers ” Ebenstein, W
Toda/s Isms, p
,
103
658 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
(National Socialist) Party has now become the State.” This is exactly what
Mussolini had said and done
The party, according to Nazi teachings, was the authorised agent of
the dictatorship and the State Both in Itlay and Germany the principle of leader-
ship from above was an established fact It was the core not only of the consti-
tution of the National Socialist Party, but also of its doctrines Hitler was
the head of the party, head of the State, head of the government, and, most
important of all, head of the German nation considered as a racial community
Obedience to the leader was declared a sacred duty and it was rigidly enforced by
the arts of discipline and propaganda The ideal of “one Reich, one people, one
leader” did not involve any question of how and why Hitler definitely put it
Duty, discipline and sacrifice to be the watchwords of German citizens Religion
became worship of the Fuehrer Professor Ernest Bergman wrote “We ol the
German religion today turn to the ancient Nordic, Indo-Germanic Light-Hero
figure and get rid of a false and diseased Christ picture created by the Christian
Pope and Church to the hurt of humanity The highpriest of the new German
paganism is Hitler himself He is the real Holy Ghost Hitler is lonely So is God
”
Hitler IS like Gcxl Hitler is a new, greater, and a powerful Jesus Christ
The worship of Hitler was preached from the pulpit and at school, the stage,
the cinema, the radio and the press “When the child returned home from school
forlunch the parents greeted him with ‘Heil Hitler’, a phrase which the Germans
used from 50 to 150 times a day ” A Nazi school text-book which every German
child was required to use, contained the following precious sentiment
“Our Leader, Adolf Hitler,
We love you
We pray lor you
We like to hear you
”
We work for you, Heil
Leadership was, thus, far more in Nazi Germany than just a matter of
authority Irom above “It was the instrumentality through which nationality,
State, and processes were fused into one The national leader was
all political
hailed as the supreme embodiment of spirit and will of the people and hence the
infallible head of their political system Totalitarianism, therefore, acquired a
”
sanctity in Germany that was never attained in Italy
similarly expressive ” was restoration of the old heritage of the directing leader
It
and the old idea of a united voUl In its origin, the Nazi party mixed an old
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY— NAZI-ISM 659
the small shopkeeper, and the lower middle class Then, the party had a
particular appeal to the young who had seen war service, and wished to preserve
the best they had learnt in the war by cultivating the virtues of fellowship and
heroism From its beginning “the Party called itself German (the German
Workers’ Party), and whatever elements it gathered youth or aged, the lower —
—
middle class or the great industries it remained essentially and fundamentally
Cierman” National Socialism was, and the
thus, wedded to the people
community From this it proceeded and concluded
to drive out foreign elements
by conceiving German community as a native and natural race, which must
above all things “preserve its racial purity, enhance its racial vigour and expand
to Its racial limits” This was the climax of racial unity and racial exclusiveness
The National Socialist Party made Germans a “closed” society when it preached
that only the pure race could possess and transmit the true spint These
teachings, in fact, set the old conceptions on a firmer and deeper foundation
which could be advocated to others and adopted by them “In a word, both
Oimmunism and Fascism are general alternatives, they are presented to the
world at large, and if in the Italian view Fascism is an alternative produced by
the Italian genius and peculiarly connected with Italy, it is nonetheless an
”
alternative presented to the common choice
What Germany presents to others is simply Germany by itself and in itself;
20 Barker, E ,
Rffieclmns on Government, p 391
SUGGESTED READINGS
Asirvatham, E Political Theory, Chap XIII, pp 447- 72
Barker, E Political Thought in England from 1 848-1914, Chaps I, III
Harmon, Judd M Political Thought from Plato to Present, Chaps XVII, XVIII, XXI
Hitler, A Mem Kampf
Hiller, A My Battle, tr from the German (Nesv York, 1933)
Joad, C EM Introduction to Modem Politual Theory, Chaps II I,
SOCIALISM
Meaning of Socialism. The word socialism appears to have been first used
m the Poor Man’s Guardian m 1833 In 1835, a society, which received the name
of the Association of all classes of all Nations, was founded under the auspices of
Robert Owen (1771-1858), a successful capitalist who had made a fortune by the
age of forty, and the words socialists and socialism became current during the
discussions which arose there The term was soon afterwards borrowed from
England by a distinguished French writer, Reybaud, in his well-known work, the
Reformateur moderne, in which he discussed the theories of Saint Simon,
Fourier and Owen Through Reybaud it gained wide currency on the Continent
and IS now the accepted name for one of the most remarkable movements of the
nineteenth century
up in the midst of the industrial revolution and he was deeply conscious of the
enormous abuses of the factory system, which he witnessed in his own industrial
enterprises He also knew the wonderful services that might be rendered by new
technical improvements if only it were made subordinate to human well-being
Owen, thus, sought to bring the mechanism of the industrial system under the
direction of the nobler principle, in which the good of all should be the great and
sole aim He adv(x:ated the organisation of producers’ cooperatives in order to
If Owen had before his eyes the evils of industrialization. Saint Simon had
before him the history of the hoary abuses of an idle and privileged feudalism
Revolution had, no doubt, fearfully shaken feudalism in France, but it was still
661
662 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
this array of parasitesthrough the industrial and scientific leaders as the real
working heads of the people What he exactly desired was an industrialist State.
The men who were best fitted to organise society for productive labour should
rule in it, his aim was the substitution of the feudal aristocracy by a working
aristocracy of merit
towards the amelioration of the moral and physical existence of the poorest class
”
ScKiety ought to organise itself in the way best adapted for attaining this end
During the next stage in the development of Socialism, we see the influence
of chieflyGerman and also Russian thinkers Marx used the term Communism to
denote his own theories m contradiction to the term Socialism. Marx and Engels
gave expression to their doctrines in their celebrated Communist Manifesto
(1848) and criticised the socialism hitherto preached and advocated Later, the
socialism of Owen and Simon school came to lie known as Utopian
Saint
Socialism or Utopianism and the one which drew its inspiration from Marx as
scientific socialism or merely Socialism. The term Communism denoted a
distinct scheme of social reorganisation
The term Socialism is derived from the word socious which means society
vSocialism is concerned with scxietv and it is the injustice of the capitalist system
that has inspired it It is a reaction against the scKial and economic anarchy
which the capitalist ssstem had produced It is a revolt against the exploitation of
man bv man and of child, in field, factory, mine and workshop It is a protest
against the building of an economic and social system on the incentive of profit,
not service It is a challenge to competition which had degraded the working man
and his family, starved many to keep a few in luxury, separated scKiety into two
classes — haves and have-nots — and dragged mankind into perpetual conflicts and
wars
The socialist challenge to the existing order is primarily moral, though its
basis is economic If is the assertion of the rights of the producing class which had
never obtained a fair deal anywhere during all stages of social evolution At one
time this class was chiefly made up of slaves, then, of half-free or nominally free
agricultural labourers, and, finally, of industrial workers This class had always
been excluded from the possession of land and capital, deprived of its share of the
product of labour, denied the opportunities for effective participation in the
affairs of thecommunity, for political power without its economic counterpart is
only a delusion and a snare No reform or change can be of any use, they argue, as
long as there is no change in the system by which the few owned and controlled
the capital, and the whole productive and distributive machine The Socialists,
therefore, propose that land and capital, which are the requisites of labour and
the source^s of all wealth, should be placed under s(x:ial ownership in order to
So far all the Socialists are agreed But on the most important points of
detail they differ very greatly They differ as to the form society will take in
carrying out the Socialist programme, as to the relation of regional and local
&PH£JK]S. Ur aiAlB. AV-liVii X
had rightly said that “scx-ialism is like a hat that has lost its shape because
everybody wears it” But the ideal of the Socialists is, whatever their variety, to
'
remove poverty and privileges, vice and crime and other social evils from which
s(x:iety suffers today and lo establish a new
and economic order where there social
will exist equal opportunity for As Spargo says, no
all to flower to their best
definition of Socialism can be complete which does not consider it as (i) a
criticism of existing society, (ii) a philosophy of social evolution, (in) a social
forecast or ideal, and (iv) the attainment of the ideal The description of the
Socialist ideal is provided by GDH Cole He savs, “Socialism means four closely
connected things—a human fellowship which denies and expels distinctions of
class, a scKial system in which no one is so much rich and pcxirer than his
neighbours as to be unable to mix with them on equal terms, the common
ownership and use of all the vital instruments of production, and an obligation
upon all citizens to serve one another according to their capacities” ScKialism is,
thus,an economic doctrine related especially to the economic ills of the industrial
revolution Its aim is to establish s(x:ial justice
Marx’s contribution. The greatest and most influential name in the history
The most essential of Marx’s doctrines may be reduced to three (1) the
materialistic conception of history, (2) the law of the concentration of capital,
and (3) the class war Das Kapital or Capital, the first and the most important
volume of which appeared in 1867, and the other two volumes, edited by Engels
published posthumously in 1885 and 1894, adds a wealth of factual detail to the
The Theory of Surplus Value. The central point in Marx’s thesis is his
theory of Surplus Value. Here he derives his inspiration from the classical labour
name of David Ricardo Marx held
theory of value, primarily associated with the
that labour was the sole source of value He agreed with the classical economists
that the market value of a commodity depends on demand and supply, but in the
long run the value of anything is determined by the labour and time spent on its
production Karl Marx defined commodities as congelation of labour and
regarded value as “crystallised labour” The inclusion of labour in the commodity
gives It But the labour must be “socially necessary” This means two
value
things In the first place, labour must use instruments without which it cannot
work These instruments are factories, machinery, electric and steam power, etc
Secondly, the goods must be produced in such quantities that they can be easily
marketed If the market refuses to buy all the goods produced, the labour
expended in the prcxluction of such goods is wasted
Labour, says Karl Marx, is a commodity and its value, too, is determined
like any other commodity That is to say, its value in exchange is fixed by the
labour needed to produce and mintain it, or, in other words, it amounts to the
commodities needed to support the labourer The worker must get wages
sufficient enough to cover his expenses of maintaining himself and his family But
actually this does not happen in a capitalist society and labourers get wages
much below their subsistence level The reason is obvious In the existing
structure of scx:iety the instruments of production machinery, tools and —
materials upon which labour can be performed— are owned by a relatively small
class, called the capitalist class, who are the employers Labourers merely own
their ability to work, which they sell to the capitalist and for which they receive
the employer’s advantages, because what is honey for him is vinegar for the
worker By paying him less wages, which he accepts because his labour is highly
perishable, the employer increases
his profits The difference between the
exchange value of a commodity and the wage paid to the worker, Karl Marx
calls. Surplus Value. The Surplus Value which ought to have gone to labour is
appropriated by the capitalist It is, in fact, the product of unpaid labour and
Marx charactenses it as pure and simple exploitation In the Communist
Manifesto Marx says, “For exploitation, veiled by leligious and political illusions,
It (bourgeoisie) has substituted naked, shameless, direct brutal exploitation ”
It was this exploitation of labour which Karl Marx sought to remove The
modern State, in his opinion, is a tool in the hands of the capitalist class and they
use It to protect and perpetuate their vested interests The only way to put an end
to these conditions, according to Marx, is to destroy all opportunity for private
enterprise and free competition This can be achieved only under a Socialist
society, where collective capital will replace private capital, both capitalists and
wage-earners disappear, and all persons become cooperating producers
The Materialistic Conception of History. Marx, then, proceeds to enquire
how society came to be organised in such a way that a small pnvileged class has
ever appropriated and continues to appropriate the surplus value created by the
labour of workers with the full authority of law He finds his explanation in
historyand gives to his doctrine the name of the Materialistic Conception of
History According to this doctnne all the phenomena of human society have
their origin in material conditions of life “Legal relations as well as forms of
State,” said Marx, “could neither be understood by themselves, nor explained by
the so-called general progress of the human mind, but they are rooted in the
material conditions of life The mode of production in material life determines
the general character of the social, political and spiritual process of life. It is not
the consciousness of men
that determines their existence, but on the contrary
their social existence determines their consciousness ” The political institutions of
every country, its social structure, trade and industry, art and philosophy, and the
customs, manners, traditions, law, religion and morality, all are influenced and
shaped, according to Marx, by the material conditions of life By material
conditions of life, he means environment, production, distnbution and exchange;
production being the most important of all “Thus to each stage of economic
production there corresponds an appropriate political form and an appropriate
class structure ” Marx’s philosophy, therefore, is a theory of history setting forth
the natural phase of evolution
He applies his doctrine in particular to two revolutions, one in the past, the
other in the future The revolution in the past was that of bourgeoisie against
feudalism and it found its expression, according to Marx, in the French
Revolution The one in the future, is the revolution which Marx predicts, the
revolution of the wage-earners or proletariat against the bourgeoisie in their bid
to establish the Socialist Commonwealth “The weapwjns with which the
bourgeoisie felled feudalism to the ground are now turned against the bourgeoisie
Itself But not only has the bourgeoisie forged the weapons that bnng death to
Itself, It has called into existence the men who are to wield those weapons the —
”
modern working class, the proletarian
666 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
the ranks of the proletariat “Our epoch, the epoch of bourgeoisie,” says Karl
Marx, “has simplified the class antagonisms Society as a whole is more and more
splitting up into two great hostile camps, into two great classes directly facing
each other Bourgeoisie and Proletanat ” When the capitalists grow numerically
weaker, less in number, that heralds their destruction “All previous historical
movements,” according to Marx, “were movements of minorities The proletar-
ian movement the self-conscious, independent
is movement of the immense
”
majority, in the interests of the immense majority
Marx applied the principle of the law of the concentration of capital not
only to industry but also to agriculture He predicted the landowners to become
fewer number while their estates grew larger and larger This process would
in
make more glaring the evils and injustices of the capitalist system and
consequently strengthen the ranks of the opposition
The Class War. In every age, Marx maintained, the differing modes of
acquiring means of subsistence divide men into separate groups and create within
each group special group consciousness This group consciousness created by the
affinity of economic interest makes them a community of interests, the bonds of
which are more enduring and give rise to class struggles The existence of a class
war is, therefore, nothing new “The history of all hitherto existing society is the
history of class struggles.” For a historian, history is warfare between nations, but
for Marx it is a revolutionary struggle between classes In these struggles the fight
“each time ended either in a revolutionary reconstitution of society at large, or in
the common ruin of the contending classes ” All social changes, appeared to
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITy— SOCIALISM 667
Marx to have been determined chiefly by economic class struggle and the history
of humanity was the history of class conflict Evv,ry system of production, he says,
has given two opposing economic classes~the exploiters and the exploited,
rise to
the owners and the toilers “Freeman and slave, partician and plebian, baron and
serf, guildmaster and journeyman, in one word, oppressor and oppressed,
standing constantly in opposition to each other carried on an uninterrupted
”
warfare, now open, now concealed
Society IS dynamic, it changes and evolves The capitalist society must, as a
result of this evolution, ultimately pass away and be succeeded by another The
and the system of capitalism generate seeds of their own destruction
capitalist
For some time the proletariat would continue toiling, fretting and fuming till
ultimately they become desperate and unite to overthrow the capitalist class.
Revolution follows, as a result of which the proletanat seizes power. This
sequence is inevitable and invariable and can end in no other way The
is bound to come and when it comes, it takes
dictatorship of the proletariat
complete control over the economic functions of society by expropriating the
private capitalist and by appropriating the means of production Society, thus,
passes into the socialistic stage through a revolution determined by the natural
laws of evolution
Socialism is a result determined
by the inherent laws of social evolution,
independent of the and purpose of individual men “All that the most
will
powerful and clearsighted intellect can do is to learn to divine the laws of the
great movement of society and to shorten and alleviate the birth pangs of the new
era The efforts of reactionaries to turn the wheel of history’ backwards are in
”
vain
The Socialist society which emerges from the proletarian revolution will be a
classless society All land and capital shall be owned in common, exploitation will
cease, the tyranny of the no longer be possible, and all men
owners of wealth will
will be free Tlie Communist Manifesto ends with an appeal to the wage-earners
to rise on behalf of Communism “The Communists disdain to conceal their
views and aims They openly declare that their end can be attained only by the
forcible overthrow of all existing social conditions Let the ruling classes tremble
at a Communist revolution The proletarians have nothing to lose but their
”
chains They have a world to win Working men of all countries unite
But here emerges the great difference Are the class war and the consequent
rise of the proletariat inevitable^ Can the desired social transformation be
brought about by violent and catastrophic changes or will it come into being by
the slow process of natural growth'* Two different answers to these questions have
given rise to the schools of revolutionary and evolutionary socialism The latter is
ISan organism, a living structure and, like any other living structure, may grow or
decay Growth and decay are slow processes, “they may be detected by human
intelligence and even assisted and accelerated by human effort, but they cannot
be reversed or brought to a standstill, nor can they be speeded up into abrupt and
(atastrophic changes The path of progress consists, therefore, “in a series of
reforms designed to assist the gradual movement of society towards the next
COLLECTIVISM
What is Collectivism. Collectivism or State Socialism is one of the varieties
of Socialism It is a reaction against the extreme Individualism of the nineteenth
century and refers to that school of thought which regards the State as a positive
good and holds that its promote the common economic, moral and
mission is to
intellectual as a whole The central idea underlying
interests of the people
Collectivism is that if the mass of the people are to nse above the level of wage
slaves, they will have to be protected against the evils of free competition by a
greater measure of interference with and regulation of industry by government as
a representative of the community with a view that ultimately all means of
production and distribution are collectively owned “A socialist,” Professor Ely
says, “is one who looks to society organised in the state for aid in bringing about a
”
more perfect distnbution of economic goods and an elevation of humanity
Collectivism analysed. According to the Collectivists the existing political
organisation discloses several defects It assures the happiness and comfort of the
few and suffering of the many The fate of the masses is their poverty in plenty
“It is always tragic,” remarks Mrs Barbara Woottan, “to starve and to be
desperately poor or to have nothing to do But to starve in the midst of plenty is
hallowed concepts of the eighteenth century For them the body politic is an
organism and the State is the best medium through which exploitation,
degradation and starvation of the masses can be removed and equality of
opportunity provided to all “In any society,” Lindsey says, “political organisa-
tion is necessary because common action is necessary to repair the disorganisation
caused by the fact that men act independently and yet affect one another by such
action.” The Collectivists, thus, believe in the necessity of the State and regard it
as a supreme and positive good, an instrument which provides conditions of
social welfare ensuring social justice
The new social order which the Collectivists envisage is not to be brought
about by catastrophic or revolutionary methods The transformation of society is
to be slow, gradual and peaceful. Society, they urge, should be permeated with
socialistic ideas through education and propaganda Those who subsenbe to the
5 Ibid.,
p 46
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY — SOCIALISM 669
control,
2 industry to be carried on for the purpose of ministering to the needs of the
community, and not with the object of making profits for individuals. The
quality and quantity of the commodities produced is to be determined by
considerations of social need, and
3 the motive of social service to be substituted for incentive of private profit
There is, thus, a sharp difference between the Collectivists or State Socialists
and the Scientific Socialists, the disciples of Karl Marx, or the Communists The
State Socialists are opposed to revolution as a means of attaining social
democracy whereas Marx had advocated it as the only alternative for overthrow-
ing capitalism They also view with alarm the Dictatorship of the Prolctanat
because force is its raison d’etre. It is to be invested with oppressive and
autocratic powers m order to destroy capitalism and construct socialism When
force becomes the criterion of political authority, it makes no difference whether
It is the dictatorship of the proletariat or dictatorship of the individual.
