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National Affairs & Indian Polity for CLAT

Current-affairs passages on national news are really polity questions in disguise. Master a small set of static anchors — Parliament, the judiciary, constitutional bodies — and a quarter of the paper starts to feel familiar.

~25%
of the CLAT paper
150
practice questions
10
drills
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The Current Affairs & GK section is roughly a quarter of CLAT, and a huge slice of it is national news — Parliament passing a bill, the Supreme Court delivering a judgment, the Election Commission running a poll. None of it makes sense unless you know the static framework behind it. This chapter on national affairs and Indian polity for CLAT gives you that framework, then shows you how to read any news passage through it.

📌 The core idea
CLAT will not ask you to recall a date. It gives you a passage about a recent national event and asks a question that only makes sense if you understand the institution behind the event. The news is the wrapping; polity is the gift inside. Learn the static anchors and the passage answers itself.

Why national affairs is really polity

A passage might describe a vote in the Rajya Sabha or a writ before the Supreme Court. The words change every year; the institutions do not. You cannot revise events that have not happened yet — but you can master a finite, evergreen set of facts that recur in every CLAT paper, so that every news passage slots into one of them. Five anchors carry most of the load.

Parliament: the two Houses

The Indian Parliament has two Houses. The Lok Sabha (House of the People) is directly elected and is the more powerful chamber. The Rajya Sabha (Council of States) represents the States and is a permanent body that is never fully dissolved. Together with the President, they make up Parliament. Most passages here test the difference between the two Houses, how a bill becomes law, or what makes a money bill special.

FeatureLok Sabha (House of the People)Rajya Sabha (Council of States)
Who it representsThe people directlyThe States and Union Territories
How members are chosenDirectly elected by votersElected by State legislatures (plus some nominated members)
Normal termFive years, unless dissolved earlierPermanent — one-third of members retire every two years
Can be dissolved?YesNo — it is never fully dissolved
Who presidesThe SpeakerThe Vice-President (as ex-officio Chairman)
Power over money billsGreater — a money bill starts hereLimited — can only recommend changes; can't reject
ℹ️ Why the Lok Sabha is stronger
Because it is directly elected and the government must hold its confidence, the Lok Sabha has the final say on money matters and on the survival of the government. The Rajya Sabha is a revising chamber that gives the States a voice and adds a layer of second thought — but it cannot bring down a government.

How a bill becomes law

When the news says 'Parliament passed the such-and-such Bill', it is describing a fixed journey. A bill is a draft law; once it completes the journey and receives assent, it becomes an Act. CLAT loves to test the sequence.

  1. 1
    Introduction (First Reading)
    A minister or member introduces the bill in either House (money bills must start in the Lok Sabha). Its aims are stated; there is no detailed debate yet.
  2. 2
    Second Reading
    The heart of the process — the House debates the bill's principles and then scrutinises it clause by clause. It may be sent to a committee for closer study.
  3. 3
    Third Reading
    The House votes on the bill as a whole. If a majority approves, it is passed by that House.
  4. 4
    The other House
    The bill goes to the second House, which may pass it, amend it, or delay it. For an ordinary bill, both Houses must agree (a deadlock can be resolved in a joint sitting).
  5. 5
    President's assent
    Once both Houses pass it, the bill goes to the President. On assent it becomes an Act and part of the law of the land.
💡 Bill vs Act — the words matter
A bill is still only a proposal. It becomes an Act (a law) only after both Houses pass it and the President assents. If a CLAT option calls something a 'law' while the passage says it is still a 'bill awaiting assent', that option is wrong.

Money bills are special

A money bill deals only with taxation, government borrowing or spending from public funds. It can be introduced only in the Lok Sabha, and the Rajya Sabha cannot reject or amend it — it can merely suggest changes, which the Lok Sabha is free to ignore. This is the single biggest power difference between the two Houses, and a recurring CLAT theme.

🧩 Worked example
A money bill can be introduced only in the Lok Sabha. After the Lok Sabha passes it, the Rajya Sabha may make recommendations but cannot reject or amend the bill. The Lok Sabha may accept or reject those recommendations.

