ICSE Class 9 History & Civics Question 11 of 15

Our Constitution — Question 1

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Question 1

With reference to the making of Indian Constitution explain the following:

(a) Name the plan which proposed to set up the Constituent Assembly. How were the members of the Constituent Assembly elected?

(b) How was the membership of the Constituent Assembly reduced as a result of Partition of the country?

(c) How can you say that the Constituent Assembly gave adequate representation to all sections of the Indian society?

Answer

(a) The Cabinet Mission Plan (1946) proposed to set up the Constituent Assembly.

The members of the Constituent Assembly were elected indirectly by the Provincial Legislative Assemblies (Lower House only). Elections to the Provincial Assembly were completed by July 1946. The princely states were represented by the members nominated by the rulers of these States. The Constituent Assembly of undivided India consisted of 389 members (292 elected, 93 nominated by the Princely states, 3 from Chief Commissioner Provinces and one from the British).

(b) The Muslim League boycotted the Constituent Assembly to demand the creation of a separate state called Pakistan. Consequently the members representing the territories which went to Pakistan withdrew from the Constituent Assembly of India. As a result, the membership of the Constituent Assembly of India stood at 299 against the original number of 389 members.

(c) The wide-ranging membership of the Constituent Assembly gave representation to all shades of public opinion. The Cabinet Mission plan had ensured representation to only three categories — the General category, Muslims and Sikhs. The Congress leaders had, however, ensured that other communities like Anglo-Indians, Indian Christians Scheduled Castes and Scheduled tribes got representation.

Chapter Overview: The Indian Constitution

The Indian Constitution is the supreme law of India, adopted on 26 November 1949 and enacted on 26 January 1950. It was drafted by the Constituent Assembly (389 members) chaired by Dr. Rajendra Prasad, with Dr. B.R. Ambedkar heading the Drafting Committee. The Constitution establishes India as a Sovereign, Socialist, Secular, Democratic Republic (the words Socialist and Secular were added by the 42nd Amendment in 1976).

The Constitution draws from multiple sources: parliamentary government from Britain, fundamental rights from the USA, directive principles from Ireland, the federal structure from Canada, and the emergency provisions from Germany. Key features include a written and lengthy constitution, a blend of rigidity and flexibility, single citizenship, an independent judiciary, universal adult suffrage, and fundamental rights balanced by fundamental duties. The Preamble declares the ideals of justice, liberty, equality, and fraternity as the guiding values of the nation.

Board Exam Weightage: 6-7 marks | Difficulty: Moderate

Sources of the Indian Constitution

Feature Source Country
Parliamentary government, Rule of LawBritain
Fundamental Rights, Judicial ReviewUSA
Directive Principles of State PolicyIreland
Federal structure with strong centreCanada
Emergency provisionsGermany (Weimar)
Fundamental DutiesUSSR
Concurrent ListAustralia

Must-Know Concepts

  • Preamble: “We, the people of India” — declares sovereignty rests with the people; mentions justice, liberty, equality, fraternity
  • Key dates: Constituent Assembly first met 9 December 1946; Constitution adopted 26 November 1949; enacted 26 January 1950 (Republic Day)
  • Ambedkar’s role: Chairman of the Drafting Committee; called the “Father of the Indian Constitution”
  • Features: Longest written constitution in the world, blend of federal and unitary, independent judiciary, single citizenship, universal adult suffrage
  • 42nd Amendment (1976): Added “Socialist,” “Secular,” and “Integrity” to the Preamble; added Fundamental Duties

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Confusing 26 November (adoption date) with 26 January (enforcement/Republic Day)
  • Writing that “Socialist” and “Secular” were in the original Preamble — they were added in 1976
  • Mixing up Dr. Rajendra Prasad (President of Constituent Assembly) with Dr. Ambedkar (Chairman of Drafting Committee)
  • Stating India has a purely federal system — it is federal with a strong unitary bias

Scoring Tips

  • Memorise the sources table — very frequently asked in matching-type questions
  • Be able to explain each keyword in the Preamble: Sovereign, Socialist, Secular, Democratic, Republic
  • For features questions, list at least 5-6 features with one-line explanations

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the significance of the Preamble?

The Preamble is the introduction to the Constitution, declaring India as a Sovereign Socialist Secular Democratic Republic. It embodies the ideals of justice, liberty, equality, and fraternity, and states that power comes from “We, the people.”

Why is the Indian Constitution called a “bag of borrowings”?

The Constitution drew features from multiple countries (Britain, USA, Ireland, Canada, etc.). However, these borrowed features were adapted to Indian conditions, making the Constitution unique and not merely a copy.

What makes India “quasi-federal”?

India has federal features (written constitution, division of powers, independent judiciary) but also strong unitary features (single citizenship, emergency powers, residuary powers with Centre, Governor appointed by Centre). This makes it federal in structure but unitary in spirit.