Council of Ministers — Core Concepts
Core Concepts
The Council of Ministers is India's executive body headed by the Prime Minister that aids and advises the President under Articles 74 and 75. It consists of three tiers: Cabinet Ministers (senior ministers heading major ministries), Ministers of State (either independent charge or assisting Cabinet Ministers), and Deputy Ministers (assisting senior ministers).
The Prime Minister is appointed first by the President, then other ministers are appointed on PM's advice. All ministers must be MPs within six months and take oaths of office and secrecy. The Council operates on collective responsibility - all ministers are jointly answerable to Lok Sabha and must publicly support government decisions.
If the government loses Lok Sabha's confidence, the entire Council resigns. The total size cannot exceed 15% of Lok Sabha strength (91st Amendment, 2003). The Cabinet, consisting only of Cabinet Ministers, is the inner decision-making core that meets regularly.
Ministers hold office during President's pleasure but practically serve at PM's discretion. The system ensures democratic accountability while providing stable governance, adapting the Westminster model to Indian federal parliamentary democracy.
Key principles include collective responsibility, individual accountability for portfolios, parliamentary membership requirement, and unity in government action.
Important Differences
vs Cabinet
| Aspect | This Topic | Cabinet |
|---|---|---|
| Composition | Includes Cabinet Ministers, Ministers of State, and Deputy Ministers | Includes only Cabinet Ministers |
| Size | Limited to 15% of Lok Sabha strength (approximately 81 members) | Typically 20-25 members |
| Meetings | Rarely meets as a complete body | Meets regularly (usually weekly) |
| Decision Making | Major decisions made by Cabinet, others by individual ministers | Makes all major policy decisions collectively |
| Constitutional Status | Mentioned in Articles 74 and 75 | Not specifically mentioned in Constitution but evolved through convention |
vs UK Cabinet System
| Aspect | This Topic | UK Cabinet System |
|---|---|---|
| Head of State Role | President can seek reconsideration of advice once | Monarch has no such power, purely ceremonial |
| Federal Structure | Must coordinate with state governments in federal system | Unitary system, no federal coordination required |
| Constitutional Basis | Explicitly provided in written Constitution (Articles 74-75) | Based on conventions and traditions, no written constitution |
| Size Limitation | Constitutionally limited to 15% of Lok Sabha strength | No constitutional limit, determined by political considerations |
| Parliamentary Membership | Must be MP within 6 months of appointment | Must be MP at time of appointment |