A money bill passed by the Lok Sabha is sent to the Rajya Sabha. The Rajya Sabha votes to reject the bill outright. What is the legal effect?

AThe bill is dead, because both Houses must agree.
BThe Rajya Sabha cannot reject a money bill; its rejection has no effect and the Lok Sabha's version prevails.
CThe bill must go to a joint sitting of both Houses.
DThe bill is sent back to be reintroduced in the Rajya Sabha first.
▸ Show solution
Answer: B. The principle states the Rajya Sabha cannot reject or amend a money bill — it can only recommend. A 'rejection' is therefore ineffective; the Lok Sabha's version stands. D is wrong because a money bill cannot start in the Rajya Sabha at all.

The Executive: President, PM and the Council of Ministers

India is a parliamentary democracy, so real executive power and ceremonial power sit in different hands. Reading a news passage correctly often turns on knowing who actually decides.

The key constitutional fact: the President is the nominal executive who acts on the advice of the Council of Ministers headed by the Prime Minister, the real executive. The Council is collectively responsible to the Lok Sabha — if it loses the House's confidence, the government falls.

⚠️ The 'President decides' trap
An option saying the President personally decides policy or 'can refuse to follow the government' is usually a trap. In nearly all matters the President acts on the advice of the Council of Ministers. The PM and Cabinet are the real decision-makers; the President is the constitutional head who gives the act its formal authority.
Drill National Affairs & Polity now
10 drills, 150 questions — each a national-news or polity passage with a full solution.
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The Supreme Court and the judiciary

When the news reports a landmark verdict, a constitutional bench, or a writ petition, it is talking about the judiciary — the third organ of the State that interprets the law and settles disputes. The Supreme Court sits at the top, followed by the High Courts in the States and a tier of lower courts.

Two ideas recur in CLAT news passages. First, judicial review makes the courts the watchdog of the Constitution. Second, the basic structure doctrine (from Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala, 1973) holds that Parliament may amend the Constitution but cannot destroy its basic features — judicial review, free elections, federalism and secularism among them.

📌 Independence of the judiciary
For courts to check the other two organs, they must be free from their pressure. That independence is itself part of the basic structure. A news passage about judicial appointments or transfers is really a passage about protecting this independence.
🧩 Worked example
Judicial review is the power of the courts to examine the constitutionality of legislative and executive actions and declare them void if they violate the Constitution. Under the basic structure doctrine, Parliament can amend the Constitution but cannot destroy its basic features, of which judicial review is one.

Parliament passes a law declaring that a particular statute 'shall not be questioned in any court on any ground whatsoever', shutting out all judicial scrutiny of it. Applying the principle, is this valid?

AValid, because Parliament is supreme and can bar courts.
BValid, because it reduces the burden on courts.
CInvalid, because it removes judicial review, which is part of the basic structure.
DInvalid, because Parliament can never make any law about courts.
▸ Show solution
Answer: C. Judicial review is part of the basic structure. A law that completely ousts the courts' power to test it destroys that feature and is invalid. D overstates the rule — Parliament can legislate about courts; it just cannot abolish judicial review.

Constitutional bodies and their roles

Several independent bodies created by the Constitution keep the system honest. CLAT regularly tests which body does what — often by describing a news event and asking which institution it concerns. Learn this table cold.

BodyCore roleYou'll see it in news about...
Election CommissionConducts and supervises elections to Parliament, State legislatures and the offices of President and Vice-PresidentElection schedules, model code of conduct, voter rolls
Comptroller & Auditor General (CAG)Audits the accounts of the Union and the States and reports on how public money was spentAudit reports, government spending, financial irregularities
Union Public Service Commission (UPSC)Conducts recruitment examinations for the central civil services and advises on appointmentsCivil services exams, recruitment to central services
Finance CommissionRecommends how tax revenue is shared between the Centre and the StatesDevolution of taxes, grants to States, Centre-State finances
ℹ️ Watchdogs, not players
These bodies are deliberately kept independent of the government of the day so they can act as neutral umpires. The Election Commission runs fair polls; the CAG checks how money was spent; the UPSC keeps recruitment merit-based; the Finance Commission keeps Centre-State finances balanced. None of them is a political body.
🧩 Worked example
The Comptroller and Auditor General audits the accounts of the Union and the State governments and reports whether public money was spent lawfully. The CAG does not decide policy or punish wrongdoers; it audits and reports to the legislature.

