TNPSC Indian Constitution Articles Complete Notes (52 - 371+) – Part 2 | இந்திய அரசியலமைப்புச் சட்டம் (52 - 371+) – TNPSC குறிப்புகள் | பகுதி 2
📜 Constitutional Articles — Part 2: Union, State, Emergency & Amendments
11. Part V — The Union Government (Articles 52–151)
The President of India — Key Articles
| Article | Provision |
|---|---|
| 52 | There shall be a President of India |
| 53 | Executive power of the Union vested in the President |
| 54 | Election of the President — by Electoral College |
| 55 | Manner of election of President (proportional representation) |
| 56 | Term of office — 5 years |
| 57 | Eligibility for re-election |
| 58 | Qualifications for election as President |
| 60 | Oath or affirmation by the President (before Chief Justice of India) |
| 61 | Procedure for impeachment of the President |
| 63 | There shall be a Vice-President of India |
| 65 | VP acts as President during vacancies |
| 72 | Pardoning powers of President (Pardon, Reprieve, Respite, Remission, Commutation) |
| 74 | Council of Ministers to aid and advise the President; PM heads the CoM |
| 75 | Appointment of PM by President; CoM collectively responsible to Lok Sabha |
| 76 | Attorney General of India |
| 77 | Conduct of business of the Government of India |
| 78 | Duties of PM — to communicate decisions to President |
TNPSC Key: The President's qualifications (Article 58): Must be a citizen of India, must have completed 35 years of age, and must be qualified for election as a member of the Lok Sabha. The minimum age for Lok Sabha membership is 25 years — so 35 years is the bar for President.
President's Pardoning Power — Article 72 vs Governor's Article 161
| Type of Pardon | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Pardon | Completely removes conviction and punishment |
| Commutation | Substitutes one form of punishment for a lighter one |
| Remission | Reduces period of sentence without changing its character |
| Respite | Awarding lesser punishment due to special circumstances |
| Reprieve | Temporary suspension of sentence (especially death sentence) |
Key Difference: President (Art. 72) can pardon sentences given under Court Martial and sentences of death. Governor (Art. 161) cannot pardon death sentences or sentences by Court Martial.
12. Parliament — Key Articles (79–122)
| Article | Provision |
|---|---|
| 79 | Constitution of Parliament — President + Rajya Sabha + Lok Sabha |
| 80 | Composition of Rajya Sabha — max 250 members (238 elected + 12 nominated by President) |
| 81 | Composition of Lok Sabha — max 552 members (530 states + 20 UTs + 2 Anglo-Indian nominated — now removed by 104th Amendment) |
| 83 | Duration — Rajya Sabha (permanent, 1/3rd retire every 2 years); Lok Sabha (5 years) |
| 84 | Qualifications for membership of Parliament |
| 85 | Sessions of Parliament — summoned and prorogued by President |
| 93 | Speaker and Deputy Speaker of Lok Sabha |
| 97 | Salaries of Speaker and Deputy Speaker of Lok Sabha |
| 100 | Quorum — 1/10th of total membership of each House |
| 108 | Joint sitting of both Houses (presided by Speaker of Lok Sabha) |
| 109 | Special procedure for Money Bills |
| 110 | Definition of Money Bills |
| 112 | Annual Financial Statement (Budget) |
| 114 | Appropriation Bills |
| 117 | Financial Bills |
| 123 | Ordinance making power of President |
13. Supreme Court — Key Articles (124–147)
| Article | Provision |
|---|---|
| 124 | Establishment and constitution of Supreme Court; CJI appointed by President |
| 125 | Salaries of judges (charged on Consolidated Fund of India) |
| 126 | Appointment of acting Chief Justice |
| 127 | Appointment of ad hoc judges |
| 128 | Retired judges can sit in SC |
| 129 | Supreme Court is a court of record |
| 130 | Seat of Supreme Court (Delhi; can sit elsewhere with President's approval) |
| 131 | Original jurisdiction of SC (Centre-State disputes) |
| 132 | Appellate jurisdiction — Constitutional matters |
| 133 | Appellate jurisdiction — Civil matters |
| 134 | Appellate jurisdiction — Criminal matters |
| 136 | Special Leave Petition (SLP) — SC can grant leave to appeal in any matter |
| 137 | Review jurisdiction of SC |
| 141 | Law declared by SC is binding on all courts in India |
| 142 | SC may pass decree for doing complete justice |
| 143 | Advisory jurisdiction — President can seek SC's opinion |
| 144 | Civil and judicial authorities shall act in aid of SC |
14. Part VI — State Government (Articles 152–237)