Collectivism appeals to reason and its instruments are education and propagan-
da It aims at a slow, gradual and peaceful transformation of society While the
State Socialists have confidence in the State as a matter of principle, the
Scientific Socialists accept it only as a transitory phase which will “wither away”
when capitalism is destroyed completely Finally, the State Socialists do not
subscribe to the theory of worldwide revolution They believe that itis by
constitutional means that the ultimate goal of social democracy can be attained
in all lands
The Collectivists deny the individual’s nght to the ownership of the free gifts
of nature, like land and mines These are limited in supply and if they are left to
the individual he would exploit them for self-interest sacrificing national interests
and for his immediate gain jeopardising the future social interests. It is not even
distributive justice, the Collectivists urge, that the few should appropriate the
free gifts of nature to the detnment of the predominating majority Justice
demands that they should be owned by the State on behalf of the community and
exploited for the benefit of the community.
to society those goods and services which are socially needed, but for which there
does not exist sufficient demand. Moreover, Socialism aims at substituting the
motive of social service for the motive of private profit In a capitalist society,
they assert, every individual is a competitor inspired bv his own self-interest
without any regard to the interest of others This mad competitive race
degenerates man and demoralises society But the elimination of competition and
private ownership of the means of production would bring about a psychological
change in the outlook of the people Their incentive will be social service and
social welfare A Socialist government will, accordingly, be incorruptible There
will be no temptation to enrich an individual self The finer side of human nature
is stimulated and the best self of man guides the individual and society
down” The demand for equality is the basis of Socialism It holds that liberty is
not worth having without the security equality provides Socialists, accordingly,
argue that economic democracy must precede political democracy The Collecti-
vists stand to realize this social transformation through the agency of a
democratic State
Not merely is capitalism accused of being unjust in its distribution of
rewards for work, not only does it fail to give that security which is the
distinguishing mark of an efficient economic system, but it is callous in its
FABIANISM
Origin and meaning of Fabianism. The principles of the Fabian Society
form the basis of British Socialism In January, 1884, a band of young reformers
in Bntain (prominent among them were Sidney Webb, George Bernard Shaw,
Sydney Oliver, Graham Wallas, Mrs Annie Besant, Headlam, Pease and, for a
short time, H G Wells) founded the Fabian Society with a view to spreading
Socialism and to persuade the national and local governments of Bntain to put
the doctnne gradually into practical operation The Society adopted the name
Fabian after Fabius (nicknamed Cuncta or delayer), the Roman General, whose
tactics they defined. “For the right moment you must wait, as Fabius did
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY — FABIANISM 671
patiently when warnng against Hannibal, though many censured his delays: but
when the time comes you must strike hard, as Fabius did, or your waiting will be
”
in vain, and fruitless
The Fabians in Britain were to adopt the methods of the Roman General for
the achievement of their goal of Socialism The Fabian Society did not direct its
appeal to any particular class, but to men and women of all classes who saw the
and desired their removal It endeavoured to rouse social
evils of capitalist society
were influenced particularly by the doctrines of Henry George, the various British
interpretations of Karl Marx, the developing of Collectivism in John Stuart
Mill’s exposition of his individualist doctrines, and the implications in the
philosophy of T H Green They were struck with the obvious fact of the
existence of poverty among the masses and the concentration of land and
industry in the hands of a few land-owners and industrialists deriving huge
fortunes without any effort on their part In a manifesto, prepared by Shaw and
adopted by the Fabian Society in September, 1884, is contained its policy and
programme The manifesto said
community), rent and interest will be added to the reward of labour, the idle
class now living on the labour of others will necessarily disappear, and practical
equality of opportunity will be maintained by spontaneous action of economic
forces with much less interference with personal liberty than the present system
”
entails
5. “For the attainment of these ends the Fabian Society looks to the spread
of socialist opinion, and the social and political changes consequent thereon,
including the establishment of equal citizenship for men and women It seeks to
Fabianism is, thus, based upon the actual experience of the pitiable plight of
the masses and the degrading lot to which they are subjected rather than on any
well defined theory of Socialism It is concerned with a more just distribution of
income and the reconstitution of society in such a manner as to secure the general
welfare and happiness The Fabians reject the thesis of Marx that there is a
perpetual conflict or class war between those who work for wages and those who
employ wage-workers Ramsay MacDonald declared in 1893, “The watchword of
Socialism is not class-consciousness, but community consciousness ’’
The conflict
IS between the community, on the one hand, and those who grow rich through
investments, on the other “The individuals or class who possess social power
have at all times, consciously or unconsciously, made use of that power in such a
way as to leave the great majority of the fellows practically nothing beyond the
means of subsistence according to the current living standard The additional
product, determined by the relative differences in productive efficiency of the
different sites, soils, capitals, and forms of skill above the margin of cultivation,
has gone to those exercising control over these valuable but scarce factors 1 his
struggle to secure surplus of ‘economic rent’ is the key to the confused historv of
" ^
European progress and the underlying unconscious motive of all revolutions
The object of Socialism, as the Fabians thought, is to obtain for all members
of the society the values which society creates This object is to be achieved by
gradually transferring land and industrial capital to the community But such a
transformation does not involve a violent change A catastrophic change is
foreign to the Fabian creed Any kind of violent change, even if necessitated by
the stress of circumstances, would fail to achieve the desired results, the Fabians
assert Barker convincingly sums up the object of Fabianism, “Resolved to
permeate all classes it has not preached class antagonism Re'-olved gradually
to permeate it has not been revolutionary, it has relied on the slow growth of
opinion
For the Fabians the State must be fully representative of the community, if it
could be “trusted with the rent of the country, and finally with the land, the
capital and the organisation of the national industry” They regard the State,
with a perfected machinery, the representative and trustee of the people, “their
guardian, their men of business, their manager, their Secretary, even their
>iix k-holder” They believe that the existing State could be made without radical
The object of the Fabians was to persuade the British nation to make
their political constitution thoroughly democratic, and to socialise their indus-
tries so as to make the livelihood of the people entirely indepiendent of capitalism.
The Fabian society enjoined upon its members that, instead of keeping aloof from
other bodies, they should join them and premeate them with Fabian ideas.
“Almost all organisations,” according to their belief, “contained elements making
for socialism” The Fabian Society, to sum up, was constitutional in its attitude,
and Its methods were the same familar and usual methods of political life in
Britain It stood for democracy, which meant simply the control of administra-
The great merit of Fabianism lies in the concrete plans which it devised “for
diffusing more equitably the advantages of modem industrial civilisation by
raising the economic and civic status of wage-earners and paring down the
fortunes of property-owners ” They worked out definite and attractive schemes
for immediate application like (1) “Social Legislation” embracing shorter hours
There had been a deep affinity between the Fabian Society and the Labour
two authors— Sidney Webb (later Lord Passifield) and Sydney Oliver of the —
original Fabian Essays, were members of the first British Labour Government in
1924 Webb was also Secretary of State for the Dominions and for Colonies in the
second labour Government in 1928 The society is extinct now
SYNDICALISM
Syndicalism Explained. Two schools of Socialists, the Syndicalists and the
(iuild socialists, directed their attack upon the Collectivist State, the former in
the late nineteenth century and the latter in the first decade of the twentieth
8 Shaw, B ,
Eiia}! in Fabian Socialism, p 47
674 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
outright In its place, they proposed a scxiety organised into trade unions or
syndicats. Thev suggested that most problems could be solved by local syndicats,
and that a national system of syndicat affiliations could administer affairs which
transcended the local level Syndicalism, thus, aimed to abolish private owner-
ship of capital and to substitute it by collective capital owned by the community
It was to be a producers’ commonwealth in which industries governed them-
selves Instead of a political state there was to be a co-ordinating body elected out
of the syndicats. To achieve their end the Syndicalists advocated a programme of
direct action, including the use of violence
intellectuals,” who are out of touch with the workers and their needs It is the
workers alone, they assert, who can really and adequately express their needs
“The importance of keeping alive an intense class consciousness further forbids
any rapprochement between the workers and the intellectuals of the middle-
class, even when the latter are favourably disposed, as mimical to revolutionary
”
ardour
Socialism, they fuither urge, involves nationalisation, which would preserve,
and, indeed, add to the hierarchy of officials who control and manage business or
industry, and the real emancipation of the wage-earner would be as far off as
ever Moreover, in order to achieve nationalisation or even to work towards that
end, the Socialist forces have been obliged to organise themselves into a political
party Any political party, the Syndicalists maintain, which participates in
parliamentary action make compromises and follow the principle of
is bound to
give and take, thereby softening down the rigour of its revolutionary principles A
political party, they further argue, is a much less efficient instrument of action
than a “class” The cause of the workers can best be served, if they organise
themselves into independent, self-governing unions of producers, keep alive
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY — SYNDICALISM 673
exists Just as a leopard cannot change his spots, so the State cannot change its
bourgeois character It is asserted that service under the State makes men
bureaucratic and unsympathetic to the needs and aspirations of the workers, who
are engaged in the actual work of production A governmental organisation with
Its concentrated authority promotes uniformity and routine, breeds narrowness,
saps imagination, and distrusts local development and enterprise Even a
benevolent State, the Syndicalists maintain, would, if left in control of industry,
be inimical to progress For it cannot know, nor does it care to know, what exactly
the needs and aspirations of the workers are It is only the workers themselves and
they alone who know what they actually need and how their needs may be
precisely met
Moreover, the State represents the consumers of labour only and not the
producers of value The authority and power of the State is the power of the
consumers of labour, the employers The State which safeguards the interests of
the consumers cannot and would not be the guardian of the producers By
abolishing the State, the Syndicalists aim at installing labour in the position of
authority They demand the organisation of each industry under the workers of
that industry Finally, the Syndicalists attack the very basis of the State as it
The only attempt to set forth fully the organisation of the future syndicalist
For these tasks the existing syndical associations, for the most part, be sufficient.
Ordinary functions of management will rest with the local industrial unions
These unions will have possession of buildings, machinery, and equipment in the
several industries and will exercise immediate direction of production and
execution of policy The national services, like post offices, railways, highways,
etc ,
will be assigned to the national federations of workers There will be other
national federations to supply technical information and expert advice to the
local bodies. Finally, there will be a national body, like the existing CGT
(Confederation Generale du Travail), entrusted with the function of deciding
matters that demand uniform treatment all over, such as, the determination of
wages, the length of normal hours of work, the care of children, the old, and sick
The authors of the scheme recognise the necessity of certain disciplinary
sanctions against the anti-human and anti-social acts of the members of the
Syndicalist society But these sanctions will be of a distinctive kind as compared
with the coercive authority of the State Each union will pass judgment upon
any of its offending members It may decree a moral punishment, like the
9 Coker, F W ,
Rnen/ Political Thought, p 243
10 Ihi^l p 244
1
1
Joad, CEM ,
Introduction to Modem Political Theory, p 69
12 Ihid
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY — SYNDIC VLISM 677
The General Strike may not be a strike of all the workers in a country By
General Strike the Syndicalists mean a strike on the part of the sufficiently large
number of workers employed in the key industries which may paralyse the whole
economic life of the country and bring the capitalist system to an end To be
ready for the Geneial Strike, it is essential that the workers must carry out a
policy of perpetual offence by adopting methods of sabotage, boycott, the label
and ca’canny practices t hrough all such methods of direct action the proletariat
expresses its will to conquer The Syndicalists, thus, believe in the principles of
violence in policies and Georges Sorel was one of the leading exponents
on the other hand, will vest this control in the State which is the repository of the
interests of the prodiuers as well as the consumers Secondly, Syndicalists hold
that the workers, as producers, should exercise control not only in the industrial
sphere but also, in the political sphere Their object is to create a stateless society
13 Ibid
678 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
whole Its object is not the good of a particular class, but the happiness of all
Criticism of Syndicalism. The idea of the Syndicalist society has been left
vague and hazy There is a reason behind it But no political movement can
appeal vigorously unless its goal is definitely defined Syndicalism aims at
entrusting the industrial and political control to the workers as producers Then,
how to safeguard the interests of the consumers^ There is no guarantee that the
producers of value, once saddled with power and authority, may not abuse their
authority in the same manner as the consumers have abused it
are more eduring, with stabilising effects, than revolutionary methods intended to
topsy-turvy the existing order of society, and with no certain result Advocates of
sabotage justify it war against the capitalist, but in its more
as a part of class
violent forms “it is and probably inexpedient, while even in its milder form
cruel
It must tend to encourage slovenly habits of work, which might easily persist
under the new regime that the Syndicalists wish to introduce Habits seldom
die with the people Doubts arc also entertained on the efficacy of strikes
Unsuccessful strikes demoralise the workers instead of intensifying class cons-
ciousness. Moreover, in the strike the working class, which has no surplus to rely
upon during the period of the strike, are likely to starve before achieving their
object Many orthodox Marxians attack Syndicalism as being in essence
anarchical And so it is
The policies and methods of the new Syndicalism have been well elaborated
and addresses by Jouhaux, Perrot and others A comprehensive
in various articles
exposition of the philosophy of the new movement comes from Maxime Leroy
The workers are enjoined to abandon their narrow conception of class war and
concentrate upon all those processes of mter-group collaboration that proved
effective in war time “Workers can now safely admit that production is not
simply a matter of hand labour, that the whole process involves administration,
invention, research, artistic craftsmanship, distribution, and even use and
consumption The production of any basic commodity or service demands a
co-ordination among manual labourers, technicians, managers, artists, scientists,
carriers, purveyors, users — all vitally concerned in the quality, quantity and
price of that utility The new Syndicalism is, accordingly, a philosophy of
co-ordination and cooperation of all interests concerned directly and indirectly in
the act of production and the consumers within the framework of the State The
presence of the State will be necessary for the supervision and cooperation of the
activities of the different unions The State will, according to Leroy, become
“through all its laws and in all its services, an impulse to initiative, invention and
economic heresy, with the same zeal with which the traditional state restrains
spontaneity and innovation It will endeavour to guide rather than restrain, its
legislation will become more and more a means of enlightenment rather than
dictation”
The new Syndicalists will also need the State to maintain military defence
and conduct foreign intercourse The coercive power of the State will be, of
course, reduced to the minimum with the modification in its functions The new
Syndicalists, adhering to a positive and comprehensive programme, condemn
violence of any kind There is, they say, “nothing proletarian about violence, It
has been the weapon of malcontents of ail ages and was inherited by proletarians
from the bourgeois insurrectionary parties of the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries” The new syndicalism is, thus, in some respects a return to the‘ideas
GUILD SOCIALISM
Rise of Guild Socialism. Guild Socialism, which had its birth in Britain, is
18 Ibid, p 254
680 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
politics. The British Socialists, who did not believe with the Fabians adopted a
via media between traditional Collectivism and traditional Syndicalism Someth-
ing was taken from the Collectivists and with the fundamentals of Syndicalism a
new doctrine was evolved known as Guild Socialism To the Guild Socialists the
trade unions represented the germs of the future organisation of industry The
trade union, they argued, should do for modern industry what the Guild did for
the medieval arts and crafts Guild Socialism, accoidingly, aims at placing
authority in the hands of democracies of producers and democracies of consumers
w'lthin the framework of the Stale
In Its original form the dcxrtrine of Guild Scxialism was first expounded by
British intellectuals in the first and second decades of the present century Its
basic ideas appeared in a bcxik The Restoration of the Guild System, by AJ
Penty, published in 1906 In this book Penty advocated a return to the medieval
whereby craftsman who was a member
‘‘principle of self-government in industry,
of an autonomous Guild owned the instruments with which he worked, and
determined the nature and extent of his production ” Penty’s arguments were
based partly on sentimental, partly on aesthetic grounds and were actuated
throughout by hostility against the mcxlern methexis of large-scale production
and trading His proposals of organising industry on the basis of the independent
craftsman, however, did not seem practical and were characterised as “the
”
Utopian phase of Guild Socialist propaganda
The movement soon became popular and its adherants swelled Guild
Socialism assumed a more practical form at the hands of S G Hobson and A R
Orage They, too, advocated the revival of the medieval Guild system, but at the
same time, they realised that modem conditions required some fundamental
modifications in order to fit the doctrine with the system of large-scale
production They asserted that the Guild idea should be adopted to modern
conditions on the basis of the existing Trade Union organization Their plea was
for self-government in industry by the workers concerned in the industry, grouped
together in a system of industrial Guilds, of which the existing Trade Unions
would form the germ ” GDH Cole was the chief active philosophic apostle of
this new movement
Cole was originally a Fabian and was actively associated with the
organisation of the Society’s Research Department All through his stay in the
Society, Cole had been persuading his fellow members that they should abandon
their affiliations with the political labourites and the liberals But he failed Then,
the War came The enormous increase in the powers of the State gave him a rude
shock. He came to the conclusion that the omnipotence of the State could not be
20 Joad, CEM ,
Introduction to Modem Political Theory,
p 74
21 IbicL,
p 75
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY — GUILD SOCIALISM 681
the road to the Millennium By this time he had become a sympathetic student of
French Syndicalism It had a considerable appeal for him and accepting William
Morris as his patron saint, he began to advocate the restoration of the medieval
society of societies He favoured a federal structure for the State and emphasized
that the State does not embody within it the whole society In a more than dozen
books and pamphelts, Cole amplified the critical and constructive ideas of Guild
S(x:ialism and, thus, became “the best known and most influential figure in the
movement”
Guild Socialism Analysed. The Guild Socialists opposed, as had Marx, the
dehumanizing work involved in large-scale production with its division of labour
They accepted the labour theory of value and the theory of suiplus value,
although m modified form, and they maintained that property is justified only
when It renders a service to society They did not object to political democracy,
but they argued that a government by representatives elected on a territorial
basis was incapable of understanding and solving the complex problems of an
method of representation The Guild Socialists aim to free the masses from the
shackles of slavery by making work better paid and by making it in itself more
interesting and more democratic in organisation
work in it, whether with hand or brain In order to avoid the dangers of
bureaucracy and of inefficiency, the Guild Socialists propose to establish
complete industrial government through an elaborate system of committees. It is
