Political Parties PDF
Political Parties PDF
Political Parties PDF
Political Parties
Political Parties
Political parties are one of the most visible institutions in a democracy.
Is a group of people who come together to contest elections and hold power in the
government.
They agree on some policies and programs for the society with the view of promoting
the collective good.
They seek to implement these policies by winning popular support through elections.
A political party has three components:
Leaders
Active members
Followers
Functions
Parties contest elections.
Parties have different policies and programmes and the voters choose from
them. A party reduces a vast multitude of opinions into a few basic positions which
it supports.
Parties play a decisive role in making laws for a country. Laws are debated and
passed in the legislature by the members of the various political parties.
Parties form and run governments.
Parties recruit leaders, train them and then make them ministers to run the
government in the way they want.
Parties shape public opinion.
Often, opinions in the society are formed on the lines of the party.
Parties provide people access to government machinery and welfare schemes
implemented by governments.
Necessity
Political parties are directly linked to the emergence of representative
democracies.
Political parties help large scale societies in developing a representative democracy.
They also help in gathering different views on various issues and present these to
the government.
They bring various representatives together so that a responsible government could
be formed.
They support or restrain the government in the formulation of policies.
Party System
One-party system
Only one party is allowed to control and run the government. E.g., The
Communist Party of China.
We cannot consider one-party system as a good option because this is not a
democratic option.
Two-party system
Power usually changes between two main parties. E.g., The United States of
America and the United Kingdom.
Only the two main parties have a serious chance of winning majority of seats for
forming the government.
Several other parties may exist, contest elections and win a few seats in the national
legislatures.
Multi-party system
Several parties compete for power, and more than two parties have a reasonable
chance of coming to power either on their own strength or in alliance with others.
E.g., India (The National Democratic Alliance, the United Progressive Alliance and
the Left Front).
The government is formed by various parties coming together in a coalition.
This system allows a variety of interests and opinions to enjoy political
representation.
A multi-party system may often lead to political instability.
Party system evolves over a long time, depending on the nature of society, its social and
regional divisions, its history of politics and its system of elections.
National Political Parties
Countrywide parties are called ‘national parties’ and these have their units in various
states.
A party that secures at least six per cent of total votes in the Lok Sabha elections or the
Assembly elections in four States and wins at least four seats in the Lok Sabha is
recognized as a national party.
There are six national recognised parties in India.