Social Sciences, asked by preetikaushik505, 9 months ago

1. Use the terms 'constituency' and 'represent' to explain
who an MLA is and how is the person elected?
Please guys,tell this answer...... very urgent ..... from civics class 7 ....please help

Answers

Answered by ashumanwatkar4
1

'Constituency' is a group of voters who select their representative to a legislative assembly.

The elected candidate of the constituency is the MLA of that area who 'represent' the constituency(voters) to the assembly to raise the matters, public issues, cases, problems etc of the citizens of that area.

hope it will help you nd be the best answer......

plz mark as brainliest if u liked it

Answered by sockerrd7777
1

Answer:

PLS MARK ME AS BRAINLIEST!!!!!

Explanation:

1. Use the terms ‘constituency’ and ‘represent’ to explain who an MLA is and how is the person elected?

Answer: A state is divided into several constituencies on the basis of population. Every constituency elects one representative for the Legislative Assembly. The person elected as representative represents that particular constituency. He/She is called as a Member of Legislative Assembly Le. MLA. An MLA is elected through a general election. He/She may be a member of a recognised political party or independent. One who gets the maximum votes becomes the MLA of that constituency.

2. How did some MLAs become Ministers? Explain.

Answer: The party which is elected in majority for the Legislative Assembly forms the government. As per constitutional provisions the ruling party elects its leader who is called the Chief Minister as the head of the government. The Chief Minister, in consultation with the Governor, constitutes a cabinet which includes members of his/her party as ministers. The MLAs who become ministers are allotted with a portfolio. Here the MLAs turned ministers become accountable for the entire state for that particular portfolio.

 

3. Why should decisions taken by the Chief Minister and other ministers be debated in the Legislative Assembly?

Answer: The decisions taken by the Chief Minister and other ministers must be debated in the Legislative Assembly. It is because during debate it is discussed whether a particular decision is in interest of the people at large or net. It is also discussed whether it is urgent or not, how much would it cost the government, is there anything objectionable for any particular community, etc.

Similar questions