claimed that the interests of consumers will be adequately safeguarded by vesting
final rights of ownership of each industry in the State For Guild Socialists the
22 C>)le, GDH ,
Self-Government m Industry, p 154
682 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
mam economic problem is to find “a way of restoring the spirit of craft, to devise
others Problems like internal peace and security, defence, education, currency
and credit, etc are national problems and are the same for all whatever the
,
both of industrial and political organisation Joad has aptly remarked that the
theory of functional democracy “reacting vigorously from the idea of a
centralised and all-embracing State, advocates devolution of powers and
functions to a number of different bodies which will, it is hoped, adequately
”
express all the varied interests of man in the complex of modern society
The authors of Guild Socialism find room for the State as well as the Guild,
and this they do by a “separation of powers” To the State they will assign all
matters that concern the national life, “for the guild they would vindicate all
matters that concern the national income” In this way, two democracies the —
economic and the political— will be realised in the State For, unless there be
2'J pp 33-34
24 Joad, GEM, Introduction to Modem Political Theory,
p 78
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY — GUILD SOCIALISM 683
economic democracy— the control by the workers themselves of their work poli-
tical democracy is all in vain. The factory, the Guild Socialists further urge, forms
—
the necessary training school for active self-government, and unless democracy
can be successfully established in the industrial sphere, it will never work as a real
democracy in politics, however widely the franchise may be extended. “For the
conditions under which men work, exert powerful influence upon their minds and
attitudes, and they cannot easily learn to control the wider issues that arise in
politics unless they are given the opportunity of controlling the more immediate
concerns which affect them in their daily lives Of course, this doctrine involves
not only self-government in industry, but also a widespread system of functional
dem(x:racy extending over every field of collective activity The goal of Guild
Socialism is the attainment of democracy in economic as well as m political life
The Guild Socialists do retain the State, but with far less confidence in it
Appraisal. Guild Socialism has apparently a great appeal both for the
worker and the consumer The Guild Socialist State is intended to be a
decentralised State with separate autonomous units Opinions, however, differ on
the status of the State Hobson, for example, says that the State will be supreme
over all Guilds, local and national, and other associations as it shall be the
25 Cole, GDH ,
^ Gmde to Modem Polttus, pp 406-07
684 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
deciding authority on all disputes arising between diverse economic and political
units Cole, on the other hand, regards the State as an association like various
other associations and not a dominating association over others as Hobson has
suggested Barker has correctly said, “any doctrine of separation of powers, such
as Guild Socialism advocates, is bound to collapse before the simple fact of the
vital interdependence of all the activities of the ‘great society’ of today
But Guild Socialism is now dead as a separate doctrine Even Cole himself
admitted that Guild Socialism “has since declined and virtually disappeared as a
separate movement largely on account of the weakening of Trade Unions
through industnal depression, but also because the changes in the political
situation have forced to the front the issue of seizing political power, and have,
therefore, pushed into background the question of the forms of organisation to be
adopted power when it has been won
for the exercise of The Guild Socialists
demand too much of human nature If selfish instinct in man cannot be taken
out, then. Guild Socialism fails in its goal. Similarly, the scheme of functional
democracy does not seem to be a workable plan If functional representation
destroys social unity, functional democracy in industry presents its own insoluble
problems From where shall capital come and who bears the risk, are two
pertinent questions which need proper answers
26 Barker, E ,
Political Thought in England, 1848-1914, p 208
27 Cole, GDH ,
4 Guide to Modem Politics,
pp 404-405
SUGGESTED READINGS
Attlee, Clement As It Happened
Beer,M A History of British Socialism
Bober,M M Karl Marx's Theory of the State
Chang, H M The Marxian Theory of State the
COMMUNISM
Meaning of Communism. Communism is used to express many different
meanings Sometimes it is used for a theory of society such as that of the early
Christians, where nothing belonged to you and me but all property was held in
common Some people use it synonymously with Socialism, which, in reality, it is
not For, while all Communists are S^icialists, all Socialists are not Communists
A man in the street is very often given to understand that Communism refers to
that system of society under which food, clothing, shelter, education, medical aid,
and other necessaries of life are freely administered according to want But the
fact of the matter is that Communism has none of these meanings It is the
philosophy of society as constructed by Karl Marx and the Communists are those
who claim to be the inheritors of the true teachings of Karl Marx The true
Marxist use of the word Communism may be seen in the following quotation
from Lenin, wherein he speaks of the transition from Capitalism to Communism
“What IS generally called socialism was termed by Marx the ‘first’ or lower phase
of Communist society In so far as the means of production become common
property, the word ‘communism’ is also applicable here, provided we do not
forget that it is not complete communism” Communism is, thus, a theory of
method which seeks to lay down the principles upon which the transition from
capitalism to socialism is to be accomplished, and its two essential doctrines are
the class war and the revolution, that is, the forcible transference of power to the
proletariat
At the close of the First World Wai Lenin went back to the original name of
‘Communist’ in order tc make the position of the Russian Bolsheviks stand out in
the meaning and the foundation of Communism The leading features of Marx’s
thesis have already been briefly discussed • It is however, necessary to recapitu-
lateand expand what has been said m order to formulate the principle upon
which Communism is based Marx saw all historical movements, whether
religious or cultural or political, m terms of material conditions of life “It is not
685
686 PRINCIPLES OF OOLITICAL SCIENCE
the consciousness of man,” he said, “that determines his existence, but quite the
reverse, it is his social existence that determines his consciousness ” Since the
emergence of private property society has always been divided into two hostile
classes* “Just as in the ancient world the interest of slave owners was opposed to
that of the slaves, and in the medieval Europe the interest of the Feudal Lords
was opposed to that of the serfs, so in our times the interest of the capital class,
which derives its income from the ownership of property, is antagonistic to the
interest of the proletariat class, which depends for its livelihood chiefly upon the
sale of its labour power ” The capitalist class appropriates the entire surplus
value produced by the proletariat class which, according to Marx, is the latter’s
legitimate due With the growing complexity of industrial technique the control
of industry becomes monopolised and concentrated in the hands of fewer
capitalists, while the conditions of the workers grow more precarious
It IS at this stage that capitalism generates the seeds of its own destruction
The instruments which capitalists use “to enlarge and rents are the
their profits
instruments which, when perfected, fall inevitablyinto the hands of the workers
to be used by them to demolish the whole capitalist system ’’Marx develops this
prognosis in concrete detail In the first place, the tendency under capitalist
production is towards large-scale production, increasing specialisation of func-
tions, standardisation of goods and then monopolisation As a result of this
tendency large-scale producers succeed in throwing small-scale producers out of
the market The small-scale producers, thus, become exploited and they join the
ranks of the exploited proletariat class, swelling their number and strength When
the ranks of the proletariat swell those of the capitalists shrink Secondly, the
tendency is towards localisation and integration of industries The former means
the birth and growth of industries in such areas as offer the greatest relative
advantages The tendency towards integration means the cooperation and
coordination under one management of all the processes involved in the
production of an article, from the raw material to the final stage All this brings
about the concentration of thousands of workers together These constant mutual
contacts make workers conscious of their disabilities and hardships, which cement
their group consciousness Thirdly, large-scale production means two things In
the home market it results in unemployment, because of the extended use ol
machinery and other labour saving devices in order to reduce co'.ts of production
Unemployment means loss in the purchasing power and, consequently, the
demand in the home market contracts for new markets m
The producers hunt
foreign countnes Large-scale production also means extensive markets Extensive
markets can be possible only under conditions of highly developed means of
communication and transport. This development breaks barriers of distance
betw'een different countries facilitating inter-communication among workers
spread throughout the industrial world, thereby, strengthening the common
cause of the workers and bringing in them the consciousness of their universal
disabilities
periodic economic cnsis Crisis may be due either to over-capital isat ion or
competition The workers receive too small a proportion of the product of
industry Consequently, in prosperous periods much of the surplus value created
by producers passes into the form of fixed capital held by the capitalists The
purchasing power erf* the workers having diminished they consume less goods
Markets are glutted with the surplus of the goods produced and a period of
failure and stagnation ensues. Finally, the constant endeavours of the capitalists
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY — COMMUNISM 687
forces come into ever mtenser conflict with the forms of capitalistic concentra-
tion ” In an attempt to find a way out of this impasse, the monopolists make
and employ cheap labour and tap new markets to get
frantic efforts to find out
cheap raw materials and to sell their commodities It means a fierce imperialistic
struggle between the States controlled by capitalistic interests for a division and
re-division of areas to exploit The conflict inevitably culminates in world wai,
which deepens the crisis and prepares the way for open revolution
The eventual result is open revolution overthrowing the capitalist scx:iety
when the proletariat expropriates the private capitalist and appropriates the
means of production The capitalist methods of production are the cause of their
own decay Marx said, “Along with the constantly diminishing number of the
magnates of capital grows the mass of misery, oppression, slavery, degradation,
exploitation, but with this too grows the revolt of the working class, a class
always increasing in numbers and disciplined, united, organized by the very
2 Coker, F W ,
Rerent Political Thought, p 52
688 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
class basis, the state of society which follows the revolution will be based on the
abolition of classes.” The Communists claim that their battle against capitalism,
though outwardly waged on behalf of a dispossessed class, is really the battle of
own destruction, vet it does not create Communism Deliberate, intelligent, and
informed action, according to Karl Marx, is needed for its achievement A
transition period must, therefore, occur during which preparations are made for
the perfect Communist community to come into being A lew remaining
elements of capitalism must be swept away The minds of men must be purged of
the remnants of the capitalist mentality with which thev are infected All these
preparations force, which means that the Stale and governmental
require
machinery must employed The government will be a “dictatorship of the
l>e
IS, Marx more democratic than other governments have been, including
says, far
the bourgeois democracy of capitalism And while the proletariat operates for a
time as an exploiting class, its purpose is not to perpetuate its own power but to
eliminate oppression for ever The proletarian dictatorship will take up the work
3 Joad, CE M ,
Introduction to Modem Political Theory,
p 90
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY— COKfMUNISM 689
The Post- Revolutionary Stage. Once the bourgeoisie has been suppressed
and all the defects and remnants of the have been removed, the
capitalist system
necessity of the State ceases to exist becomes superfluous and must “wither
It
away” When the whole society comes down to one level every one will be able to
contribute his best to the social whole, and freely satisfy his needs The State will
give place to a free society of voluntary associations formed for the transaction of
public business It is this society whose advent bears witness to the fact that the
revolutionary era has terminated This “brave new world”, as Marx names it, will
be in effect the state of complete freedom, a society without antagonism, without
exploitation, in which, as Lenin says, “people will become gradually accustomed
to the observance of the elementary rules of social life without compulsion,
without subordination, without the special apparatus for compulsion which is
”
called the State
Critics of Marxian Theory. The Marxist theory has been severely criticised
for sweeping generalisations, inconsistencies, and contradictions. Werner
Its
Sorel insisted that myths, ideals and heroic attitudes often play a more important
role than economic processes. Max Lemer believes that “Marxists have not been
sufficiently aware of the irrational elements in human motivation: folk traditions,
nationalistic sentiments, racial prejudices, group neuroses, subconscious or
semi-conscious impulses History is the product of the inter-action of numerous
690 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
forces and ideas, but Marx denies “pluralism in historical causation”. He gave
the economic factor a pivotal role in the causation of historical changes
Communists’ methods of overthrowing Capitalism and constructing Socia-
lism through the revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat require deep
consideration Wholesale violence and repressive methods are not the desirable
means to the end, howsoever noble the end may be Moral means must be
gam
adopted to achieve good results It is difficult to believe that end justifies the
means Means and ends are convertible terms To put it in the words of Gandhi,
means may be likened “to a seed, the end to a tree, and there is just the same
inviolable connection between the means and the end as there is between the seed
and the tree” The dictatorship of the proletariat is invested with revolutionary
spirit which sternly exercises repression to dcstory all traces of Capitalism
Devotion to the party line or to face a purge is the simple truth of the dictates of
Communism, and it is the rule of common behaviour as practised in the USSR
and other countries which have gone red Beatrice and Sidney Webb deplore this
“disease of orthodoxy” of Marxism The violence of the dictatorship of the
proletariat perverts and infects the goal of a {peaceful cooperative Common-
wealth, which Communism aims to establish Violence and repressive policy
stifles the democratic aspirations and creative spontaneity of the people who are
told to march ahead for a classless and stateless society, which is to be without
compulsion and without subordination
Moreover,the course of capitalist development has been quite unlike that
foreseen b> Marx, who assumed that capitalism was in his time already on the
verge of collapse It is true that capitalism which has persisted is considerably
different from the ssstem with which Marx was familiar, “but the transition from
the exploitative capitalism of the early and middle nineteenth century to the
moderate capitalism of the mid-twentieth century occurred as a result of actions
which Marx had deemed impossible ” The Fabians correctly regarded the
transition to Socialism as the peaceful culmination of dcmtx:ratic and evolution-
ary processes The regulation of hours of work, wages and working conditions, the
prohibition of child labour, the establishment of unemployment insurance and
workmen’s compensation, and many more developments have resulted from
legislative enactments and have created an entirely different situation for
working people Likewise, many Social Democrats have rejected the Marxian
concept of class struggle and favour collaboration with all progressive forces
Even Stalin favoured such broad cooperation m achieving victory over the Axis
Powers in the Second World War and in organising the peac^e The Twentieth
Congress of the Communist Party owned and emphasised such a collaboration
with the progressive forces and it constitutes the new Party thesis Parliamentary
collaboraticjn with Social Dem<x:rats and other progressive forces is now
permissible to defeat the reactionary forces oppos<;d to the popular interest The
long resolution adopted at the Twentieth Congress admits that Socialism will not
come to all the States in the same way and that “each State will make its own
particular contribution to the one or the other form of dem(x:racy, to the one or
the other type of dictatorship of the proletariat, to this or that tempo of socialist
transformation in various aspects of the life of the society” The Congress
expressed the view that “the establishment of the new socialist system in this or
that country is an interna! affair of the people in each country” Moreover, the
rise of organised labour to a position of political power has also been contrary to
Marx’s theory Marx had contended that the owners of the instruments of
production always monopolise government and the legislative proi^css in order to
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY — BOLSHEVISM 691
hold the labour class in subjection But the Labour Party in Britain has been
alternating with the Conservative Party in forming the Government since 1924
Similarly, the great influence on government of organised labour in the United
States from 1932 to 1952 could hardly give credence to this fundamental aspect of
the Marxian theory
Marx believed that no society tould supplant another until that otherhad
developed was in it When feudalism had fully run its
fully all the potential that
course it was replaced by capitalism and capitalism in its turn is subject to the
same course of evolution “No social order even disappears," he maintained,
“before all productive forces for which there is room m it have been developed ”
But this has not happened in Russia, China and other countries which have gone
red Taking the example of Russia and China, neither of the two had anything
like a complete industrial d( velopment Both of them were primarily agrarian
and nearly feudalistit sot k Iks [)nor to then k ap into Sot lalism
Whatever may bt youi and mine rcat tion to Maix's thesis, it cannot be denied
that his influence on human thought and action has Ix^en profound No social
philosopher, ant lent oi modern, has exercised a vaster influence than Marx and
Marxism is ttKiav the official ideology of millions “True, it has been imposed by
font u})on most of them, but many have embraced it without compulsion
because tins have b(‘( n convinced Convinced Marxists
of its essential rightness "
extol tlu ttuili ol tiuii doc time with a /cal akin to
lound in dedicated tliat
promulgatois ol faith And Maixisrn has an appeal tc) democrats because only a
i
1 inally , the re is also .i psyc hological appeal in Maixist thought “It offers an
aiiswci lo men’s problems It tells the depressed that they are not themselves to
blame lor then inferior status, they are victims of a system and need only ic;
(hangc the system to be able to live on a plane of equality w ith all men ” Marx’s
Socialism was scientific His conclusions aie fortified with historical facts and
statistics “lo those who lack knowledge of the fields Marx dealt with such a
display can be convincing I hose who are attracted to the goals of Marxism take
^
satisfaction in knowing that then cause is sc lentifically
BOLSHEVISM
Lenin’s doctrine
— “Leninism”. V'^ladimir Lenin (1870-1924) was the most
ardent fo/louc i of Karl Ma/x and the most famous of the resolutionancs who
carried the banner of Maixian Stx:ialism to its successful achievement in Russia
and strived for the proletarian revolution Lenin was not himself a workman, but
a member of the middle-class intelligentsia who had become interested in the
revolutionary movement and Marxism when still very young The execution of
his elder brother foi his part in the attempt to assassinate Alexandei III in 1887,
affected Lenin deeply The ostracism of his family after the execution accentuat-
[ Hc'imon, jurid M ,
Pohtual Ihovuiht from Plato to the /Vnrri/,
p 406
092 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
ed his hatred of the society that supported privileges and submitted to the
activities of the few privileged people He found solace in the writings of Marx
and Engels and, soon after, organised a Marxist group that called for revolution
The Tsarist Government realised the danger ahead in the activities of Lenin,
arrested him in 1895, and exiled him to Siberia in 1897 While Lenin was m exile
his colleagues formed organisations, called the Leagues of Stniggle for the
emancipation of the working class, in all the key cities with a principal
organisat'on at St Petersburg A meeting of the representatives of the various
Leagues of Struggle was convenced in the city of Minsk in 1898 The meeting
proclaimed the organisation of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party and
issued a manifesto urging a fight against capitalism until the victory of Socialism
Before the Party could come into being all the members of the Minsk meeting
were arrested But proved to be a spark and the organisation that had been
it
tic supporters The liberal members of the intelligentsia were drifting towards the
Socialist Revolutionary Party, formed from the remains of the Narodnik groups,
and which had concentrated itswork on the peasants Plekhanov and Lenin’s
many other friends were of the opinion that the liberals could be helpful in
furthering the cause of revolution and should be encouraged to join the proposed
Social Democratic Partv Lenin, taking a position to which he adhered up to his
death, answered that “liberals were generally half-hearted, cowardly, and ready
to compromise with Tsarism” The group led by Plekhanov thought it
unnecessary for the new parly to become a single highly centralised organisation
an organisation of mass character that would progress with the workmen as they
developed a political and social consciousness In 1902, Lenin wrote a pamphlet.
