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Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Class 5 MCQ


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15 Questions MCQ Test - Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2

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Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 1

Who is the Chairman of Planning Commission in India ? 

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 1

Prime minister is the ex-officio Chairman; the committee has a nominated Deputy Chairman, who is given the rank of a full Cabinet Minister. During Modi Government, this Commission has been dissolved and replaced by new body Niti Aayog on first Independence speech given by the Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi and he himself acts as the chairperson of the Niti Aayog.

Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 2

The Government of India Act, 1935 was based on ___________.

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 2

The Government of India Act of 1935 provided for the establishment of an All-India Federation consisting of provinces and princely states as units. The Act divided the powers between the Centre and units in terms of three lists—Federal List (for Centre, with 59 items), Provincial List (for provinces, with 54 items) and the Concurrent List (for both, with 36 items). Residuary powers were given to the Viceroy.  The provinces were allowed to act as autonomous units of administration in their defined spheres. Moreover, the Act introduced responsible or parliamentary governments in provinces, that is, the governor was required to act with the advice of ministers responsible to the provincial legislature.

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Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 3

Which of the following Acts introduced communal electorate in India?

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 3

The  Indian Council Act of 1909 or the Morley-Minto Reforms introduced a system of communal representation for Muslims by accepting the concept of ‘separate electorate’. Under this, the Muslim members were to be elected only by Muslim voters. Thus, the Act ‘legalised communalism’ and Lord Minto came to be known as the Father of Communal Electorate.

Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 4

Which of the following was/were the main feature(s) of the Government of India Act, 1919?

  1. The act provided for the establishment, for the first time in India of a Public Service Commission.
  2. The act provided for the appointment of an India to the viceroy's executive council, as well as the provincial executive councils.
  3. A provision was made for classification of central and provincial subjects.
Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 4

The Government of India act, 1919 relaxed the central control over the provinces by demarcating and separating the central and provincial subjects. The central and provincial legislatures were authorised to make laws on their respective list of subjects. However, the structure of government continued to be centralised and unitary. It provided for the establishment of a public service commission for the first time. Hence, a Central Public Service Commission was set up in 1926 for recruiting civil servants. So both statements 1 and 3 are correct.

Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 5

The Indian Legislature was made bi-cameral for the first time by _______.

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 5
The Indian Legislature was made bi-cameral for the first time by the Government of India Act, 1919.
The detailed solution is as follows:
Under the Government of India Act, 1919, the Indian Legislature was reformed and made bi-cameral, which means it consisted of two houses - the Council of States (upper house) and the Legislative Assembly (lower house). This act introduced several significant changes in the legislative structure of India.
Key points about the Government of India Act, 1919:
- The Act was also known as the Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms, named after the then Secretary of State for India, Edwin Montagu, and the Viceroy of India, Lord Chelmsford.
- It expanded the legislative powers of the Indian Legislature and allowed for the direct election of members to the Legislative Assembly.
- The Council of States, also known as the Upper House or the Senate, consisted of members who were partially elected and partially nominated.
- The Legislative Assembly, also known as the Lower House, consisted of members who were elected through direct elections.
- This act introduced the concept of separate electorates, which provided reserved seats for Muslims, Sikhs, and other minority communities.
- It also granted limited provincial autonomy, allowing the provinces to have their own legislative councils and ministers responsible to them.
Overall, the Government of India Act, 1919 marked a significant step towards the democratization of the Indian legislative system by making it bi-cameral and providing greater representation to various communities.
Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 6

Which one among the following statements regarding the Government of India Act, 1935 is not correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 6

The Government of India Act, 1935 provided for the establishment of an All-India Federation consisting of provinces and princely states as units. It abolished dyarchy in the provinces and introduced ‘provincial autonomy’ in its place. It introduced bicameralism in six out of eleven provinces. The extension of the principle of communal representation by providing separate electorates for Sikhs, Indian Christians, Anglo-Indians and Europeans were introduced by the Government of India Act, 1919.

Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 7

Consider the following with reference to the provisions of 'Government of India Act, 1935':

  1. Establishment of an All-India Federation.
  2. Provincial autonomy, with a Government responsible to an elected legislature.
  3. Redistribution of provinces and the creation of two new provinces.

