Political Science, asked by rakhisantoshshukla, 8 months ago

1. Why do you think our national movement supported the idea that all adults have a right to vote?
2. Write an essay on Ghandhi ji's ideology on secularism
3. Write the difference between a State Legislative Assembly and the parliament ​

Answers

Answered by pds39937
5

Answer:

1) The national movement supported the idea that all adults have a right to vote because of the following reasons:

Every responsible citizen should participate in the government.

Law-making and decision-making should also be shared by the adults of the country.

2)

Explanation:

Secularism is a term which is easily misunderstood, and perhaps nowhere does this have worse consequences than in India. The comparison is often made between India, described as a secular state, and Pakistan, founded as a homeland for the subcontinent’s Muslims. India’s secularism is ascribed in part to Gandhi, and it is certainly true that Gandhi wanted the Indian state to be the homeland for Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs and Christians alike. But Mark Tully has pointed out that, far from wanting a state in which religion is stripped from public life – most peoples’ concept of secularism – Gandhi’s hope was for a state in which truly religious values permeate all aspects of life, including the political sphere.

After his success in South Africa, Gandhi’s first public speech in India, at the opening of the Hindu University in Benares, demonstrates how his political discourse was saturated with religious vocabulary:

“Truth is the end; love a means thereto . . . The Golden Rule is to dare to do the right at any cost. No amount of speeches will make us fit for self-government, it is only our conduct that will fit us for it . . . If we trust and fear God, we shall have to fear no-one, not maharajahs, not viceroys, not the detectives, not even King George.”

3)The Parliament is a bicameral legislature comprising of two Houses and the Indian President: Lok Sabha: The House of the People (Lower House). ... At the state level, the legislature is composed of the Legislative Assembly, the Legislative Council (only in 6 states currently), and the Governor of the State.

State Legislative Assembly Parliament (Lok Sabha)

An MLA can become a minister in the state cabinet. An MP can become a minister in the Union cabinet.

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Answered by bipadtarannandi4306
1

Answer:

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