why is the importance of parliament declining??
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Despite the fact that the Indian Parliament plays a crucial role as a deliberative and representative assembly, its image and influence have suffered a serious setback in recent years. The decline of Parliament is a recurrent lament all over the democratic world. Even in the case of the so-called Mother of Parliament, in the United Kingdom, the argument appeared in the literature soon after the nineteenth century heyday of parliamentary supremacy was over by the early twentieth century. According to Prof. M.P. Singh, ‘Even without the growth of a strong party system in the West European sense in India, the other foregoing factors in the years after the ‘Nehru Patel duumvirate’ passed into history and prompted the growth of executive dominance and “Prime ministerial” system in the Nehru and Gandhi was, and to a lesser extent in the Rajiv Gandhi years’. Since the late 1980s, the decline of the Parliament has further continued due to corruption and criminalization of electoral and party political processes on an unprecedented scale. Analysis based on pending criminal cases of MPs (15th Lok Sabha) are as follows: There are 162 newly elected MPs who have declared pending criminal cases according to their self declared affidavits. Out of these, there are 76 MPs having serious cases against them.
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#phenomenal
Despite the fact that the Indian Parliament plays a crucial role as a deliberative and representative assembly, its image and influence have suffered a serious setback in recent years. The decline of Parliament is a recurrent lament all over the democratic world. Even in the case of the so-called Mother of Parliament, in the United Kingdom, the argument appeared in the literature soon after the nineteenth century heyday of parliamentary supremacy was over by the early twentieth century. According to Prof. M.P. Singh, ‘Even without the growth of a strong party system in the West European sense in India, the other foregoing factors in the years after the ‘Nehru Patel duumvirate’ passed into history and prompted the growth of executive dominance and “Prime ministerial” system in the Nehru and Gandhi was, and to a lesser extent in the Rajiv Gandhi years’. Since the late 1980s, the decline of the Parliament has further continued due to corruption and criminalization of electoral and party political processes on an unprecedented scale. Analysis based on pending criminal cases of MPs (15th Lok Sabha) are as follows: There are 162 newly elected MPs who have declared pending criminal cases according to their self declared affidavits. Out of these, there are 76 MPs having serious cases against them.
.
.
.
.
#phenomenal
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