Which of these were embodied in the Government of India Act, 1935?

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 7

The Government of India Act of 1935 provided for the establishment of an All-India Federation consisting of provinces and princely states as units. It abolished dyarchy in the provinces and introduced ‘provincial autonomy’ in its place. The provinces were allowed to act as autonomous units of administration in their defined spheres. It introduced bicameralism in six out of eleven provinces. Thus, the legislatures of Bengal, Bombay, Madras, Bihar, Assam and the United Provinces were made bicameral consisting of a legislative council (upper house) and a legislative assembly (lower house). So all the 3 statements are correct.

Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 8

Which of the following vested the Secretary of State for India with supreme control over the Government of India?

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 8

The Government of India Act of 1858 created a new office, Secretary of State for India, vested with complete authority and control over Indian administration. The secretary of state was a member of the British cabinet and was responsible ultimately to the British Parliament. It ended the system of double government by abolishing the Board of Control and Court of Directors.

Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 9

Which of the following Act provided for the establishment of Reserve Bank of India?

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 9

The government of India Act of 1935 provided for the establishment of a Reserve Bank of India to control the currency and credit of the country. The Act marked a second milestone towards a completely responsible government in India. It was a lengthy and detailed document having 321 Sections and 10 Schedules.

Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 10

Consider the following statements:The Regulating Act of 1773 was passed by British Parliament in order to

  1. establish Parliamentary control over the administration of the East India Company's territory in India.
  2. make the Governor of Bengal as the Governor-General of Bengal.
  3. end the dual system of administration in India.

Which of the statements given above are correct?

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 10

The Regulating Act of 1773 act is of great constitutional importance as

(a) it was the first step taken by the British Government to control and regulate the affairs of the East India Company in India;

(b) it recognised, for the first time, the political and administrative functions of the Company; and

(c) it laid the foundations of central administration in India. It designated the Governor of Bengal as the ‘Governor-General of Bengal’ and created an Executive Council of four members to assist him. The first such Governor-General was Lord Warren Hastings.

Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 11

Dyarchy was first introduced under _____.

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 11

The Montagu-Chelmsford Reforms divided the provincial subjects into two parts—transferred and reserved. The transferred subjects were to be administered by the governor with the aid of ministers responsible to the Legislative Council. The reserved subjects, on the other hand, were to be administered by the governor and his executive council without being responsible to the Legislative Council. This dual scheme of governance was known as ‘dyarchy’—a term derived from the Greek word di-arche which means the double rule. However, this experiment was largely unsuccessful.

Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 12

Which among the following acts for the first time allowed Indians, theoretically, entry to higher posts in British Indian administration?

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 12

The Indian Councils Act of 1861 made a beginning of representative institutions by associating Indians with the law-making process. It thus provided that the viceroy should nominate some Indians as non-official members of his expanded council. In 1862, Lord Canning, the then viceroy, nominated three Indians to his legislative council—the Raja of Benaras, the Maharaja of Patiala and Sir Dinkar Rao.

Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 13

The Cabinet Mission Plan for India envisaged _______.

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 13

The cabinet mission plan of 1946 proposed that there shall be a Union of India which was to be empowered to deal with the defence, foreign affairs and communications. It provided that all the members of the Interim cabinet would be Indians and there would be minimum interference by the Viceroy. It also provided for the formation of the constituent assembly on the democratic principle of population. 

Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 14

The members of the Constituent Assembly were ________.

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 14

The representatives of each community were to be elected by members of that community in the provincial legislative assembly and voting was to be by the method of proportional representation by means of the single transferable vote. The representatives of princely states were to be nominated by the heads of the princely states. It is thus clear that the Constituent Assembly was to be a partly elected and partly nominated body. Moreover, the members were to be indirectly elected by the members of the provincial assemblies, who themselves were elected on a limited franchise.

Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 15

The Constituent Assembly that finally framed India's Constitution was set up _________.

Detailed Solution for Test: Indian Polity and Governance- 2 - Question 15

Under the Cabinet Mission Plan of 1946, a Constituent Assembly was to be formed of the representatives of the Provincial Assemblies and the Princely states. Each province had to be allotted a total number of seats in proportion to its population. The Constituent Assembly had to comprise 293 Members from the British Provinces and 93 members from the Princely states.

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