What is to be Done, calling for a vigorous, closely knit party of professional
the two factions in the party earned the names the Bolsheviks and Mensheviks,
the former meaning majority and the later minority
The between the two factions became wide and the Mensheviks
differences
did not participate the Third Congress of the Party The Bolsheviks took this
in
as an opportunity and annulled the rules of membership adopted in 1903. The
new rules permitted membership to a small group of revolutionaries only,
dropping out the sympathisers A plan was also adopted for an armed uprising,
and the political strikes in the country were to be used as the springboard of the
uprising It was decided that the leadership of the planned uprising should be in
the hands of a provisional revolutionary group The Bolsheviks, thus, took an
active and direct part m the barricade fighting later known as the Revolution of
1905 The Revolution did not succeed and from its failure Lenin drew the
conclusion that “the offensive against the enemy must be most energetic, attack
and not defence must be the slogan of the masses”
There was no guide book for the revolution, Marxism provided only an
ideological guidance Lenin attempted to provide one while awaiting his
opportunity to lead it But hardly had he finished the first part of the celebrated
volume, The State and the Revolution, which did not even cover an analysis of
the events of 1905, when he ran back to Russia from exile to lead the revolution,
l^nin was determined to act quickly, no matter at what cost He caused the
Bolsheviks to break with the Mensheviks and to form a separate party This
enabled the Bolsheviks to gam control of the Petrograd Soviet and with the new
slogan “All power to the Soviets”, the rest followed in rapid succession and the
first Socialist State came into being Lenin, thus, adopted Marxism to Russia
The philosophy of Marx could not be applied to Russia, as he had anticipated
that the proletarian revolution would take place in an advanced industrial
country, like Germany or the United Kingdom Russia was an agriculturist
country But Lenin applied Marxian principles with an instinctive understanding
of the Russian realities
While Karl Marx put tex) much emphasis on the development of class-
consciousness among the workers, Lenin’s emphasis was on the party organisa-
tion Without a strong and \ngorous party organisation, he could not conceive of
a revolution “The Proletariat has no weapon,” he said, “in the struggle for power
except organisation Constantly pushed out of depths of complete poverty, the
proletariat can and will inevitably become an unconquerable force only as a
result of this that its ideological union by means of the principles of Marxism is
strengthened by the material union of an organisation holding together millions
m the army of the working class ” At the same time, Lenin did not
of toilers
concede to members of the party the right to criticise the party policy and its
programme Party, for him, was a single, unified and centralised structure and in
It only one will, one direction must pievail It demanded of its members
unanimity of views, the strictest of discipline, and all its decisions must be carried
out unconditionally, precisely and punctually “We are marching,” said Lenin,
“in a compact group along a precipitous and difficult path, firmly holding each
other by the hand, we on all sides by enormous forces, and arc
are surrounded
under their almost constant fire We have combined voluntarily, especially for the
purpose of fighting the enemy and not to retreat into the adjacent march And
now several in our crowd begin to cry out— let us go into this March ” At anothei
place he said, “Opportunity for open fighting Opinions expressed. Tendencies
revealed Groups defined Hands raised. A decision taken. A stage passed
’
through, Forward. ‘That’s what I like ‘That is life.’ It is something different
694 PRINCIPLES OF POL»riCAL SCIENCE
from the endless, weary intellectual discussions, which finish, not because people
”
have solved the problem, but simply because they have got tired of talking
centralism ” This principle requires that party members elect their own officials
at all levels and they are accountable to those who elect them It demands,
however, strict party discipline and insists that once decisions have been taken
these must be obeyed without demur The decisions of the higher bodies are
unconditionally binding on the lower ones “Democratic centralism”, accord-
ingly, implies a combination between the principle of mass participation at the
bottom and the concentration of leadership at the top
ihc historical process to the final stage of world itvolution. He appealed to the
workers to seize the opportunity by turning the imperialist wars into civil wars
Class loyalty, Lenin contended, must be above national loyalty. As for himself,
“he would sacrifice Russia rather than the revolution if the alternative should
ever arise ” ^
Lenin had the deepest contempt for utopias in general and for the utopian
socialists in particular He would
seldom venture to forecast future developments
except in the broadest terms But with regard to the process of the “withering
away” of the State, he was unusually precise and concrete and it caused
considerable embarrassment to his successors He maintained that “the toilers
need a State merely for the suppression of the resistance of the exploiters” and
since the latter formed a small minority, the breaking down of their resistance
appeared to him a matter “relatively easy, simple and natural” The proletarian
State once established would immediately, he believed, begin to “wither away”
as in scKietv Iree from was both unnecessary and
class contradictions the State
impossible There will be two stages of the Communist society, Lenin says The
first IS the phase of socialism Hence the means of prcxluction are publicly owned,
classes stiP exist but are in the process of disappearing, so, tex), is the State A
kind of equality exists in the sense that in this phase of development each
contnbutes “according to his ability” and receives “according to his work,” that
IS, according to his productive contribution Since the State, too, in the first stage
IS in the process of ‘withering away’, Lenin outlined a number of steps which will
accelerate this disappearing of the State The first step was the abolition of the
army and its replacement by an armed people, a popular militia Then, he would
abolish bureaucracy forthwith Bureaucracy, Lenin regarded as a dangerous
inheritance from the bourgeois regime and the victorious proletariat, he asserted,
must not only lx* content to take over the machinery of government but it should
be broken and destroyed altogether to get rid of all bureaucratic elements Lenin,
indeed, favoured the immediate introduction of a system under which “all should
the functions of control and supeivision, all should be ‘bureaucrats’ for a
fulfil
authority The final stage is that in which men can live according to the
”
principle, “From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs
new set-up of the scKialist government, but he would forthwith scrap “parliamen-
tarian ism” as a system By “parliamentarianism”, Lenin meant the doctrine of
the separation of the legislative from the executive power Referring to the
“ From top to bottom
doc trine of the separation of powers, Vyshinsky writes,
the Soviet social order is penetrated by the single general spirit of the oneness of
authority of the toilers ” The proletarian representative assemblies, according to
Ixnin, must be places for work, not for idle talk He characterised parliaments of
Ixnirgeois democracies as “talking shops” and advocated the abolishing of the
immunities of the deputies In fact, Lenin insisted that the Revolution necessarily
.Innandcd a complete shattering of the bourgeois State apparatus, and that a
iM w Soviet State, based upon workers’ councils (“soviets”),
and directed by a
'^1
Hcrtiand Russel, Vhf Ptadhr and Theory of Bolshevism ,
p
696 PRINCIPLES OF POUliC^L SCIENCE
Single vanguard party of disciplined members, must take its place. And he was m
a position to carry his ideals into execution.
Lenin combined political expediency and strategy with the Marxian
men and women shall be kept sane by work, and where all work shall be of value
to the community, not only to a few wealthy vampires It is to sweep away
and pessimism and weariness and all the complicated miseries of those
listlessness
whose circumstances allow idleness and whose energies are not sufficient to force
activity In place of palaces and hovels, futile voice and misery, there is to be
wholesome work, enough but not too much, all of it useful, performed by men
and women who have no time for pessimism and no occasion for despair ”^How
far Bolshevism has succeeded in fulfilling its mission after Lenin’s death is
—
Joseph Stalin Stalinism. Stalin was the successor to Lenin But Lenin’s
death in January 1924, was followed by a bitter struggle within the Communist
Party and it centred round the issue of world revolution Trotsky, along with
others who held similar views during the life-time of Lenin, considered the
promotion of world revolution not only the chief but the sole object of the Soviet
Union He believed that the construction of Socialism and the consolidation of
the Dictatorship of the Proletariat were impossible in Russia without the direct
support of the proletariat of Europe Stalin, who had held similar views as lately
as April 1924, suddenly reversed himself and championed the principle of
“Socialism in a single country”, provided the country concerned had a large
territory, a large population and abundant natural resources The Fourteenth
Congress in December 1925, endorsed Stalin’s doctiinc and the decision that the
country was able to build Socialism even though surioiinded bv capitalist
countriesbecame the official creed of the Communist Party 4'he ideal of world
revolutionwas not given up, but it ceased to be an active factor m Soviet policies
both national and international In its international relations the USSR sought
the cooperation of capitalist States, and at home it embarked on vast schemes of
economic reconstruction embodied in the Five-Year Plans Stalin attached so
much importance to his d(K:inne that in his report to the Fifteenth Congress in
1926, as well as on different other occasions, he unequivocally declared that
6 Ibtd, 19
p
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY— BOLSHEVISM 697
Without full assurance that Socialism could be built ithin the Soviet Union the
industrial programme would be futile At the Seventeenth Congress in 1937, he
hailed the effort to complete the construction of “Socialism in a single country”
as successful And those who opposed his concept met the fate of Trotsky
The doctnne of “Socialism in a single country” was a distinct departure
from the Marxian theory and consequently it entailed a revision in the theory of
the State According to the official view, the State, having its origin and
justification in class struggle, can exist only so long as there arc classes With the
elimination of private ownership of the means of production class distinctions
disappear and simultaneously the State should begin to “wither away” But
Stalin held that the withering of the State can be accomplished not through the
weakening of the State power, but through the maximum increase of its strength.
In his report to the Eighteenth Congress Stalin explained the reasons why Soviet
Communism differed from the norm set by Marx and Lenin He said that the
contradiction between the Communist Commonwealth envisaged by Marx and
Lenin and the Soviet Union as it existed was due to the capitalist environment
and especially due to the activities of “foreign spies, assassins and wreckers” sent
to Russia by foreign intelligence services Stalin pointed out that Engels never
discussed the position of a single Socialist State encircled by hostile capitalist
nations He was either concerned with the inner process of development of the
future Socialist State, irrespective of the international situation, or proceeded on
the assumption that Socialism would be victorious in all or in a majority of the
countnes “But it follows from this,” Stalin said, “that Engels’ general formula
about the destiny of the socialist state in general cannot be extended to the
partial and specific case of the victory of socialism m
one country alone A
country, which surrounded by capitalist world and subject to the menace of the
is
foreign military attack, cannot, therefore, abstract itself from the international
situation, and must have at its disposal a well-trained army, well-organised
punitive organs, and a strong intelligence service —consequently must have its
own state strong enough to defend the conquests of Socialism from foreign
attacks ” It is important to repeat here the views of Lenin Lenin had said, “In a
society free from class contradictions the State is both unnecessary and
impossible ” Disappearace of the army and elimination of bureaucracy were the
pnncipal ramifications, according to Lenin, of the withering of the State.
Stalin divided the history of Soviet Russia into stages The first stage lasted
from the advent of the Bolsheviks to power to the liquidation of the exploiting
classes During this period the State performed two principal functions:
suppression of the exploiters at home, and defence of the Soviet Union from
foreign aggression The second stage is the period from the liquidation of the
elements to the construction of Socialism and consequently the
capitalist
adoption of the Constitution in 1936, which registered and gave legislative
embodiment to what had been actually achieved The Socialist State, as Russia
had in the second stage, Stalin maintained, was entirely novel and it differed
considerably both in form and functions from the Socialist State of the first
period USSR was moving towards Communism Stalin, then, posed a question,
“Shallwe maintain the State under Communism?” He replied, “Yes, it will be
maintained unless the capitalist environment has been liquidated, unless the
danger of military aggression from the outside is removed. It is evident that the
forms of our State will be altered again according to the modification of the
”
domestic and foreign policy “No, it will not be maintained and will wither
away, if the capitalist environment has been removed, if its place has been taken
by a socialist environment.”
im PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
In brief, the State, according to Stalin, will not “wither away” unless the
( environment has been liquidated, and a pre-requisite of the withering
dpitalist
away of the State is the existence of socialist environment So long as the Soviet
State is encircled by capitalist countries, it should be strong enough to
consolidate socialist economy and to combat international aggression Here
Stalin differed both from Marx and Lenin
While Stalin’s dictatorship of the proletariat was building socialism in a
single country, his nationalism also found expression in the creation of a new type
d* multi-national State, and the Constitution of 19J6 was a perfect mirror of the
same According to his definition, “a nation is an historically evolved, stable
community of language, territory, economic life and psychological make-up
manifested in a community of culture Upon this definition he distinguished
various national areas within the USSR and permitted wide autonomy to all
these regions In pursuance of this ideal, the Soviet Government has encouraged a
remarkable diversity of language and culture The changes introduced in the
Constitution in 1944, granting to each constituent Republic the right to enter
into direct relations with foreign States, to conclude agreements and exchange
diplomatic and consular representatives with them, and to maintain troops,
represent a further expression of the multi-national policy of the Soviet Union
The Stalin Cult, Stalin not only controlled the government, but also the
Party machine If party became the “vanguard of the
under Lenin the
became the vanguard of the party Power,
proletariat,” und< r Stalin the dutator
thus, accumulated in the hands of one single person and Stalin destroyed those
who challenged his supremacy The obvious result was Stalin’s worship No other
public figure had been driven, during his life-time, to such incredible lengths of
adulation as Stahn was He was described as “the greatest genius on earth”,
“greatest architect of communism”, “wise teacher and leader”, “inspircr of our
glorious victories", and “foremost authority on science, literature, linguistics,
music, etc ” And Stalin, as Khruschev observed at the Twentieth Congress, acted
not through persuasion, explanation and patient cooperation with people,
but by imposing his concepts and demanding absolute submission to his opinion
Whoever opposed his concept or tried to prove his viewpoint and the correctness
of his position was doomed to removal from the leading collective and to
subsequent moral and physical annihilation ” Even Lenin was cited by Khrush-
chev, in his speech at the Twentieth Congress, to have described Stalin as
“excessively rude” who did not have a proper attitude towards his comrades, and
that he was capricious and had abused his power Khrushchev further observed,
“We have to consider seriously and analyse correctly this matter in order that we
may preclude any jiossibilily of a repetition in any form whatever of what tcxik
place during the life of Stalin,who absolutely did not tolerate collegiality m
leadership and in work, and who practised brutal violence towards everything
which opposed him, but also towards that which seemed to him capricious and
”
despotic in character contrary to his concepts
Sniin, j ,
Marxism and the National Question, p 12
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY — BOLSHEVISM 699
New Thesis of the Communist Party, The cull of personality was resolutely
thesis about the contradictions of capitalism and inevitability of war has not been
discarded, but it makes a number of significant admissions and consequently
the country and the development of the Soviet Union into the world’s leading
industrial power in order to ensure the world’s highest standard In the sphere of
scKial relations, the still existing distinctions between classes may be eliminated.
This means, all classes Union and the distinctions
hitherto existing in the Soviet
prevailing between town and country and between physical and mental labour
be eradicated and all such classes should fuse into a classless society of
Communist working people When this had been done there will be greater
economic and ideological corhmunity “and the features of the man of the
Communist society will develop, harmoniously combining ideological integrity,
broad education, moral purity and physical perfection” Finally, in the political
sphere all citizens will participate in the administration of public affairs, and
society will prepare implementation of the principles of
itself for the full
communal self-government through a most extensive development of social
democracy
Shape of the Communist Society. The draft programme defined Commun-
ism and this definition gives a picture of the Communist society to come after
twenty years “Communism is a classless social system with one single form of
public ownership of the means of production and full social equality of all
productive forces and socialist relations of production that actuates the gradual
process of the distinctions between the classes of the working people
8 But It does not mean the disappearance of the State The State will be
retained The process of its ‘withering away’ will be a very long one “For some
time, features of state administration and public self-government will intermin-
gle In this process the domestic functions of the slate will develop and change,
and gradually lose their political character It is only after a developed
Communist society has been built in the USSR
and provided socialism wins and
consolidates in the international arena, that there will no longer be any need for
”
the State, and it will wither away
9 The fact that the dictatorship of the proletariat is no longer necessary
docs not in any way imply any relaxation of public order and legality, The rights,
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY— BOLSHEVISM
703
freedom, honour and dignity of the citizens will be cJoscly protected by society
and by the State
10 The principle of the co-existence of States with different social systems
remains the general principle of the foreign policy of the Soviet State In terms of
internal conditions, the Soviet Union needs no army But since the danger of war
coming from the imperialist camps persists, it is necessary to strengthen the
armed forces and the defence jxitential of the Soviet Union Defence of the
country, and service in the State Arked Forces, it is enjoined, is the lofty and
honourable duty of Societ citizens
Khrushchev’s Khrushchev dominated the Soviet political scene for
exit.
eleven years as Party and since 1958 to mid-October 1964, he
Secretary
simultaneously held the two posts of Secretary and Prime Minister His exit was
sudden and unexpected, ostensibly for reasons of health and age, but the Soviet
people and the outside world are accustomed to such dramatic changes at the
top The strange aspect of Khrushchev’s exit is that the Russians who wept for
Stalin have shed no tears for the more generous and affable Khrushchev One
possible explanation is that the former died in office before his crimes were
exposed while the latter only lost his job when his “indiscretions” had sufficiently
exasjXTated his colleagues and disgruntled a small army of officials
But if Khrushchev and his methods are gone, much of his policy remains
Kosygin, the present Premier, in his report to the Supreme Soviet, indicated some
changes in emphasis m Russian policy But there are few indications of striking
new lines of policy, national or international Peaceful co-existence is to continue
Khrushchev was one of the master-builders of the Soviet Union and his
no way alters this fact The eleven years of the Khrushchev era
political eclipse in
were years of radical and hopeful changes Stalin had transformed USSR
economically and made her a military power second only to the United States
Khrushthev inhtriti'd a trucl l(gat\ and it required, indeed, a courage on his
part to demolish the Stalin cult and to present a new thesis for achieving
Communism as endorsed by the Twentieth Congress Khrushchev s commitment
to co-cxistcnce was sincere and both in his efforts to achieve a detente with the
West and in his unflinching appreciation of the role of the non-ahgned Powers in
scx'ialist democracy the b.isic principles of which were formulated by Marx and
Engels and incorpoiaicd into tht tlicois ot scientific communism, forming a part
704 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCF
f»f the doctrine of the socialist state Lenin developed this doctrine and the Soviet
Programme The question of democracy was extensively dealt with at the 25th
Party Congress held in February- March, 1976, and reaffirmed with an unflinch-
ing faith
For the first time in human democracy, it is asserted,
history. Soviet socialist
and nations, and freedom of
affirms real people’s power, the equality of peoples
the individual This is a democracy of working people free from all exploitation
and oppression, who are the sole masters of the state and society and arc united
by common political, social, and economic interests, and common goals—
the building of s(x:ialism and communism Such a democracy is effected under
the leadership of the working class and its Communist Party in the interests of all
working people of the Soviet State which is a state of the entire people In his
speech at the Conference of the Communist and Workers’ Parties of Europe, held
in Berlin in the summer of 1976, Leonid Brezhnev noted, “We have built a
societ) free from monopolist oligarchy domination, free from the fear of crises,
unemployment, free from scxrial catastrophies We have built a society of people
who are equal to the broadest sense of the word, people who know neither (lass,
propf rt), race nor anv other such privileges, a society which not only prtxrlaims
human rights, but guarantees the conditions under which they can be exercised
”
We have built up a stable, dvnamic and united xKietv
As to tht success of the sotial dt\<lo[)meni of th< So\iet societ\, Brezhnev
added, it is “possible only as a result of the people s free and conscious creative
work, of their increasingly active participation in shaping ail aspects of public
life Therefore, our further advamce in building communism will inevitably mean
the further advance of socialist democracy ” A responsible attitude on the part of
every citizen to his duties, to the people’s interest creates, it is explained, a
reliable foundation for the fullest embodiment of the principles of socialist
democracy and real freedom for the people Every thing that serves the people’s
and the interests of communist construction is “morally sound and
interests
democratic” and must, accordingly, be followed vigorously and rigidly
The Soviet State of the entire people is the next and higher stage of
development of the dictatorship of the proletariat, and the most effective
political organisation cjf the masses in conditions of developed socialism The
leading role in regulating economic, serial and political relations under socialism
belongs to the Soviet Stale of the entire people For carrying out its economic,
organisational, cultural, educational, defence and other functions the State
possesses such agencies and organisations as an economic and planning appara-
tus, the judiciary, the Procurator’s office, the Army, and cultural and other
associatioas The Soviet State organises the building of the materialand
technical basis of communism, promotes the development of socialist relations
into communist relations, exercises control
over the rate of production and
consumption, takes measures to increase the people’s well-being, protects the
rights and freedoms of its citizens, enforces socialist legality, educates people in
the spirit of conscious discipline and Communist altitude to work, provides for
I he country’s defences and safeguards its security, develops cooperation with the
MK lalist countries, and promotes the cause of peace
This is manifest
in the fact that the socialist state more fully guarantees the
economic and other rights and interests of its citizens, and in the correct
political,
understanding most citizens have of their obligations to the state As Brezhnev
said in the report to the 25th Congress “we see the improvement of socialist
democracy above all in a steady effort to ensure ever fuller
as consisting
participation of the working people in running all affairs of society, in developing
the democratic principles of our state system, and creating conditions for an
all-round flourishing of the individual ”
during the past decades to improve the society’s political system is reflected in the
new Constitution of the USSR which replaced the older 1936 Constitution It also
reflects the great achievements of socialism and formalises the general principles
of the socialist system, the basic features of the developed socialist society and
also Its political organisation Also reflected in the Constitution are the principles
of economic management relating to the building of the material and technical
basis ofcommunism, the role of the state in the intellectual and cultural life of
society The Constitution, m brief, establishes a state wh ch sets itself the goal of
building communism in the interests of every working man and the people as a
whole, and further consolidation and development of socialist democracy.