A national body has examined a ministry's spending, found that funds meant for a welfare scheme were diverted, and placed its findings before Parliament. Which body is most likely being described?

AThe Election Commission
BThe Union Public Service Commission
CThe Comptroller and Auditor General
DThe Finance Commission
▸ Show solution
Answer: C. Auditing how public money was spent and reporting to the legislature is the core role of the CAG. The Election Commission runs polls, the UPSC handles recruitment, and the Finance Commission recommends tax-sharing — none audits spending.

Federalism and Centre-State relations

India is described as a federal country with a strong central tilt. Power is divided between the Centre and the States, but the Centre is generally the stronger partner. The Constitution distributes law-making power across three lists.

Because the central law usually wins on the Concurrent List, India's federalism is often called quasi-federal — federal in form, with a unitary bias in emergencies and on shared subjects. News about a State and the Centre disagreeing over who can make a law is almost always a federalism passage.

⚠️ The 'States are sovereign' trap
An option claiming States are fully sovereign or that a State law always overrides a central law is a trap. India is a union, not a loose confederation. On the Concurrent List the central law generally prevails, and only Parliament can legislate on Union List subjects. Federalism here means shared power, not equal or independent power.
🧩 Worked example
Both Parliament and State legislatures may make laws on subjects in the Concurrent List. Where a law made by Parliament and a law made by a State legislature on a Concurrent List subject conflict, the law made by Parliament prevails and the State law is void to the extent of the conflict.

Parliament and a State each pass a law on a Concurrent List subject, and the two directly contradict each other on a key provision. Which law governs on that point?

AThe State law, because it was passed for local needs.
BThe central law, because on a Concurrent List conflict the central law prevails.
CNeither, because both are void for conflicting.
DBoth apply equally and citizens may choose.
▸ Show solution
Answer: B. The principle is explicit: on a conflict over a Concurrent List subject, the law made by Parliament prevails and the State law is void to the extent of the conflict. So the central law governs the contradictory provision.

Amendments and national schemes

The Constitution can be changed by a constitutional amendment. Some changes need only a special majority of Parliament; others, which affect the federal balance, also need the approval of half the State legislatures. But no amendment can destroy the basic structure. You do not need amendment numbers for CLAT — you need the concept: Parliament's power to amend is real but limited, and courts can review an amendment that crosses the basic-structure line.

Parliament can change the Constitution — but it cannot change the things that make it the Constitution.

— The basic structure doctrine, in one line

CLAT passages also describe government schemes — welfare, the environment, education. You are not expected to know the launch date or the budget figure. You are expected to connect the scheme to its constitutional anchor.

💡 Link the scheme to the anchor
Whenever a passage names a national scheme, mentally tag it: which part of the Constitution is this serving? A welfare scheme nods to the Directive Principles; an environmental measure leans on Article 21; an education policy touches the right to education. The question usually rewards that link.

Here is the method that turns national-affairs passages into easy marks. Practise it until it is automatic — then bring it to the drills.

  1. 1
    Spot the institution
    Read the passage and name the body or organ at its centre — Parliament, the President, the Supreme Court, the Election Commission, a State government.
  2. 2
    Recall its static rule
    Pull up what you know about that institution: its powers, its limits, its role. This is the anchor the question hangs on.
  3. 3
    Match the question to the rule
    Re-read the question. It will be testing one of the institution's known features — who has the power, what the limit is, which body fits.
  4. 4
    Eliminate the trap option
    Cross out options that over-state a power (the President 'decides'), treat a bill as a law, or call a non-justiciable goal enforceable.
  5. 5
    Answer from the rule, not the news
    Pick the option that fits the static rule. Ignore extra detail in the passage that the question does not need.
🧩 Worked example
The President is the constitutional head of the Union and acts on the aid and advice of the Council of Ministers headed by the Prime Minister. In a parliamentary system, real executive power is exercised by the Council of Ministers, while the President is the nominal head.

