what are the electoral constituencies on which basis these are divided
Answers
Answered by
9
Answer:
The country has been divided into 543 Parliamentary Constituencies, each of which returns one MP to the Lok Sabha, the lower house of the Parliament.
The term constituency is commonly used to refer to an electoral district, especially in British English, but it can also refer to the body of eligible voters or all the residents of the represented area or only those who voted for a certain candidate.
A constituency is all of the constituents of a representative. Constituents also have the power to remove their representative from the position to which they have appointed him or her.
All of the constituents who are registered to vote are called the electorate.
Hope it helps! :)
Answered by
0
Electoral constituency is generally referred to any district that conducts elections and have residents that are eligible to cast their vote for choosing right candidate.
The division of country has been done in such ways that there are 543 constituencies of Parliament. From each of these 543 constituencies, Lok sabha gets one MP. Lok sabha is Parliament's lower house.
In these twenty nine states of India, and among seven union territories, two of them have Vidhan sabha.❤️
Similar questions