The outstanding feature of this process of development is the emergence of
the next higher stage in the path of socialism The dictatorship of the proletariat
has completed its transitorv and revolutionary role and gives place to the Soviet
State of the entire people It is a democratic state which affirms the real people’s
power, the equality of peoples and nations and freedom of individuals It is a
dem(x:racy of the working people As democrat) and socialism are indispensable
for one another, the deselopmeiit of the future stageshall depend upon the
people's free and work under the leadership of the w'orking class and its
creative
C’omniunist Partv A new Constitution embodying the achievement and
aspirations of the people has been given *o the people, with an apparatus of
organisation, to reach the common goal the building of Socialism and —
Communism Withering aw ay of the State is not yet in sight
El^RO-COMMCNlSM
Deviation from Marxism. Wav back in 1899, Eduard Brenstein, the famous
German socialist, rebutted Marx's analysis of the Capitalist society In his
“Evolutionarv Socialism he argued that Marx was mistaken in his analysis that
",
Brenstein candidly admitted that there were vital differences between his
views and those of Marx and they were, he confessed, not short of ‘revisionism’
He movement was everything and that there was no
declared that the socialist
need to setaim of socialism as the march of events in the post- Marxist
a final
phase had proved that any such aim was unpredictable The socialist efforts, he
explained, should be vigorously directed to secure important reforms, within the
existing constitutional framework, ultimately leading to the establishment of real
democracy He outright rejected the doctrine of dictatorship of the proletariat
armed with powers to suppress capitalism and vigorously construct socialism,
that is, to invest the State— a transitional phase on the path of a socialist
society — with a revolutionary spirit
Brenstein, thus, laid the basis for Euro-Commumst movement in West
Europe in the mid-seventies of the present century Bolshevism, too, had made
significant modifications in the Marxian analysis and the msolution of the
twentieth Soviet Congress was not only a deviation from the communist theory
but also a departure from Leninism But being the first country to bring Marx’s
dream of revolution an accomplished fact, Russia became the epicentre of the
International Communist movement and inspired the peoples of distant lands
with the teachings of Marxim-Leninism and all those countries joining the family
of the communists looked to their mentors in Moscow for guidance and initiative
But Soviet Russia lost its leadership not long after The Yugoslavia’s break with
and Soviet intervention in Czechoslova
the Soviet Union, the SinoSoviet split
kia were landmarks Communists’ disillusionment with the Soviet concept
in the
damage Marxism It was bom out of the evolution of ideas and changing
to
conditions in West Europe as well as the desire of the Communist parties in these
countries to assume office and achieve power which otherwise was a far distant
cry, if- not absolutely impossible What distinguished Euro-Communists from
their more orthodox comrades w'as the repudiation of the Soviet system m total
They in clear terms accepted the existence of a plural society, were committed to
multi-party democracy and pledged to surrender power in the event of electoral
defeat and, consequently, their faith in alternation of government They owned
and adhered to liberal or in Marxian terminology, “bourgeois” freedoms, rejected
the exclusive and pivotal role of the communist party in the body politic, the
doctrine of dictatorship of the proletariat, the classical Marxist economic theory
and of Moscow as the only model for all the communist societies Santiago
Carrillo, the Spanish Communist Party leader, summed it up neatly when he
declared that “Moscow is not our Rome and October (1917 Revolution) is not
our Christmas”
The disenchantment of the EuroCommunists with the Soviet Union was the
consequence of their realization that there existed a wide gulf between what they
professed and practised as reflected in the foreign policy and the treatment
accorded to their comrade allies They also became aware of the distinction
between German Marxism and Russian Communism The evolution of this
important development was nurtured by important Marxist theories like
SPHERE OF STATE ACTIVITY — EURO-COMMUNISM 707
officials had meetings with French and Italian Communist functionaries. But the
not a whit less better In their search for Berlinguer’s “historic compromise” they
came to truce with the Christian Democrats, their traditional rivals, and eroded
their social base when they enjoyed unparalleled popular support from a wide
cross-section of the Italian society They were not in the government, but had to
share the blame for its failures whereas all credit went to the Christian Democrats
if the government achieved success in any direction. They were attached by tliif
trade unions and the radical left and had to pay heavily in the following regional
and local elections Italians, again, rebuffed them in the 1979 general election.
708 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
With one seat less than their number in 1976 the Christian Democrats remained
virtually as they were while the electoral support of the Communist Party dipped
by as much as four percent
In Spam conditions wem not as bad as m France and Italy In the 1977
election, the first to be held since Franco’s death,Communists secured 9 22 per
cent of the votes, a significant achievement considering that the Communist
Party was banned in Spain for the preceding forty years or so But the main
problem facing Carrillo in his campaigns to gather support for the Communist
Party was the Socialist Party’s apparently successful moves to woo the electorate
with almost identical policies and programmes Consequently, the Communists
had all through hesitated to come to terms with the Socialists, on the French and
Italian model, lest their own image as a separate party may altogether be blurred
This attitude also explained wh) they had not suffered electoral reverses unlike
their French and Italian counterparts
These practical more fundamental reason was that
difficulties aside, the
Euro-Communism was an and a nebulous concept It combined the
ill-defined
two incompatibles, “bourgeois” democracy with Communism It accepted
Marxist premises but did not relish what they led to in practice It owned class
conflict but outright rejected the dictatorship of the proletariat, an indispensable
instrument to usher a classless society It believed in revolution but wanted to be
achieved through constitutional democracy Euro-Communism believed in
The French Communists opted out of the Euro-left front and they drifted
back to Moscow for guidance and initiative. The failure of Euro-Communism
had convinced them that they must no longer appeat To
dilute their ideological
Communists, along with
establish their credibility for the shift over, the French
their Polish counterparts, sponsored, at the behest of Moscow, the disarmament
conference of East and West European Communists in Pans on 27 April 1980
Italy, Spain and Yugoslavia declined to participate in the conference They
accused Georges Marchais, the French Communist Party leader and not long
back their Comrade in the Euro-Communist family, for allowing himself be used
by Moscow in efforts to reestablish its leadership of the Communist movement
Prospects of Euro-left. The search for Euro-left has not rekindled any more
hope than was expected of Euro-Communism Like its predecessor Euro-left is
it
All these factors impelled the Euro-Communists to adopt a more flexible and
7!0 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
realistic attitude. But it did not work What was the alternative then ^ Professor
Carr’s answer was that if Euro-Communism failed, “ there are two
alternatives. . The first is to remain Communists, and to remain an education-
al propagandist group divorced from political action The second is to go
into current politics, become social democrats, frankly recognise and accept the
capitalist system . and work for those compromises between employers and
”
workers and serve to maintain it
them that the Euro-left communists mean business and they vehemently eschew
revolution, a closed society, dictatorship of the proletariat and subordination of
personal freedoms to the socialist order For them communist is a communist
Just as a leopard cannot change his spots so shall a communist not change his
ideological base and his commitment to it Euro-left for them is another name for
communism and all what the latter stands for
The tide of public sentiment against communism is a phenomenon not
peculiar to West Europe alone Its canvas is wide and even orthodox communists
are not oblivious of it The recent shifts in the ideological base in Soviet Russia,
China and Poland is a clear concession to the rising tide of these political
sentiments China’s policy of embour geoisement is nothing short of revisionism
of the orthodox Marxian theory Soviet Russia swears by Marxism-Leninism, but
the party stalwarts there too are not immune from the impact of this new trend
The Soviet Land, under the caption “Why has not Marxism-Leninism become
obsolete reported, “To dogmatists, to like to rest on their
all those who would
laurels, who immutable truths, as a
interpret Marxist-Leninist theory as a set of
complete collection of ready-made formulas and recipes to meet every contin-
gency, genuine Marxists-Leninists, who creatively interpret this theory, have
always said and will continue to say that Marxism-Leninism is an ever living
and constantly developing teaching The concept of creatively interpreting
Marxist- l..en mist theory was unknown in the annals of Soviet Russia, not even
half a decade back The tide of political sentiment has admittedly changed the
direction
ANARCHISM
Anarchism explained. Anarchism is the doctrine that political authority, in
any of its forms, is unnecessary and undesirable The State is regarded as the
embodiment of force employed in the government of the community Liberty is
supreme in the Anarchist creed, but it is sought by abolishing the State and all its
”
institutions exercising forcible control over the individuals “The liberty of man
Bakunin .says, “consists solely in this, that he obeys the laws of Nature, because he
has himself recognised them as such, and not because they have been imposed
upon him externally by any foreign will whatsoever, human or divine, collective
or individual” The Anarchists will, therefore, like to get rid of the State and all
guarantee for a and orderly civil life and men united in their Christian faith
just
should be permitted to live under the control of their faith alone without any
impositions from the government Many poets and philosophers in all lands and
climes and at all times talked contemptuously of the coercive power of the State
and yearned for that free atmosphere of liberty wherein a just, happy and free
social life was the desideratum Disparagement of the political authority was
more common in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries when man’s quest for
freedom and equality brought him into clash with the despotic authority of the
rulers Individualism, too, in the nineteenth century condemned the State by
regarding it as a necessary evil and advocating for the minimum exercise of
political authority in order to secure maximum liberty for the individual
The Socialists headed by Karl Marx regarded the existing State and its
Stage in the development of free associations. Marx regarded Bakunin’s view “as
arrant nonsense of the radical and utopian kind which had long damaged the
socialist cause.” It was, he thought, a far cry from his own “scientific, practical,
”
and hardheaded proposals
There was no meeting ground between the two and both Marx and Bakunin
tried to eclipseeach orther Bakunin commanded a substantial measure of
support and the Basle conference in 1869 of the International was a victory for
him. Marx tried to reverse the situation He succeeded in securing the removal of
the headquarters of the International to New York in 1872, and subsequently
managed the expulsion of Bakunin and his associates from the organisation
Bakunin, then, gave a definite shape to his ideas, and established a distinct school
of thought known as Anarchism
Pierre-Joscph Proudhon (1809-1865). Proudhon is generally called the
father of anarchism, although he called himself a socialist He had wide
differences with Karl Marx He regarded Communism as utopian “I am opposed
to Communism,” he wrote, “and if I am now considered as being the less
advanced of the socialists, it is because I have left utopia, whilst the socialists are
still in It ” Communism, he said, resulted in a caricature of property In fact,
Proudhon was so much vehement in his criticism of Communism that he
regarded it not science but the annihilation of science “It is incapable of finding
a formula,” he said, “of distribution and of organisation It is eclectic,
Liberty, Proudhon held, was not the daughter but mother of order A society
of his conception would consist of individuals and voluntary associations and m
this societywould prevail liberty and freedom for all without restraint The
individuals and associations would engage themselves in productive enterprises
with the aid of gratuitous credit supplied by cooperative banking associations
Karl Marx condemned Proudhon as a pctit-bourgeois
Count Michael Bakunin (1814-1876). same sense in which Marx is
In the
regarded as the founder of Bakunin is also regarded as the
scientific Socialism,
founder of scientific Anarchism Bakunin, however, unlike Karl Marx, does not
give us a coherent and systematic body of doctrine It was left to his follower
Kropotkin (1842-1921) to give refinement to the theory of Anarchism and present
it in a logical manner Both Bakunin and Kropotkin were Russians and the
theory of Anarchism owes its fuller development chiefly to Russian thinkers.
physical compulsions, religion sustains both State and property, and also appeals
to man’s desire for physical comfort and to his fear of physical suffering after
death These institutions— private property, the State, and religion— which are
the characteristic expressions of the primitive nature must ultimately disappear
as a result of the operation of the natural laws of human evolution.
Bakunin’s attitude towards the State is explicit and uncompromising. In his
book, God and the “The State is not society, it is only an historical
State, he says
form of It, as brutal as it is abstract It was born historically in all countries of the
marriages of violence, rapine, pillage, in a world war and conquest, with the gods
successively created by the theological fantasy of nations It has been from its
origin, and it remains still at present, the divine sanction of brutal force and
triumphant inequality ” Despotism, he holds, is the essence of the State whatever
be Its form Democracy and democratic devices are sheer cloak to hide the
hypocrisy of the State oppression The economically powerful class moulds and
shapes the machinery of the government to their advantage by employing the
economically weak classes as powers on the chess board of political intrigue The
system of private property “both the ground of existence and the consequence
is
provides superfluous luxury and special opportunity for physical and artistic and
’’
intellectual enjoyment
Apart from the perpetuation of an oppressive economic condition, the
essential vice of the State is that it debases man morally and intellectually A
typical passage from Bakunin’s God and the State is illustrative of this He says
“The State is authority, it is force, it is the ostentation and infatuation of force It
does not insinuate itself, it does not seek to convert Even when it commands
what is good, it hinders and spoils it, just because it commands it, and because
ever, command provokes and excites the legitimate revolt of liberty, and because
the good, from the moment that it is commanded, becomes evil from the point of
view of true morality, of human morality (doubtless not of divine), from the point
of view of human respect and liberty Liberty, morality and the human dignity of
men consist precisely in this that he does good, not because it is commanded, but
because he conceives it, wills it and loves it
” Political authority also demoralises
and degrades those who are entrusted with the power to exercise it Power is
intoxicating and corrupts even the best intentioned natures, and once in power,
they would endeavour to retain it at all costs and by all means They become
flushed with an attitude of superiority “Among those who exercise the power,
natural sentiments of cooperation and fraternity are supplemented by tradition
of prerogative, class differentiation, and sacrifice of individual welfare to the
interests of public office Thus the State makes tyrants or egoists out of the few
”
and servants or dependents out of the many
Bakunin regarded religion as an evil, because it permits evil institutions, and
It is, also, incompatible with man’s better nature. Religion, he held, is used as a
714 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
“it is the peculiarity of privilege and of every privileged position to kill the
intellect man The privileged man, whether he be privileged
and heart of
pxihtically or economically, is a man deprived in intellect and heart ” Here is
the summing up which Bakunin himself gives He says, “In a word, we object to
all legislation, all authority, and all influence, privileged, patented, official and
legal even when it has proceeded from universal suffrage, convinced that it must
always turn to the profit of a dominating and exploiting minority, against the
”
interests of the immense majority enslaved
Bakunin’s methods of realising his programme are revolutionary He makes
all haste to sweep away the political and social institutions that prevent the
realisation of his plans for the future He advocates violence, pure and simple,
with conspiracies, systematic assassinations and the like “Our task is,” Bakunin
unequivocally asserted, “terrible, total, inexorable and universal destruction ’’The
revolutionist of Bakunin’s conception is a consecrated man, who will allow no
private interests or feelings, and scruples of religion, patriotism or morality to
turn him aside from his mission the aim of which is by all available means to
overturn the existing State and society And the emerging society will be a free
federation of free associations wherein authority of any kind docs not prevail
preter of new Anarchism and he sought to give evolutionary and historical bases
to his doctrines The laws of evolution, he holds, apply alike to animals and
their groupings and men and human society Kropotkin places clear emphasis
to
upon two phases of natural evolution The first is that in the normal course of the
life of an individual vital forces operate in an orderly manner But when these are
interfered with, it may cause friction In the beginning, the interference may
accumulate, eventually, however, it leads to resistance of inconceivable strength
This resistance is means of bringing natural processes back
justified as a necessary
into their normal course In the too, there is slow and steady progress
social life,
and the course of natural evolution runs its way smooth But the normal course of
social evolution may be obstructed by “misinformed or interested opposition” for
gaming selfish interests “On such occasions there is the need for great events that
breaks the immediate course of history and draw mankind out of old ruts into
”
new roads, but still on the mam highway
The second and more important principle of Kropotkin’s evolutionary
theory is the predominant part played in evolution by the cooperative, as
distinguished from the competitive, nature of animals and men The law of
organic evolution is primarily a law of mutual aid, not of conflict. Kropotkin
argued that the law of mutual aid manifests itself in social life, in the principle of
equality, justice and social solidarity It inculcates the spirit of Do to others as
you would have it done to you in like case This golden rule of social conduct is
the necessary condition for the attainment of the goal of social evolution
Then, what are the hindrances to the progress of human society? Kropotkin
catalogues three hindrances, the State, the property, and religion.
SPHERE OF STATE ACnVlTY—-ANARCHISM 715
laws IS obtained by the coercive power exercised' by that ruling minority The
State,by its very nature, is opposed to man’s natural cooperative instincts. He
grows and develops only in a free atmosphere and by the spontaneous
performance of his faculties and not by the spoon-feeding of the State Restnction
and restraint, if at all they are needed, must be self-imposed acts “The people,
acting spontaneously, can defend themselves against domestic brigands and
foreign aggressors, history shows that standing armies have always been defeated
by citizen armiesand that invasion is more effectively thwarted by popular
uprisings Nor
government successful in protecting us against ill-disposed
is
persons at home, prisons are more effective in spreading vice than in checking it,
the cultural and benevolent activities of government are superfluous, when men
are released from their economic and political dependence, voluntary activity will
”
supply all that is needed for both education and chanty
In the same strain Kropotkin condemns private property He says that
production is the result of collective cooperative efforts of all the individuals
engaged in the act of production, either directly or indirectly Moreover, the
existing stage in the advancement of industry is the cumulative result of the
discoveries, inventions, and labours of many past centuries plus the present
activities of varied and scattered groups of men “Science and industry,
knowledge and application, discovery and practical realization leading to new
discoveries, working of brain and of hand, toil of mind and music— all together
Each discovery, each advance, each increase in the sum of human riches, owes its
being to the physical and mental travail of the past and present By what right,
then, can any one whatever appropriate the least morsel of this immense whole
—
and say This is mine, not yours ” It is, therefore, a heinous sin against justice
that a small minority of the people retain the major benefit of the combined
wealth produced by the collective efforts of the multitudes of men of both present
and past generations Kropotkin, then, proceeded to show the results of private
property Among the masses, he revealed, is “want and misery, millions
unemployed, children of retarded growth, constant debts for the farmers, anmng
the wealthy few — prodigality, ostentation, idleness, leading to the pursuit of the
coarsest pleasures, debasing the press, and inciting war ” What a real and
matter-of-fact picture This misery for the many and plenty for the few,
Kropotkin associates with the political system which functions to protect private
property
1 The social, economic and moral evils from which society suffers are
intolerable They can neither be cured nor alleviated by any action of the
State which is always an instrument of personal or class domination
2. Human nature is is corrupted by evil institutions, the
essentialy good, but
State, private property and religion.
3. The division of labour and other forms of economic cooperation should
always be on a voluntary basis for mutual benefit and advantages rather
than contnved for the benefit of the propertied minority.