A news article reports that the Cabinet decided on a major policy and the President formally gave effect to it. A reader asks who actually took the decision. Based on the principle, the answer is:

AThe President, who is the real head of the executive.
BThe Council of Ministers, with the President acting as the nominal head who gives it formal effect.
CThe Lok Sabha, which exercises executive power directly.
DThe Supreme Court, which approves all Cabinet decisions.
▸ Show solution
Answer: B. The President is the nominal head who acts on advice, while the Council of Ministers exercises real executive power. So the Cabinet took the decision and the President gave it formal effect. A inverts the roles; C and D involve organs with no such power.
🎯 National Affairs & Polity in a nutshell
  • National-news passages are polity questions in disguise — learn the static anchors and they answer themselves.
  • Parliament has two Houses: the directly-elected Lok Sabha (stronger, controls money bills) and the permanent Rajya Sabha.
  • A bill becomes an Act only after both Houses pass it and the President assents; money bills start only in the Lok Sabha.
  • The President is the nominal head; the PM and Council of Ministers are the real executive, responsible to the Lok Sabha.
  • Courts have judicial review; Parliament can amend the Constitution but cannot destroy its basic structure.
  • Know the constitutional bodies: Election Commission (polls), CAG (audit), UPSC (recruitment), Finance Commission (tax-sharing).
  • India is quasi-federal: on the Concurrent List, the central law generally prevails over a conflicting State law.

Common traps in national-affairs questions

Ready for the next chapter?
International Affairs covers the UN, major treaties, India's foreign relations and global bodies — the other half of the Current Affairs section.
Go to International Affairs

Frequently asked questions

Why is national affairs and polity so important for CLAT?
Current Affairs including GK is about a quarter of the CLAT paper, and national news makes up a large part of it. Almost every such passage rests on a polity fact — how Parliament works, what the Supreme Court does, which constitutional body is involved. Master the static framework and a big chunk of this section becomes reliable, repeatable marks.
Do I need to memorise article numbers and dates for the polity questions?
No. CLAT is passage-based and does not reward rote provisions or exact dates. You apply your understanding of how institutions work to a news passage. Knowing the framework — the two Houses, the bill process, the role of each constitutional body — helps you read faster and spot the issue, but the passage carries the detail you need.
What is the difference between the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha?
The Lok Sabha is directly elected by the people, can be dissolved, and is the stronger House — money bills start there and the government must keep its confidence. The Rajya Sabha represents the States, is a permanent body that is never fully dissolved, and acts as a revising chamber. It cannot reject a money bill or bring down the government.
How does a bill become a law in India?
A bill is introduced and read, debated and scrutinised clause by clause in the second reading, then voted on in the third reading. It must be passed by both Houses (money bills start in the Lok Sabha). It then goes to the President, and on the President's assent it becomes an Act and part of the law of the land.
What are the main constitutional bodies CLAT tests?
The big four are the Election Commission, which conducts elections; the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG), which audits government spending; the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC), which conducts civil-services recruitment; and the Finance Commission, which recommends how tax revenue is shared between the Centre and the States. All are kept independent of the government.
Is India a fully federal country?
India is described as quasi-federal — federal in form but with a strong central tilt. Power is divided across the Union, State and Concurrent Lists, but on the Concurrent List a central law generally prevails over a conflicting State law, and the Centre gains extra powers in emergencies. States share power; they are not sovereign or fully independent.
What is the basic structure doctrine and why does it matter for current affairs?
Laid down in Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala (1973), it holds that Parliament can amend the Constitution but cannot destroy its basic features — supremacy of the Constitution, judicial review, free elections, federalism and secularism. It matters because news about new amendments or major judgments often turns on whether a basic feature has been touched.

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