Overview
The Executive in India refers to the branch of government responsible for the implementation of laws and administration of the country. At the Union level, it consists of:
- the President as the nominal head
- the Council of Ministers headed by the Prime Minister as the real executive
The Council of Ministers is the core decision-making body, exercising actual executive authority.
Constitutional Basis
The Council of Ministers is provided under:
- Article 74 – There shall be a Council of Ministers with the Prime Minister at the head to aid and advise the President
- Article 75 – Deals with appointment, tenure, responsibility, and other aspects
Composition
The Council of Ministers includes different categories of ministers:
Cabinet Ministers
- Senior-most ministers
- Head key ministries such as Finance, Home, Defence, External Affairs
- Form the Cabinet, which is the real policy-making body
Ministers of State
- May hold independent charge of a ministry
- Or assist Cabinet Ministers in their work
Deputy Ministers
- Assist senior ministers
- Do not hold independent charge
Prime Minister
The Prime Minister is the head of the Council of Ministers and the real executive authority.
Role
- selects and allocates portfolios to ministers
- chairs Cabinet meetings
- coordinates government policy
- acts as the link between the President and the Council of Ministers
Appointment
- The President appoints the Prime Minister
- Other ministers are appointed by the President on the advice of the Prime Minister
Tenure
- Ministers hold office during the pleasure of the President
- In reality, they remain in office as long as they enjoy the confidence of the Lok Sabha
Collective Responsibility
Constitutional provision
- Article 75(3) states that the Council of Ministers is collectively responsible to the Lok Sabha
Meaning
- All ministers stand or fall together
- If the Lok Sabha passes a no-confidence motion, the entire Council must resign
- Decisions of the Cabinet are binding on all ministers
Individual Responsibility
- Each minister is individually responsible for their department
- The Prime Minister can ask a minister to resign
- The President can remove a minister on the advice of the Prime Minister
Powers and Functions
Executive functions
- implementation of laws and policies
- administration of government departments
Legislative functions
- introduction of bills in Parliament
- framing policies that guide legislation
- advising the President on summoning and proroguing Parliament
Financial functions
- preparation and presentation of the Budget
- control over government expenditure
Policy-making
- formulation of national policies on economy, defence, foreign affairs, etc.
Cabinet vs Council of Ministers
Council of Ministers
- Larger body
- Includes all categories of ministers
Cabinet
- Smaller, inner core
- Includes only senior ministers
- Takes major policy decisions
Role in Parliamentary System
India follows a parliamentary system, where:
- the executive is drawn from the legislature
- the executive is accountable to the legislature
- the real power lies with elected representatives
Significance
- ensures efficient governance and administration
- maintains accountability to Parliament
- enables coordination among different ministries
- reflects democratic control over executive power
Conclusion
The Council of Ministers is the real executive authority in India, functioning under the leadership of the Prime Minister. Through the principles of collective responsibility and parliamentary accountability, it ensures that governance remains both effective and democratically controlled.