4. The new society can only result from a revolutionary change in the
individual, his institutional environment, or both It means destruction of
the State and all other institutions connected therewith which aim to protect
private property and perpetuate the hyproensy of religion
sense of public order, existing governors removed from the seats of their political
authority, prisons and forts demolished, armies disbanded and police liquidated,
courts and offices removed “A frightful storm is needed to sweep away all this
rottenness, to vivify torpid souls with breath, and to restore to humanity the
devotion, self-denial, and heroism, without which society becomes senile and
decrepit, and crumbles away ” Bakunin justifies bloodshed as a result of “the
stupidity of those who will atempt to resist and of the natural feelings of revenge
which many, in the first moments of their uprising, will feel towards their first
oppressors”
After the political authority has been dissolved, the people will proceed to
expropriate private property peasants expelling land-owners, workers driving out
factory owners, those having inadequate homes moving into dwellings that
contain surplus This having been secured, the work of a constructive reshaping
of society will begin through a purely voluntary procedure Establishment of any
kind of government, may it be in the form of a transitional dictatorship, will,
according to Kropotkin, mean the death of the revolution “If the dissolution of
the State is once started, if once the machinery of oppression begins to weaken,
be formed automatically When cooperation is not forced by
free associations will
government, natural wants will bnng about a voluntary cooperation Overthrow
”
of the State and a free society will rise on its ruins
terms Individuals prosecuting the same end will combine into groups and these
groups will form larger associations. ‘‘A complex interweaving of associations
with order everwhere and compulsion nowhere, forms the stuff of which an
Anarchist society will be made ” These associations and groups will be for vaiious
purposes according to the actual needs and desires and all associations will be
formed through voluntary contracts Local associations may unite into larger
territonal combinations, provided that at every stage there will be no compulsion
about With each group disputes will be settled by voluntarily established
It
SUGGESTED READINGS
Almond, GA The Appeals of Conmuntm
Beer, M A History of British Socialism
Bobber, MM Karl Marx 's Intcrpntatum of History
Brameld, 1’ B H A Philosophical Approach to Communism
Chang, HM The Marxian Theory of the State
Ebenstcin, W •
Modem Political Thought
Ebenstein, W. Today’s Isms
Hallowel, J H Mam Currents m Modern Political Thought
Harmon, Judd M •
Political Thought from Plato to the Present, Ghap>s 19-20
Hook, Sidney Marx and Marxists
Hook, Sidney Towards the Understanding of Karl Marx A Revolutionary Interpretation
Laski,HJ Communism
Lenin, V Imperialism The Highest Stage of Capitalism
Lenin, V Marx- Engels Marxism —
Lenm, V The Proletarian Revolution
Lenin, V The State and Revolution
Low, A Lemn on the Question of Nationality
Marx, Karl Capital
Mayo, HB Democrcuy and Marxism
Mayo, HB Introduction to Marxist Theory
Mayer, A G Leninism
Page, S W Lenin and World Revolution
Plamenlz, J German Marxism and Russian Communism
Russell, B The Practice and Theory of Bolshevism
Sabine, GH A History of Political Theory, Chaps 33, 34
Salter, F R Karl Marx and Modem Socialism
Gandhiism and the Gandhian Way. Gandhi was not an inspired political
philosopher destined to propound a new political philosophy and contemplate
the world in the light of his creative vision He was a common man whom the
accident of circumstances had brought into the political field But once he drifted
to the field of politics, he made his mission sublime through his truthful nature,
his sincerity, his tenacity, his industry, and hisshrewd practical ability Through
his force of will and vital energy he grew by an evolutionary process to be a
superman and was universally acclaimed the Knower, the Doer, and the
Sayer He practised old philosophies and adhering to certain fundamental
principles based upon truth, he led men to the realization of a better order of
society than the destructive and cruel chaos m which mankind had hitherto
existed His mission was to purify politics, to rekindle love in the human breast,
to rehabilitate the freedom of man, and to restore and teach the dign'ly of human
labour
always strove to keep his mind open and he very often differed with himself.
There was no rigidity with him and his life was an unending experiment Gandhi
himself had told the members of the Gandhi Sangh at Saoli m March 193d
“There is no such thing as ‘Gandhiism’ and I do not want to leave any sect after
me I do not claim to have onginated any new principle or doctrine. I have
simply tried in my own way to apply the eternal tmths to our daily life and
problems The opinions I have formed and conclusions I have tried at are not
final I may change them tomorrow I have nothing to teach to the world.
Truth and non-violence are as old as the hills All I have done is to try
experiments in both on as vast scale as I could do In doing so I have sometimes
erred and learnt by my error Well, all my philosophy, if it may be called by
that pretentious name, is contained in what I have said You will not call it
”
‘Gandhism’, there is no ism about it
There is, therefore, no such thing as Gandhiism. It is only the Gandhian way
1 Sitaramayya, P ,
Gandhi and Gandhiism, Vol I,
p 35
2 Kripalani, J B The GandhiaA Way, p 159
,
719
\
and outlook Vhich is neither rigid nor formal nor final. The things he said had
been said before, the truth he uttered, or even the principles he claimed, had been
said and practised in earlier days also. He held these cardinal principles truth —
and non-violence— religiously and based all his transactions on these principles.
Gandhi’s originality lies in the application of these principles on a mass scale
covering the whole of life, individual and social, moral and material No one
before him had ever done so The pnnciples of truth and non-violence had been
previously applied on individual scale to mould personal life and acts But for
Gandhi to separate the individual from society was to do violence to both. The
individual and society, in his opinion, act and react upon each other and have to
be raised simultaneously
A casual reference may be made to the statement which Gandhi made at a
public meeting at Karachi soon after the Gandhi-Irwin Pact had been concluded,
and just before the Karachi Session of the Congress Gandhi is reported to have
declared that “Gandhi Gandhiism may live for ever” ^ “Apparently,”
may die but
says Dr. Sitaramayya, “he then and there coined the term Gandhiism as an
expression which succinctly but comprehensively, summanses the philosophy
that underlies his cult of truth and non-violence ’’‘'The Gandhi-Irwin Pact, or the
Delhi Pact, as the biographer of Lord Irwin calls it, was a triumph of truth and
non-violence It was tribute to his power of satyagraha, because the Pact,
according to Gandhi, had established the basis of equality in principle, between
India and Britain ^ It was a new basis of relationship between the two countries,
though the Pact neither promised independence nor Dominion Status The
success of the Pact depended upon the behaviour of the British Government and
the outcome of the Round Table Conference And Gandhi was doubtful of the
good results “There is every chance of my returning empty-handed,” he said on
going aboard the Rajputana which took him to London to participate in the
Second Round Table Conference as the sole delegate of the Congress
It will be too much to assert that Gandhi had claimed to establish a
distinctive doctrine of his own when he said “Gandhiism may live for ever” The
only logical meaning which can be given to it is that he desired to keep the torch
of truth and non-violence burning for ever and glowing the path of true
satyagrahis in reaching the goal of independence, and establishing a non-vioicnt
society or Ram Rajya. Perhaps, Gandhi was in a mood to remind his listeners at
the Karachi meeting of the ordeals ahead of them, because the moment the Pact
was signed, complaints of its non-fulfilment were level led against the Govern-
ment and Gandhi was again negotiating with the Viceroy, this time the new
Viceroy, Lord Willmgdon, well-known in India for his professions and deeds
It would, therefore, be presumptuous to give the statement a meaning other
than the natural explanation in the context of the circumstances There was no
Gandhiism with Gandhi Being a growing and evolving personality there could
be no finally fixed modes of thought and action for him As regards the two
cardinal principles of truth and non-violcncc, there was no rigidity for him in
their application Even his closest associates could not make any positive forecast
5 Ibid
<)1 how he would act under a particular set of circumstances. Gandhi himself
freely admitted that Ahimsa might be applied differently m differing circum-
stances and Acharya Knpalani rightly says, “come
situations In fact, all isms, as
whose names they are preached and
into existence, not at the initiative of those in
pormulgated, but as the result of limitations imposed upon the original ideas by
the followers Lacking the creative genius, the followers systematise and organise.
In so doing they make the ongmal doctrines rigid, inelastic, one-sided and
fanatical depriving them of their original freshness and flexibility, which are the
signs of youth ’’^Gandhi simply indicated the direction without trying to fill in
the details finally or for all times to come
was only a Gandhian way andIt
outlook When his impatient followers fill m the details making his ideas and
technique rigid, it becomes Gandhiism Then, the principles he preached and the
modes he practised become rigid and extreme Gandhi had always condemned
extremism “If only these isms (as Babu Bhagvandas puts it) would shed their
extremism and taken instead, a little genuine spiritual religion and a few
psychological principles,” Gandhi said, “they would be at once shaking hands
with each other or even running into each other’s arms All these ideologies and
isms have great things to their credit, all have great crimes to their debit too.”
Gandhi’s views are equally applicable to all varieties of isms, religious, economic,
and political
and form ” Then, comes the revolutionary Gandhi who declared that his loyalty
7 Knpalani, J B ,
The Gandhian Way, p 158
722 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Gandhi perfected the science and art of Ahimsa, extended its scope to all
activities in life, and himself attained the status of sthitaprajna, the ideal man of
the Gita; and the ideal man of the Gita is one who has abandoned desire and
freed his mind from all worry, who receives pleasures and pains alike and is no
longer subject to the passion of fear, anger and hatred, who is completely
detached and is unconcerned with good or bad results
John Ruskin’s Unto This Last had also been one of the transforming
influences which shaped Gandhi’s views This book was given to Gandhi by
Henry S.L Polak, an Assistant Editor of the Transvaal Critic. “This book,” he
said in 1946, “marked the turning point in my life ” He immediately decided to
change his “life in accordance with the ideals of the book ” Gandhi learnt three
lessons from it
borrowed the idea of satyagraha from Thoreau But he denied it in his letter,
dated September 10, 1935, addressed to P Kodanda Rao of the Servants of India
Society Gandhi wrote, “The statement that I have derived my idea of Civil
Disobedience from the writing of Thoreau is wrong The resistance to authority
in South Africa was well advanced before I got the essay of I'horeau on Civil
Disobedience ” He, however, regarded it as “masterly treatise” and admitted
that “it left a deep impression” on him
time when he was passing through a crisis of scepticism. He had not by then
completely surrendered himself to non-violence and accepted it as a creed in the
solution of all problems in life. But “its reading,” says Gandhi, “cured me of my
scepticism and made me a firm believer in Ahimsa.”
Tolstoy’s philosophy is called Christian Anarchism It is the application of
the teaching of the Sermon on the Mount to the solution of the modem social,
economic and political problems The essence of Christ’s teaching and the one
adequate solution for human problem is, according to Tolstoy, love “A Christian
enters intono dispute with his neighbour, he neither attacks nor uses violence; on
the contrary, he suffers himself, without resistance, and by his very attitude
towards evil not only sets himself free, but helps to free the world at large from all
outward authority ” The Christian Anarchist, Tolstoy, makes love as the basis of
his principle of non-resistance
The Gita and the Sermon on the Mount had led Gandhi to the same
conclusion “Next Raychandra,” " wrote Gandhi, “Tolstoy is one of
to the late
the three modemers who have exerted the greatest spiritual influence on my life,
the third being Ruskin ’’^“Tolstoy preached peaceful, painful refusal to serve or
obey evil governments Gandhi also preached the same In his letter to Gandhi
dated April 25 (May 8), 1910, Tolstoy wrote, “I just received your letter and your
book, Indian Home Rule. I read your book with great interest because of the
things and questions you treat in it, passive resistance is a question of the greatest
importance, not only for India, but for the whole of humanity ”
Religion and Politics. Gandhi’s religion made him political and his politics
was religious This is in essence the Gandhian outlook “There are no politics,”
said Gandhi, “devoid of religion Politics bereft of religion are a death trap
because they kill the soul ” To him, religion and politics were not apart from each
other than body and soul Religion was the very breath of Gandhi’s being He
says,“At the back of every word that I have uttered since I have known what
public life IS, and ol every act that I have done, there has been a religious
”
consciousness and a downright religious motive
By Gandhi did not mean any particular creed He believed in an
religion,
all-pervading God His God was Truth His Truth was knowledge and where
there was true knowledge there was bliss He did not merely say that “God is
truth”, but also said that “Truth is God”. Gandhi was, accordingly, a seeker after
truth and his Gcxl manifested Himself in Truth and Love. Love and Ahimsa were
synonymous for him Without Ahimsa, he said, it was not possible to seek and
find truth Both are the obverse and reverse of the same coin one is the means, —
the other is the end Whoever acts on these principles was for him a religious and
spiritual person whether he believed in God or not, whether he was a Jew or a
gentile, a heathen or a Christian, a Muslim or a Kafir Gandhi’s God and religion
was, thus, a thing of the heart It resided in every human heart and it must be
evolved by each out of himself as it is always within us “The ultimate definition
of religion,” he concluded, “may be said to be obedience to the Law of God. God
and His Law are synonymous terms Therefore, God signifies an unchanging and
Gandhi came in intimate contact with him after his return from England He not only
religious nature, but helped him m
influenced Gandhi by his moral earnestness and deep
the study of Hindu religion
1 2 India, p 652
,
living being No one has ever really found him. But Avtars and prophets have, by
means of their tapasya, given to mankind a faint glimpse of the eternal law and
assigned to each one amongst us the work of the moral scavenger— so as to clean
and purify our hearts and get them ready,” ready for action and service of
mankind in removing iniquity and injustice
Gandhi’s religion, in short, means, “belief in the ordered moral government
of the universe” '^It is identical with morality It is practical and universal and
provides a basis for all the activities of man He explained to the Christian
pilgrims, who met him at Wardha, the motive of his work Gandhi said, “My
motive has been purely religious I could not be leading a religious life unless I
identified myself with the whole of mankind, and this I could not do unless I took
part in politics The full gamut of man’s activities today constitutes an indivisible
whole You cannot divide social, political and religious work into watertight
compartments I do not know any religion apart from human activity It provides
a moral basis to all other activities which if they would otherwise lack reduce life
to a thing of sound and fury signifying nothing
man and society But a moral man and a
Gandhi’s mission was to moralise
moral society could only be obtained when truth stood arrayed against all
tyranny whether that tyranny was of the State or society or of the individual
^
Politics was, accordingly, an unavoidable evil for him “If I take part m
politics,” he said, “it is only because politics today encircles us like the coils of the
snake from which one cannot get out no matter how one tries I wish to wrestle
with the snake I am trying to introduce religion into politics ” Political
freedom, he thought, was essential for the emergence of a non-violent State and a
non-violent society “He who does not know w^hat patriotism or feeling for one’s
country is, does not know his true duty or religion” and those who say that
religion has nothing to do with politics, do not know what religion means.”
Gandhian Outlook Explained. Gandhi was a political engineer whose
domain was action, first in South Africa and later in India He was not a
philosopher or thinker m the sense that he thought out a philosophy of
and life
for the result, his mission in life was to strive for justice for all men; freedom for
all nations to develop their own resources according to their own genius; freedom
for individuals within nations, that is, complete freedom, no matter what colour,
creed, what religion or political views they have, freedom from disease, hunger
and poverty, m a word complete freedom for all so that each individual could
attain his highest innate capacity for physical, psychological, and cultural
development
In his attempt to realise a better ordering of human society, Gandhi devised
a new moral strategy, the method of regulating along non-violent lines, group life
economic, national and international aspects. He condemned the
in its political,
methods hitherto employed to solve the group problems, because modern group
life has degraded both individual and social morality. The individual is asked to
play a dual and contradictory role and two different and conflicting moral
standards regulate his conduct As a citizen, he is enjoined to act as a good
neighbour and to regulate his social conduct on the basis of natural trust,
cooperation, truth and non-violence As a member of a group and a nation, he is
enjoined to consider other groups and nations as actual or potential enemies and
his conduct is marked by selfishness, distrust, fraud, violence and war These
differing moral standards create conflicting loyalties and when “loyalties cannot
be harmonised, they create internal and external conflicts” In the individual
“they create a split personality Conflicting moral standards produce social,
economic and political contradictions and maladjustments and cause violence,
”
revolution and war
truth and non-violence,” said Gandhi, “matters not merely for individual
practice but for practice by groups, communities and nations That at any rate is
niy dream
work out a synthesis between the individual and group, between
In order to
social and economic and political life, Gandhi began with the individual, whose
moral regeneration he deemed as the first requisite Gandhi’s Swaraj was
concerned with the individual’s inner freedom as well as his external freedom in
society His was a simultaneous reform of the individual and society True
morality must manifest itself in every action of the individual as individual
and also as a member of s(x:icty The individual and society both act and react
upon each other “I do not believe,” said Gandhi, “that the spiritual law works in
a field of its own On the contrary, it expresses itself through the ordinary
activities of life It thus affects the economic, social and political fields Gand-
you have to reform
hian outlook may, as such, be reduced to a simple formula. If
violence there is untruth One who holds to truth is not out to injure or destroy
the opponent, but to convert him into an ally Violence gams nothing On the
contrary, it aggravates the moral disease It does not lead to the correction of the
person on whom violence is perpetrated Violence, in fact, is likely to kill the
initiative of the person concerned and “to destroy” the very possibility of “change
of heart” which is the essence of moral regeneration Use of violence, Gandhi
further asserted, not only lowers the victim, but also the user of violent means,
because “non-violence is the law of our species as violence is the law of the
brute” " The evil-doer should be weaned from error by patience and sympathy,
le., self-suffering Pursuit of truth means realization of spiritual unity through
love and service of and love and service of all is non-violence The use of
all,
violence, in any form, Gandhi maintained, offends “the greatest truth, the unity
and sacrednes^ of all Beings
Gandhi did not and means He regarded the two as
distinguish between ends
a continuous process He maxim
that the end justifies the means
rejected the
Ever) act, he said, is in pursuance of an end The end is merely the result of a
series of acts that are undertaken as means If each action has its appropriate
result, then, a good action creates a good result and a bad action a bad result
Gandhi’s unique and distinctive contribution not only to the armoury of political
weapons, and the technique of revolution, but to the store of human knowledge
and thought as well It is a new science or a philosophy in action It was tried and
found successful in limited fields and it has the possibilities of being applied in
new and wider fields, particularly in the explosive situation of the present-day
world affairs Satyagraha is the technique of resisting all that is evil, unjust,
impure and untrue and resolving all maladjustments in human relations by love,
voluntary suffering and self-purification by an appeal “to the divine spark m
the opponent’s soul” It is an expression of purest Ahimsa or non-violence and it
precludes hatred, deception or untruth To explain it in the words of Gandhi
love The satyagrahi establishes his spiritual identity with the opponent and
awakens in him a feeling that he cannot hurt him without hurting his own
personality The action of satyagraha, m the last analysis, proceeds through the
technique of “identification” and “involvement” All differences and conflicts
between man and man, between
group and group, “are sought to be resolved by
the mighty weapon of satyagraha by lifting these from the gross physical plane to
the elevated spiritual and moral plane where they can be adjusted by the union
”
of souls, by the deep calling unto the deep
Satyagraha or Soul force or Love force, as Gandhi calls it, is like a com on
whose face you read love and on the reverse you read truth “And as a satyagrahi
never injures his opponents and always appeals either to his reason by gentle
argument, or his heart by the sacrifice of self, satyagraha is twice blessed, it
blesses him who practises it, and against whom it is practised ” It has very often
been maintained that the organisation of non-violent resistance or satyagraha of
Gandhi’s conception can be practised by only a select few Gandhi did not agree
to It He said, “My experience proves the contrary Once its simple pnnci-
ples— adherence to truth and insistence upon it by self-suffering are understood, —
”
anybody can practise it It is as difficult or as easy as any other virtue
Satyagraha, as a method of redressing group and political wrongs, was first
experimented by Gandhi in Sojth Africa with a commendable success It was
again tried on an extended scale and covering many phases in India to achieve
national independence India won the non-violent battle of her independence It
stands unparalleled in history No revolution for national independence had been
as bloodless as the Indian revolution tor independence and both the rulers and
the ruled parted company in comparative friendliness
totally untrue to say that it is a force to be used only by the weak so long as they
are not capable of meeting by violence This force is to violence, and therefore
what light is to darkness In politics its use is based on
to all tyranny, all injustice,
the immutable maxim that government of the people is possible only so long as
”
they consent cither consciously or unconsciously to be governed
The Technique of Satyagraha. The technique of satyagraha as corporate
action may take the following forms
“cannot stand except with the consent of the governed, which consent is often
forcibly procured by the despot. Immediately the subject ceases to fear the
despotic force, his power is gone ” What is true of governments also applies to
other exploiting groups and organisations Non-cooperation with evil takes the
form of self-purification in the satyagrahi himself and the withdrawal on his part
object IS to strike the imagination of the people and the government or the
institution involved Two things are necessary here In the first place, the hartals
should not be frequent, otherwise they would cease to be effective, and, secondly,
they should be strictly voluntary, the result of persuasion and other non-violent
methods of propaganda
(ii) Social Ostracism. This is tantamount to social boycott against black-
legs who defy public opinion and do not resort to non-co-operation Gandhi felt
that “in social life it is impossible to avoid ostracism to a certain extent, but it
should not be used, except in a very limited sense” It does not mean depriving a
person of indispensable social services or to make his life unbearable “by insults,
innuendoes and abuse” All this would amount to coercion and violence
(ill) Picketing. Picketing must necessarily be persuasive and not coercive
Gandhi had always condemned picketing in the sense of sitting dhama and
desenbed it as a barbarity and a species of violence Similarly, he did not approve
of picketing in the sense “of formation of a living wall of picket” in order to
prevent the entry of persons into the picketed place “The object of peaceful
picketing is not to block the path of a person wanting to do a particular thing,
but to rely on the force of public opprobrium and to warn and even shame the
blacklegs Picketing should avoid coercion, intimidation, discourtesy, burning or
”
burying of effigies, and hunger-strikes
2 Civil Disobedience. Civil disobedience is the last stage and the most
drastic form of non-co-operation Gandhi called it “a complete, effective and
bloodless substitute of armed revolt” He defined civil disobedience as the
“breach of unmoral statutory enactment” It signifies “the resister’s outlawry in a
civil, i e non-violent ”
Gandhi put greater emphasis on the word civil
manner
,
than on disobedience so that the movement might not become uncivil and
violent “Disobedience to be civil,” he said, “must be sincere, respectful,
restrained, never defiant, must be based upon some well understood principle,
must not be capricious and must have no ill will or hatred behind it ” And as it is
an effective and more drastic remedy, it should be employed with the gratest
caution and most sparingly “ Its use must be guarded by all conceivable
stirs up as nothing else “sluggish concience and fires ioving hearts to ac-
tion Those who have to bring about radical changes in human conditions
and surroundings cannot do it except by raising ferment in society There are
only two methods of doing this— violence and non-violence Non-violent pressure
exerted through self-suffering by fasting touches and strengthens the moral
”
fibre of those against whom it is directed
5 is the weapon
Strike. Strike of the labour for the redress of their
legitimate grievances Gandhi desired to make his concept of strike entirely
distinct from its prototype in the West He did not accept the proposition that
the capitalist class should be eliminated and substituted by a labour ‘capitalist’
class He envisaged all industry as a joint enterprise of labour and capital wherein
both act as mutual ‘trustees’ With the trusteeship basis of industrial control,
Gandhi inculcated in the labour the attitude that they must regard the industry
as a whole as their own and, accordingly, direct their attack against corruption,
injustice, inefficiency and shortsighted greed of the owners Strikes, he said,
should be directed for achieving this end rather than in a bid to seize power of
owning and controlling industry The satyagrahi strike must be non-violent in
spirit as well as in method “It is voluntary, purificatory suffering undertaken to
convert the erring opponent ” Moreover, the demands of the strikers must be
and just Further, to ensure non-violence on the part of the strikers,
clear, feasible
Gandhi emphasised that they must acquire some manual craft so that they might
not have to depend upon the strike fund to maintain themselves and their
families duiing a prolonged strike
ed a plan of action in case of a foreign armed aggression, though he had not any
opportunity to test it out “A non-violent man or society,” said Gandhi, “docs not
anticipate or provide for attacks from without ” On the contrary, such a person or
society firmly believes that nobody is going to disturb them. If the worst
happens, there are two ways open to meet violence, to yield possession, but
non-co-operate with the aggressor Thus, supposing that a modern edition of
Nero descended upon India, the representatives of the State will let him in, but
tell him that he will get no assistance from the people They will prefer death to
submission The second way be non-violcnt resistance by a people who have
will
been trained in the non-violent methods They would offer themselves unarmed
as fodder for the aggressor’s canons The underlying belief in either case is that
even a Nero is not devoid of a heart “The unexpected spectacle of endless rows
upon rows of men and women,” asserted Gandhi, “simply dying rather than
surrender to the will of an aggressor must ultimately melt him and his solidery
Gandhi, therefore, offered two solutions to meet foreign aggression During
the invasion, the technique would consist in offering non-violent resistanceup to
death to the last man and complete non-co-operation with him m
to the invader,
all forms of non-violent satyagraha to which a reference has been made above
The advice given by Gandhi to the Abyssinians, the Czechs, the Poles, the
British and other victims of aggression are typical examples of his technique To
the Chinese he advised, “If the Chinese had non-violence of my conception, there
would be no use left machinery of destruction which Japan
for the latest
possesses The Chinese would sa/ to Japan, ‘Bring all your machinery, we present
half of our population to you But the remaining two hundred million won’t bend
their knees to you If the Chinese did that, Japan would become China’s
’
”
slave
Attitude towards the State. Gandhi did not directly make any suggestion as
to the nature of a non-violent State He was, more concerned with the immediate
present than the future. His immediate concern was to free India from the
subjection of the British through the technique of non-violent satyagraha. And
the science of satyagraha was yet in the making He was still experimenting with
it. He even admitted that the experiment had not reached an advanced stage of
development Moreover, he thought it desirable that the details of a non-violent
State should be determined by the people according to their moral level and their
preferences It, accordingly, appeared to him premature and unscientific to detail
with the governmental shape of things to come “I have purposely refrained from
today But I cannot say in advance what the Government based wholly on
”
