The answer lists the functions described in the chapter and justifies one overarching function.
The ECI prepares and revises electoral rolls, fixes election schedules, registers and recognises political parties, allocates symbols, supervises nominations and campaigning, enforces the Model Code of Conduct, arranges polling and security, counts votes, declares results and resolves specified disputes. It also introduces accessibility and technology measures and coordinates officials across states. All are connected, but impartial supervision of the entire process is most important: accurate rolls or counting alone cannot produce a fair election if campaigning, polling or enforcement is biased.
The response supports the statement while explaining that elections need wider democratic safeguards.
Yes, provided elections are genuinely free, fair, inclusive and periodic. They give citizens an equal vote, allow them to choose or remove representatives, authorise governments and make rulers answerable for performance. Parties and candidates also present alternatives and organise public debate. Elections are therefore central to democracy, though they must operate with rights, the Rule of Law, transparent institutions and active citizenship between polling days.
The response contrasts area of recognition, political focus and formal performance criteria.
A national party has recognised electoral strength across several states, whereas a state party meets recognition criteria within a particular state. National parties usually contest and organise across much of India and address Union-level as well as state issues; state or regional parties concentrate more strongly on a state or region and its specific interests. Recognition criteria also differ: for example, a party may qualify nationally by recognition in at least four states, while state recognition can follow specified vote-and-seat performance within one state. Their reserved symbols operate according to their category and recognition.
This is a model personal ranking; the explanation matters more than a single fixed order.
One reasonable order is: d. Strengthens democracy; a. Opportunity to choose my representative; c. Opportunity to change the non-performing representative; b. Makes me a responsible person. Voting strengthens the whole representative system by giving government public authority. It lets me select the candidate I trust and, in the next election, hold a poor performer accountable. Participating thoughtfully also develops civic responsibility. Other orders are valid when supported by democratic reasons.
The answer follows the definition, grounds for correction and safeguards stated in the chapter.
SIR is an exercise in which the ECI intensively updates, verifies and corrects electoral rolls. Its objectives are to add every eligible citizen, especially newly eligible young voters, and remove entries made invalid by death, change of residence, duplicate enrolment or permanent untraceability. Claims and objections are invited and settled before the final roll is published. It is necessary because people continually turn 18, move or die, and inaccurate rolls can either deny an eligible citizen a vote or permit duplicate or ineligible entries, weakening trust in an election.
The subanswers identify inclusion measures and apply the chapter’s ETPBS and Model Code discussion to the case.
a. The case shows online registration, security, an accessible polling station with a wheelchair and volunteers, VVPAT verification and home voting for an eligible senior citizen. b. She could use another approved photo identity document, such as a passport or driving licence, provided her name appeared on the electoral roll. c. Campaigners were distributing pamphlets and raising slogans on the day before polling, within the silence period; unauthorised wall writing or posters may also violate the Code and local defacement rules. d. A suitable title is ‘An Inclusive Election Day’. e. Armed-forces personnel registered as service voters can use ETPBS and a postal ballot. Police and other staff placed on election duty can use the election-duty voting facilities prescribed for them, such as a postal ballot or election duty certificate, depending on their category.
The response interprets the political and economic dimensions in the printed chart without reproducing a table-shaped answer.
a. In Country A’s multi-party system, voting allows citizens to choose among competing programmes and can replace one governing party with another. In Country B, citizens may vote, but a one-party system removes meaningful party competition and greatly limits the ability to choose an alternative government. b. I would choose Country A because its written constitution, periodic elections, voting rights and party competition provide the strongest political participation and accountability. A higher material standard of living cannot by itself replace political freedom.
The answer develops the challenges shown in Fig. 7.13 and throughout the chapter.
Challenges include misinformation and fake news, intimidation, violence or misuse of muscle power, vote buying and excessive money power, biased use of public machinery, hate speech and Model Code violations. Errors in electoral rolls, inaccessible polling arrangements, unfair media influence, weak party democracy and inaccurate or distrusted counting can also exclude voters or reduce confidence. Independent supervision, transparent rolls and funding, accessible polling, prompt enforcement, voter education and verifiable procedures help address them.