Target Exam

CUET

Subject

Political Science

Chapter

Politics in India Since Independence: Crisis of democratic Order

Question:

Match List I with List II

LIST I

LIST II

A. Shah Commission of Inquiry

I. May, 1977

B. Lok Sabha Elections

II. January, 1977

C. Emergency

III. June, 1975

D. Railway Strike

IV. May, 1974

Choose the correct answer from the options given below:

Options:

A-I, B-II, C-III, D-IV

A-II, B-III, C-IV, D-I

A-III, B-IV, C-I, D-II

A-IV, B-III, C-II, D-I

Correct Answer:

A-I, B-II, C-III, D-IV

Explanation:

The correct answer is Option (1) → A-I, B-II, C-III, D-IV

LIST I

LIST II

A. Shah Commission of Inquiry

I. May, 1977

B. Lok Sabha Elections

II. January, 1977

C. Emergency

III. June, 1975

D. Railway Strike

IV. May, 1974

Explanation:

In May 1977, the Janata party government appointed a commission of Inquiry headed by Justice J.C. Shah retired chief justice of the supreme court of India, to inquire into several aspects of allegations of abuse of authority, excesses and malpractices committed and action taken in the wake of the Emergency proclaimed on the 25th June 1975.

In January 1977, after eighteen months of Emergency, the government decided to hold elections. Accordingly, all the leaders and activists were released from jails. Elections were held in March 1977. This left the opposition with very little time, but political developments took place very rapidly. The major opposition parties had already been coming closer in the pre-Emergency period. Now they came together on the eve of the elections and formed a new party, known as the Janata Party. The new party accepted the leadership of Jayaprakash Narayan. Some leaders of the Congress who were opposed to the Emergency also joined this new party.

On 25 June 1975, the government declared that there was a threat of internal disturbances and therefore, it invoked Article 352 of the Constitution. Under the provision of this article the government could declare a state of emergency on grounds of external threat or a threat of internal disturbances. The government decided that a grave crisis had arisen which made the proclamation of a state of emergency necessary. Technically speaking this was within the powers of the government, for our Constitution provides for some special powers to the government once an emergency is declared.

The National Coordination Committee for Railwaymen’s Struggle led by George Fernandes gave a call for nationwide strike by all employees of the Railways for pressing their demands related to bonus and service conditions. The government was opposed to these demands. So, the employees of India’s largest public sector undertaking went on a strike in May 1974. The strike by the Railway employees added to the atmosphere of labour unrest. It also raised issues like rights of the workers and whether employees of essential services should adopt measures like strikes. The government declared the strike illegal. As the government refused to concede the demands of the striking workers, arrested many of their leaders and deployed the territorial army to protect railway tracks, the strike had to be called off after twenty days without any settlement.