non-violence will be like
40 Elhual p 40
Religion, op atd ,
41 Modern Review, October 1935 An Interview with Mahatma Gandhi by N.K Bose.
such a society everyone is his own ruler, but he rules himself in such a way that he
is never a hindrance to his neighbours
and must not indulge in running down his opponent and exploit the voters.
Gandhi would not even permit canvassing for the votes His ideal was let service
of the people be the criterion for securing votes and voters should be left to
themselves to judge who has really served them the best Gandhi would give to all
citizens, men and women, the right to vote The only qualification he would
prescribe for a voter is manual work “The qualifications for franchise should be,”
he said more than once, “neither projxrty nor position but manual work . Li-
teracy or property test has proved to be elusive Manual work gives an
opportunity to all who wish to take part in the government and the well-being of
the State ” Work, he further said, “will not be the antithesis of life, but the means
”
of realizing the full content of life
barriers of caste, creed, religion, colour and sex, participate in its governance.
And “if independence is bom non-violently, Gandhi concluded, “all the
component parts” of the State “will be voluntarily interdependent working in
perfect harmony under a representative central authority which will derive its
sanction from the confidence reposed in it by the component parts ” But it does
not mean that there will be no need for the police There may be found even in a
non-violent State some anti-social individuals who may resort to violence and
break laws Such people need to be reformed and the police will be needed for
this purpose But the police of Gandhi’s conception will be entirely different as
compart with the police which now maintains law and order and protects us
from the undesired social elements The ranks of the police, according to Gandhi,
“will be composed of believers in non-violence. They will be servants, not masters
of the people The people will instinctively render them any help, and through
mutual cooperation they will easily deal with the ever decreasing disturbances.
The police force will have some kind of arms but they will be rarely used, if at all.
In fact, the policemen will be reformers Their police work will be confined to
robbers and dacoits Quarrels between labour and capital and strikes will be few
and far between in a non-violent State, because the influence of the non-violent
majority will be so great as to command the respect of the principal elements in
734 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
and m case of uneconomic holding exemption from rent for such period as
may be necessary, relief being given to small zamindars wherever necessary
by reason of such reduction
11 Imposition of a progressive tax on agricultural income above a fixed
maximum
1 2 A gradual mhentance tax
13 Expenditure and salaries m civil departments to be largely reduced. And no
servant of the State, other than the specially employed experts and the like,
to be paid above a certain fixed figure which should not ordinarily exceed Rs.
500 per month
14 Protection of indigenous cloth by exclusion of all foreign cloth and foreign
yam from the country
1 ^ Prohibition of intoxicating drinks and drugs
16 No duty on salt manufactured m India
1 7 Control over exchange and currency policy so as to help Indian industries
and bring relief to the masses
18 Control by the State of key industries and ownership of mineral resources.
”
19 Control of usury
Gandhi was an and through He did not believe that the
egalitarian through
wide gulf between
ideal of non-violence could be realised in society so long as the
the rich and the hungry millions remained But by economic equality he did not
mean absolute equality His ideas was approximate equality “Economic equality
must never be supposed to mean possession of an equal amount of worldly goods
by everyone It does mean however that everyone will have a proper house to live
in, sufficient and balanced food to eat, and sufficient khadi with which to cover
himself It also means that the cruel inequality that obtains today will be
for the education of one’s children and adequate medical relief Any
possession over and above, he regarded as superfluous But the superfluous
wealth must be held by those who possessed it as trustees of the people to
Gandhi did not contemplate any scheme of expropriating the capitalist and
the landlord, if they changed their mentality and worked as trustees of the
workers and the peasants. On the other hand, they should “supply brain to them
and remove the present terrible inequality between them” and the workers and
peasants. Gandhi’s scheme did not envisage class antagonism He aimed at “class
collabcH^tion and class coordination as the first step towards the classless
democracy in which everyone will perform same form of productive physical
labour and there will be no exploiters”. As trustees, the capitalists and the
landlords would use their talent and the bulk of their earnings not for themselves,
but as a trust for the good of society They would be entitled to a reasonable rate
of earnings determined by themselves in consultation with society But the rate of
payment “would not matter so long as they agreed to surrender their existing
titles based on absolute ownership for a trusteeship basis” If the capitalists and
the /amindars do not rise to the occasion and accept the new basis of ownership,
the weapon of non-co-operation, Gandhi proposed, should be employed in order
to make it impossible for the landlords and the capitalists to exploit He warned
the capitalist class to read the signs of the times, “revise their notions of
God-given right of all they possess,” and if this is done, “in an incredibly short
space of time the seven hundred thousand dung-heaps which today pass mostly as
villages can be turned into abodes of peace, health and comfort There is no other
choice than between voluntary surrender on the part of the capitalist of
superfluities and consequent acquisition of the real happiness of all on the one
hand, and on the other the impending chaos into which, if the capitalist does not
wake up betimes, awakened but ignorant, famishing millions will plunge the
country and which not even the armed force that a powerful Government can
”
bring into play can avert
391.
GANDHIAN WAY OF LIFE 737
ideal conditions, not for profit, but for the benefit of humanity ” He would
concede to the workers the right to elect their representatives, who should share in
the management of those industries He was, however, against centralization and
mass production Centralization and mass production, according to Gandhi,
vitiateddemocracy Concentration of political and economic power, he further
maintained, was the negation of fundamental rights and civil liberties and
against the individual’s moral freedom Non»violence and centralised industries,
whether under individual capitalism or State ownership, he held incompatible.
Gandhi preferred individual violence to State violence, because the former was
the lesser of the two evils “If the State suppressed capitalism by violence it would
be caught in the coils of violence itself and fail to develop non-violence at any
time The State represents violence in a concentrated and organised form. The
individual has a soul but the State is a soulless machine Hence I prefer the
”
doctrine of trusteeship
strategy, based upon the twin principles of truth and non-violence, for the
solution of individual and group problems The basis of the teachings of Gandhi
IS one of mutual adjustment, the feeling of contentment, and the desire to sec
The unique contribution of Gandhi lies not in the fact that he has disco-
vered new truths, but that he has applied old and eternal truths for the
solution of modern problems He is the greatest exponent of the theory and
practice of non-violence There is some scepticism about the efficacy ol
Yet, the present-day world standing on the brink of an abysmal cataclysm does
find solace in the Gandhian outlook and his peaceful technique If the world
fieacehad hitherto remained elusive like a will-o’-the-wisp in spite of the fact that
no country professedly wanted war, it had been so because the world had not
paid sufficient attention to the principles of peace and non-vidence as preached
by Gandhi Now the war-scared and bewildered nations of the West do not find
these methods the only way to have a real peace, but the very methods upon
which depend human peace, freedom and culture, in fact, their survival To put
It a little mom bluntly, the world today must choose between the Gandhian way
of life and the atom or hydrogen bomb Perhaps, the bellicose nature of man may
be curbed by the real nature of man and the ultimate choice may be with
(Jandhi’ If such a revolution comes about in the dealings of mankind who can,
I hen, say that the Gandhian way of life is not revolutionary^
Gandhi had faith in human nature and its capacity, through a gradual
prcK'ess, to minimise evil He realised that even the tallest among men have
738 PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
imperfections But even the most depressed, he believed, cannot shake himself
from the self-conscious impulse “to realise God who dwells in us” Accordingly, it
was his conviction that it is more natural for man to be good than evil, “though
apparently descent may seem easier than ascent” Gandhi is, thus, a realist who
believes in ‘Futurism’ and inevitability of progress But he is not oblivious of the
means He forthwith rejects the maxim that end justifies the means His maxim is
as themeans so the end and good means must be adopted for the realization of
good ends Good means and a good end constitute a single whole pattern for him
the realm of idealism divorced from the realities of earthly life His socio-
economic structure of the non-violent democracy is inconveivable in the form in
which he conceives it He advocated a return to simplicity and nature He
opposed large-scale industrialism and mechanization Later on, he becomes
somewhat realistic, at least in the context of the future Indian society, and
advocates a reconciliation of large-scale and small-scale industries, the rationali-
sation of key industries, and the organisation of “urban centres not as lop-sided
out-growths but functioning as catenng to the interests of the village where the
real soul of India lay ” He would even allow the electrification of the rural areas
By conceding all this, he brings forward his concept of trusteeship It is true that
Gandhi’s scheme did not envisage class antagonism But is it humanly possible to
reconcile the two antagonistic classes to a scheme of class collaboration and class
co-ordination^ It may be divinely possible If labour and capital did not work as
won through the non-violence of the brave, the resulting State will be a genuine
democracy wherein exploitation and coercion exist to the minimum The
non-violent State of Gandhi’s dream will be internally free and externally equal
to other States Its aims would be to promote the greatest good of all and with a
view to achieving this end it will govern the least leaving to individual initiative
the largest part of the functions of the State The State would meet foreign
aggression and internal disturbances, as far as possible, non-violently, the police
and the military will be least in evidence In this way, the State will prepare for
Its own demise to be replaced by voluntary associations
Is there any possibility of such a non-violent State to come into being^ Docs
the Sovereign and Independent Republic of India fulfil the conditions of
Gandhi’s non-violent Stated Is the socialistic pattern of society or the socialistic
GANDHIAN WAY OF LIFE 739
society, which the Congress Party intended to estabi sh, in conformity with
the ideals of Gandhi^ Are the representatives of the people the embodiment of
Gandhi’s ideal, selfless, able, and incorruptible who have no craze for oflSce and
they do not indulge in self-advertisement and exploit the voters^ Does the spirit
of service dominate their lives and is that their merit which makes them
representatives^ Will the State, as today constituted in India, prepare the way for
Its own demise by voluntary associations^ These are some of the
to be replaced
very pertinent questions which often agitate the minds of the students of
Gandhian way of life If Gandhi had been alive, perhaps, he would have cither
modified his views about the State or would have deplored the State emerging
out of his labour and sacrifices Yet, the one redeeming feature is that his
teachings remain the beacon light and inspiration to the people But “his ideal”,
as Bodh Raj Sharma succinctly observed, “so far as a poor mortal may foresee,
will ever remain an ideal to be discussed in Seminars and papers until God wills
”
otherwise
SARVODAYA
The followers of Gandhi. If the teachings of Gandhi have failed to mould
and shape the policies and transactions of the Central and State Governments in
India, several of his disciples, acclaimed as the true followers of the Mahatma and
his real successors, are still dedicated to the realization of that ideal social order
wherein the moral man would live in a moral society These followers of Gandhi
were his closest associates, the inmates of his ashram, and are distinguishable
from his political followers who have held and are holding the reins of the
government of the country and have twisted its destinies for more than three
decades now In his paper, “Second Thoughts on Gandhism,” Devarat N Pathak
makes a sharp distinction between the personal and political followers of Gandhi
and maintains that, “Now it may be easily conceded that Gandhiism never
received a wholehearted support even during Gandhi’s lifetime Congress which
owed not a little of its success to Gandhi, often vehemently differed from him
taking to a different path of action and policy, leaving Gandhi alone ” It was
left to a few of his devotees to strictly adhere to his way of life “To his close
They all followed Gandhi’s lead but they did not adopt Gandhiism in its entirety
If the Gandhiites were the personal followers of Gandhi, the latter
accepted him as their political leader The former shunned politics and lived as
Gandhi’s inmates in the ashram. The latter group figured in political life and
the transfer of power. When the officer of the Information and Broadcasting
Department, Government of India, who had come for a message, told Gandhi
that if he did not give any message, it would not be good, he replied: “There is no
message at all If it is bad, let it be so The distressing developments inside the
Ccxigress after Independence and the moral degradation of the men in the
Congress further agonised Gandhi and he gave serious thought to the future of
the Congress In the draft constitution of the reorganised Congress, which he
prepared in the last days of his life, Gandhi had unequivocally stated that
“ . . .the Congress, in its present shape and form, as a propaganda vehicle and
parliamentary machine, has outlived its use India has still to attain social, moral
and economic independence in terms of India’s seven hundred thousand villages,
as distinguished from cities and towns The struggle for the ascendancy of civil
over military power is bound to take place in India’s progress towards its
democratic goal The Congress must be kept put of unhealthy competition with
the political parties and communal bodies For these and other similar reasons,
the All India Congress Committee resolves to disband the existing Congress
organisation and flower into a Lok Sevak Sangh under the following rules \vith
”
the power to alter these as occasion may demand
Origin of the Sarvodaya Plan. But the political followers of Gandhi were in
no mood to liquidate the existing Congress Gandhi, then, turned to his true and
disciplined soldiers, his constructive workers, for the reconstruction of the social
order in the context of the changed conditions of the country. It was decided to
hold a small conference at Wardha some time in February 1948. But Gandhi was
assassmated on January 30, 1948, and the proposed conference could not be held
Subsequently, a Sarvodaya Economic Conference was held on December 22 and
23 next year with Kaka Kalelkar as President and it adopted a plan “to attain
moral and economic independence” as envisaged by Gandhi The plan was
social,
56. Tendulkar, DG ,
Mahatma, Life of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, Vol VIII, pp
95-96
57 Refer to a Note written by Gandhi entitled “4 Tragic Phenomenon”, Tendulkar,
DG ,
Maftatma, Life of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, Vol VII,p 186
58 Vol VIII, p 342
GANDHIAN WAY OF LIFE—SARVODAYA 741
hearts,and fighting against tyranny of all kinds. For him democracy was the basis
of a non-violent and Sarvodaya society, which could be achieved by a
decentralised socio-economic order based on cottage industrialism and village
community life, self-governing and self-sufficient Gandhi was, thus, able to
project in the name.of Sarvodaya, the welfare of all, a theory deemed superior to
what democracy or socialism offers,
Sarvodaya Society. Acharya Vinoba Bhave has outlined the following
three characteristics of a Sarvodaya society and maintains that wheresoever and
whenever these essential conditions are fulfilled such a society possesses the
virtues of a Sarvodaya social order But all these three charactenstics are
fundamental and they must be present and operate simultaneously
llie Sarvodayavadis aim at the creation of a social order free from every
form of authonty, stateless society where “the ruler and the ruled will be merged
in the individual ” They reject the State and its government no matter what its
form, because both are coercive institutions and force is the ultimate sanction
behind them Even the Welfare State does not offer them any satisfaction “The
Welfare State,” says Jayaprakash Narayan, “in the name of welfare threatens as
much to enslave man to the State as in totalitarian State The people must cry
hall to this creeping paralysis ” The human society must, therefore, be free from
all coercive institutions It does not, however, mean disappearance of the State all
and from that condition to one where people are free of government altogether.”
His progression is from “no government”, that is, the condition of anarchy where
exploitation and oppression prevail, to “good government”, where no power is
”
dominant and justice prevails, to a social order absolutely “free of government
The Sarvodayavadis, thus, do not exclude some form of government in the
intervening stage of a Sarvodaya society But they will eschew a representative
democracy— political parties, periodic elections and the rule of the majority arc
the mdispensable parts of a representative government The Sarvodayites
condemn political parties and regard them as conspiracies against the people to
divide them into warring camps Parties create differences where there were none
originally and they always take a narrow and partisan view of all matters People
become power crazy and there is a scramble for party tickets which are
monoeuvred through by all corrupt practices. The propertied class and the
professional politicians control the party organisation and the party line and they
employ all corrupt practices to get their nominees elected Votes are even
purchased, thus, debasing and demoralising the body politic. The result is
obvious “Suffrage for the nch and sufferance for the poor.”
The Sarvodayites bewail the tyranny of majority rule or the tyranny of the
59 See ante Also refer to the Draft Constitution of the Congress, Tendulkar, D.G ,
service, medical service, educational service, etc The officials of the civil services
are paid four-figure salaries, while their masters, the poor of the country whom
they profess to serve, have to live on a pittance of fifty paise a day It is a tragic
paradox that those who earn lakhs are called servants while those who produce
food for the nation are regaeded as self-seekers who work to further their own
interest What is one to say of these services^ If words are not to be deprived of
their meaning then this is nothing but cant and hypocrisy
Sarvodaya society will be self-regulated and self-managed in small commun-
ities, rural or urban Life in such a society will be a life of mutual aid and sharing,
and of freedom Freedom can be enjoyed fully and democracy practised directly
and intelligently only when small communities are able to manage and regulate
their affairs Coercion will not be the basis of such a society In fact, coercion of
any kind will not exist there If at all there will be coercion, it can be called
coercion of love
Individual iind the Society. Men composing the Sarvodaya society will,
be bound together in love and by love, every individual living for others and
all others living for every individual To Gandhi, society is just like a family and
the relation between the individual and society is one of close inter-
dependence He rejects the theory of laissez faire, let the individual be left
alone and that he is not bound by social obligations He also rejects the other
extreme view that the individual is nothing without society and whatever he is it
is because of society Gandhi says, “I value individual freedom but you. must not
forget that man is essentially a social being He has risen to the present status by
learning to adjust his individualism to the requirement of social progress
Unrestricted individualism is the law of the beast of the jungle We have learnt to
stnke the mean between individual' freedom and social restraint Willing
submission to social restraint for the sake of the well-being of the whole society,
enriches both the individual and the society of which one is a member”. Gandhi
stood for the ideal of the “greatest good of all” and throughout his life he strove
for that The individual comes first and foremost in the Gandhian outlook and in
any scheme of social progress the first step always lies with the individual But
Gandhi’s Swarajya was concerned with the individual’s inner freedom as well as
his external freedom in society Individual and society must march ahead
together All faculties of the individual be dedicated to society which provides
him with opportunities for free growth and development In this way, Sarvodaya
has been defined “as a synthesis of individualism and socialism, directed at the
”
good of all
Moral, Social and Economic Values. The moral, social and economic value
of the callings pursued honestly must be the same Gandhi drew his inspiration
for Sarvodaya, of the ideal social order, immediately from a reading of Ruskin’s
Unto This Last and he acknowledged it in his Autobiography Gandhi wrote that
“a lawyer’s work has the same value as the barber’s inasmuch as all have the
same right of earning their livelihood” It means that labour is the joy of life and
labour must not be discriminated against labour” Elaborating it, Vinoba says,
“It is futile to try and draw up a scale of the values of mental or manual services
How shall we pay in money the person who nurses a sick man and sits up with
him in the night-* What should be a judge’s price for his impartial judgment^
How shall we apply the rule of three in order to know how much is due to the
man who pulls out of the water or saves us from the raging fire^ These are
infinitely precious services, in other words, they are priceless It is, therefore, right
that, giving up calculation, every'one should devote himself to the service of all
”
with all he has, while society does its duty by providing for his keep
Thus, in a Sarvodaya society there will exist no difference between mental
and manual labour Both stand at par and both will command equal utility and
respect Love is to reign supreme in such a society and all its members use their
abilities and capacities to their best with a selfless purpose for the greatest good of
all In Sarvodaya thinking physical labour and non-possession are the twin
principles of true life and they fulfil the ideals of the principle of Communism
“From each according to his work, to each according to his needs ” In the
Sarvodaya society all wealth, including land, will be a common property to be
used for the good of each and all There will be no class distinctions, the
capitalistsand the workers, and, as such, profit, rent and interest will lose their
meaning and disappear Everyone will work for society according to his capacity
and receive from society according to his needs and in consonance with the needs
of his fellowmen Production m such a society will not be for commerce, but for
In a Gram Raj the state does not disappear But it transforms its nature and
the character of government “in consonance with a non-violent social order”
Such a non- violent state possesses the following attributes which could in
themselves be considered important characteristics of Gram Raj
1 It is a secular state and all persons are free to profess and practise any
religion or belief, so long as it does not interfere with the similar rights of others
3 The state represents the sovereignty of the people “based on pure moral
authonty” That is, the will of the governed is to be the basis of the authority of
the state and its functions
4 The State whose essence
is service, governs the least Gandhi said, “I look
5 Service to the community must be the criterion and aim of all those
functionaries entrusted with the performance of the duties of government In the
draft constitution for the Congress sketched by Gandhi, he held that “ this .
body of servants derive their authority and power from service ungrudgingly and
wisely done to their master, the whole of India
(ii) individuals will be fully self-dependent and help each other, (iii) non-violeiu i
over-enthusiasm to emphasise the ‘higher’ and the ‘better’ ” She further adds,
“what is needed is not renunciation either of faith in human goodness or of
politics but realising that it will take a millennium before the whole of humanity
is transformed to divinity and raising the standard of political understanding and
”
action, the remedy is not less of democracy but more of it
efforts have ever been made and shall always be made in all states of social
development “From time to time”, says James Bryce, “hope is revived by the
appearence of a group of disinterested reformers, whose zeal rouses a nation
to sweep away abuses and leave things better than it found them The
Sarvodayites are at least a reminder to the political followers of Gandhi of his
ideals Gandhi’s influence is not particularly manifest in Indian life today,
although spokesmen of nearly all political parties and ideologies frequently refer
to him and pay at least lip service to his teachings Vinoba Bhave, who professes
to have no interest in politics, is nevertheless one of the strongest forces m India
and the technique of this itinerant leader has a magic effect on people in all the
walks of life
65 Sarvodaya and Democracy The Indian Journal of Political Science, Conference Number,
October-December 1959, p 374
66 Modern Democracies, Vol I,
p 56
SUGGESTED READINGS
Dhawan, GN The Political Philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi
Dhawan, GN Political Philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi The Indian Journal of Political Sciemt,
pp 115-33
Vinoba Bhave Vinoba and His Mission
INDEX
535-38
223, 437, 540, 641
Administrative law, 246, 401, 531
Advisory Committees, 509-16
Almond, GA , 24, 25, 32, 48, 49, 396
Amendment, Constitution, 410-11, 418 C.abinet,358, 359, 360, 361 362, 365, 366,367, ,
19, 121, 459 369, 371, 372, 373, 397, 485, 508, 548, 550
Anarchism, 710-17 ( .ijinalism, 610,611,612,615,616,662,663,
Aristocracy, 292, 293, 294, 301-305, 306
(.(*1 ()()5, (i()8 669,670,671,686,687,689,
Aristotle, 1,2, b 4, 6, 12, 16, 17, 18, 20, 23,
</)()700 705 706 710
26, 27 35, 38, 43, 47, 50, 52, 81, 101, 113,
Carter, Jimmy, 286, 707
145 176 209, 228, 291, 292, 293, 302, 305, Canada, 296, 297, 334, 335, 338, 339, 344,
390, 580 605 348, 354,411,415
\ss(Kiations, 60-62, 144, 163, 164, 165, Case law, 224, 225, 397, 405, 536
166,167 168, 2(X), 201,507 Centralisation, 349-51 352, 354, 422 ,
Ntlantit Charter, 132, 267, 387 Checks and balances, 394, 395, 399
Austin, John, 2, 4, 144, 147, 148, 157 ff, Churchill, Winston, 132, 267,268
212,213,237,364 Citizenship, 180-83
\uthontananism, 321, 379-80, 569 (avil Services, 500-05
\uthor itarian recjimes, 298, 321, 382-85 Cole, (; DH , 56, 60, 166, 168, 229, 230,452,
\yub Khan, Mohammed, 62, 108, 173, 371, 453, 515, 663, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684
382, ^8^ Collectivism, 619, 668-70, 673, 680
Bangladesh, 56, 124, 127, 128, 156, 157, 334 Confederation, 330-31, 337
Barker, E, 10, 23, 31, ,58, 60, 124, 127, 128, Consent, Theory of, 98, 212, 578
163, 166, 292, 395, 399, 495, 619, 631 , 634 Constituent Assembly, 404, 414, 415
Bentham Jermey, 27, 89, 96, 97, 189, 214, Constituency-Multi-member, 431, 432-33
215, 237,462,463.633-35,641 Constituency, -Single-member, 43 1 -32
Bhutto, ZA ,
383 Constitution, 192, 193, 194, 342 344, ,
747
1 1
D Figgis, j N ,
165, 166, 167
Finances of the state, 594-602
Dahl, Robert, 2,8,12,13,49 Finer, Herman, 18, 29, 47, 3 1 7, 360, 369, 372,
Delegated legislation, 494, 501, 534 375, 392, 395, 402, 405, 406, 448, 453, 471,
Democracy — appraisal of, 313-21, Con- 479, 481, 483, 501, 513, 547, 577;581
Indirect, 310-11, 425, 470, future of, l78, Force, 77-80, 109, 111, 309,fn ,
380, 385,
573-75, 576, requisites of, 317-20 285, 296, 325 362,416,417, 419,462,
Democratic centralism, 693, 694 463, 470 511,514 535,536,537
De Tocqueville, 23, 51, 111,235, 588, 589, frencli Revolution, 34, 70, 95, 119, 129,
566 354, 355 356. 380, 190, 404, 414, 418, 464,
Dicey AV , 151, 152, 202, 247,259, 266,343, 475, 478, 481, 498, 537, 540, 548, 565, 591
361, 406, 409, 427, 531, 532, 533, 534, 536 1 line tional representation, 451-54, 607, 642
Dictatorehip, 301, 344, 345, 378-87, 542 ()8I
Dissolution, 364, 368, 472 Functions of the State, 127, 132, 198, 503,
Divine Theory, 73, 74, 77, 116, 118, 211, 504, 508, 509, 511, 553, 606- 22, 686, 687
233-35, Social, 229, 230,318 Green, TH, 79, 103, 211, 214, 220, 427,
214, 605,623-27,628
Fabianism, 670-73, 679, 680, 690 Historical Theory, 105-1 1
Family, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 111,112, Hitler, Adolph, 32,50,51,57,78,95, 101,
113, 115, 117, 119,201,202 151, 173, 314, 378, 380, 382, 426, 456, 605,
Fascism, 133, 314, 378, 381, 559, 560, 632, 635,654,657
648-54, 658-659 Hobbes, Thomas, 12, 16,27,29,56,81-85,
Federalism, 51 ,
137, 155-56, 279, 280, 281, 86, 88, 89, 94, 95, 97, 98, 146, 157, 211
321,327-56,465,479,520, 529 237, 565
Feudalism, 117-18, 145,686 Hume, David, 569, 631
INDEX 749
209, 216,
190, 191, 193, 199, 200, 203, 204, Marx Karl, 11 26,78,84,190 191,192,
217 218, 219, 220, 224, 226, 228, 230, 234,
’,
212, 241, 609 t)48 662 fl , 675, 681, 685,
285, 304, 318, 332, 336, 426, 427, 428, 431, Biology and, 44-45, definition of, 2, 5, 16,
451, 463, 470, 589, 635-36, 638-41, 643 economics and, 35-38, efhies and 38-40,
Ministerial responsibility. 361, 362, 164, 228, Geography and, 43-44, history and,
368, 369, 172, 409 33-35, jurisprudence and, 41-42, metho-
Minority representation, 409, 410, 441- 57 dology of, 19-29, nature of 3-44, 159,
Monaidn, 121 121 131,114,292,293, political ideology and 11-12, 15, political
291 9() 298 101, 106, 402,403 philosophy and, 14-15, political System
Montesquieu, 21 21 41 50, 94, 220, 214, and, 2, 4, 32, 147, 159, political theory
294 101 172 190-91 398,400,426,536 and, 9-14, 15, politics and, 7-9, 26, 27,
Mussolini, 8,50,57,78 79,95, 151, 171,378 136, psychology and, 40-41, public ad-
380, 382, 385, 426, 559, 605, 632, 648, 649, ministration and, 42-43, Science and,
Nationalism, 32, 122-43, 266, 316, 361, 609 Property, 108 110 111 197,198,232,431
Nationalit\, 11 34 65-66 t)8 69 119, 120, 440, 521,665,666, 667,671,713, 715,735,
736
122-27, 128, 130, 132
614-1 Proportional representation, 442-49
Naiionali/ation 118, 596, 7, 644, 674
Proudhon, PJ ,712
Naznsm 35, 133, 314, 378, 381, 560, 562,
Public Opinion, 14, 19 25,41, 52, 152,457,
034-59
508, 546, 547, 550, 551 , 554, 569-84, 620
Nthru, Jawaharlal, 140 144, 575, 580, 589
Public Service Commission, 502-05
Nixon Richard, 286
o
R
Obedience, political, 93, 94, 101, 163,
210-18,219, 587,611 Race, 123-24, 126, 127, 137, 138
Opposition, id 4()3 ^(>7, 377, 383, 398, 438, Ranjit Singh, Maharaja, 159, 160, 172
Pakistan 2*) 5^ 51,55 59 (>2,67,68,74, Rights changing content of, 185, 206-07,
251 284 534,371 582 ,585,516,542 190-91, fundamental, 191-93, 206, 417,
Parlianu ntarv (jovernmtnl, 23t, 558 -70, 519, 521, 537, 734, 735, historical theory
456 49 5, 496, 580, 616 of, 187-88, idealistic theory of, 188-89,
Patriarchal Theory, l(X)-03, 105 legal theory 171-72, natural, 88, 90,
of,
Pelloutier, F,633,634 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 186-87, 204, 627, 636,
Planning, 375, 399, 481, 488, 617-19 639, political, 183-86, to revolt, 93, 94,
Pluial voting, 430-31, 484, 486 Rousseau, J J 3, 6, 26, 27, 29, 41, 50, 52,
,
Political parties, 25, 31, 32, 41, 136, 314, 65, 89 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 147, 149, 154,
315, 364, 366, 367, 369, 370, 375, 399, 422, 213, 220, 254, 293, 302, 313, 462, 475, 565,
539-68, 579, 580, 653, 654, 657, 707, 709, 569, 570, 580 630, 668
U
Sarvodaya, 739-46 Unicameralism, 460, 462, 463, 465, 466-68
Shaw, Bernard, 670, 672, 673 Unitary Government 279, 329-30, 339, 340
Stelcv, J , 22, 23, 33, 34, 36, 51, 1 17 f n 305 United Kingdom, 56, 108, 132, 149, 150, 205
,
Sell-dctermination, 49, 120, 122, 127, 128, 215, 224, 268, 272, 273, 276, 284, 285, 292,
12 16
296, 300, 325, 358, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363,
1
Sepaiation of powers 234, 366, 372, 364, 404, 409,411,412,413,414, 415, 425,
389 401 486, 531 655 426, 427, 430, 448, 450, 457, 461, 466, 467,
Sidgwick, H( nn 16, 22, 26, 29, 137 In, 469, 498, 499, 525, 541, 542, 548, 592
166, 41 1, 470, 52(), 554, 558, 584, 587 United Naticjns, 50, 85, 124, 139, 140, 174,
Social (lontiaci Ihcorv, 28, 72, 80-99, 186, 253,258, 267-87
119 140,616,638 United States (U S A ), 132, 134, 159, 195f n ,
Socialism, 94, 195, 616,618, 651-83 198, 205, 242, 244, 268, 269, 273, 274, 276,
Society, 57-60, 101 120, 127, 132, 148, 149, 284, 286, 296, 310, 331, 335, 337, 338, 341,
1 50, 362, 363, 605, 606, 624, 625, 656, 742, H4, 346, 348, 349, 351, 363, 364, 370, 393,
741 406, 410, 412, 415, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422,
Sorel, Georges, 676 678 423, 424, 458, 469, 470, 471, 474, 498, 520,
Stalm,J ,691,692, 693,696-99 541 547,592
Sovereignty Austiiiian theory of, 157-66, Universal Suffrage, 425
authority and 174-75, characteristics of, Upper Chamber, 468-71, 473, 474
167-72, dejure and defacto, 155-56, 113, USSR, 191, 200, 230, 268, 272, 273, 274,
definition of, 50, 52, 129, 144, 145, deve- 277 284 285 309,310,315,338,339,341,
lopment of, 145-48, federation and, 154, U2 346, m, W2, 386, 398, 423, 426, 485,
155-56, 170, 171, legal, 95, 104, 147, 148, 528, 540, 559, 56)0, 590, 591 , 592, 699, 705
150-51, 154, 165, liberty and, 220-22, I tihtariamsm, 632-37
452, political, 93, 104, 147, 148, 151-52,
154, 155, 171, popular, 94, 95, 98, 100,
V
101, 104, 105, 126, 128, 129, 154-55 611, V( iviillc s Treaty of, 244, 259, 379, 655
686, pluralism and, 147, 166-69, 456,566, V'lnoba Bhave, 740 711 742, 744, 745
567
Spencer, Herbeit, 25, 68 71, 71, 75 220,
w
618 619,640,641 Graham, 29, 41, 452, 580, 647
V\ alias
State association and 60- 62, 121, 128, 145, ')7() 577, 578, 580
47-50, 64, 66, elements of, 50-55, evolu- Webb, Sidney 14, 47, 52, 673, 676
tion of, 112-20, forms of, 291, functions, Wcllaie State, 57 11 41,120,161,231, 297
of 127, 132, 198, 503, 504, 509, 511, 553, 114, 351, 354, 398, 399, 506, 521, 523,593,
606 22, government and, 4, 9, 45, 52, 609, 610,611,612
55 -8, 91, 98, 162, 163, 273, 161, 563, 566, V\hea\c KU U2 3U, 3H, 335, 336,
119 150, 162 366,605,606,624 625 626 Woodiow Wilson, 49, 55, 108, 117, 132,
State of nature, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 86, 89, U, 141,212, 241,301, 372,418,565
1
90, 9] ,
96 World State, 120, 137, 140-45
S\ iidu .ihsm, ()7 1 79 (i8l), (>81 Woild Wai 1, U), 52, 63, 64, 99, 129, 136,
Fnisteeship, 735-37
Zimmern, AE , 50, 123, 126, 128