| Article | Provision |
|---|---|
| 153 | Governor for each State |
| 154 | Executive power of State vested in Governor |
| 155 | Governor appointed by President |
| 156 | Governor holds office during pleasure of President; Term — 5 years |
| 157 | Qualifications — citizen of India, completed 35 years of age |
| 158 | Conditions of Governor's office (cannot be MP/MLA) |
| 159 | Oath of office of Governor (before Chief Justice of High Court) |
| 161 | Pardoning powers of Governor (cannot pardon death sentence or Court Martial) |
| 163 | Council of Ministers to aid and advise Governor; CM heads the CoM |
| 164 | Appointment of CM; CoM collectively responsible to State Legislative Assembly |
| 165 | Advocate General of the State |
| 167 | Duties of CM — to communicate decisions to Governor |
| 168 | Constitution of State Legislature |
| 170 | Composition of Legislative Assembly (Vidhan Sabha) |
| 171 | Composition of Legislative Council (Vidhan Parishad) |
| 174 | Sessions — summoned by Governor |
| 200 | Assent to bills by Governor |
| 202 | Annual Financial Statement of State |
| 213 | Ordinance making power of Governor |
| 214 | High Courts for States |
| 215 | High Court is a court of record |
| 217 | Appointment and conditions of HC judges |
| 226 | Power of High Courts to issue writs |
| 233 | Appointment of District Judges |
15. Centre-State Relations (Articles 245–263)
| Article | Provision |
|---|---|
| 245 | Extent of laws made by Parliament and State Legislatures |
| 246 | Subject matter of laws — Three Lists (Union, State, Concurrent) |
| 248 | Residuary powers of legislation — Parliament |
| 249 | Parliament can legislate on State List items in national interest (RS passes resolution by 2/3rd majority) |
| 250 | Parliament can legislate on State List during National Emergency |
| 252 | Parliament to legislate for two or more states by consent |
| 253 | Legislation for implementing international agreements |
| 256 | Obligation of States to comply with laws of Parliament |
| 257 | Control of the Union over States in certain cases |
| 262 | Adjudication of disputes relating to waters of interstate rivers |
| 263 | Inter-State Council (ISC) — established by President |
The Three Legislative Lists
| List | Schedule | No. of Subjects | Jurisdiction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Union List | 7th Schedule | Originally 97; Now 100 | Parliament only |
| State List | 7th Schedule | Originally 66; Now 61 | State Legislature (Parliament in special cases) |
| Concurrent List | 7th Schedule | Originally 47; Now 52 | Both Parliament and State; Parliament prevails in conflict |
16. Part XVIII — Emergency Provisions (Articles 352–360)
| Article | Type of Emergency | Key Details |
|---|---|---|
| 352 | National Emergency | Grounds: War, External Aggression, Armed Rebellion (changed from "Internal Disturbance" by 44th Amendment 1978). Proclaimed by President on written advice of Cabinet. Must be approved by Parliament within 1 month by special majority (2/3rd present + voting AND majority of total membership). Revoked by simple majority in Lok Sabha. |
| 356 | State Emergency (President's Rule) | Governor's report that State government cannot function as per the Constitution. Approved by Parliament within 2 months. Maximum period: 3 years (6 months at a time). Rajya Sabha can also pass the resolution to extend it in special cases. |
| 360 | Financial Emergency | Proclaimed when financial stability of India is threatened. Approved by Parliament within 2 months by simple majority. No maximum period specified — continues till revoked. Has never been proclaimed in India so far. |
Comparison of Three Emergencies
| Feature | National Emergency (352) | State Emergency (356) | Financial Emergency (360) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proclaimed by | President | President | President |
| Parliamentary approval | 1 month / Special majority | 2 months / Simple majority | 2 months / Simple majority |
| Max Duration | No limit (6 months each) | 3 years | No limit |
| Effect on FRs | Article 19 suspended; Art 20 & 21 not suspended | No effect on FRs | No effect on FRs |
| Times Imposed | 3 times (1962, 1971, 1975) | 100+ times | Never |
17. Article 368 — Amendment of the Constitution
Article 368 in Part XX lays down the procedure for amending the Constitution. The Constitution can be amended by three methods:
- Simple Majority — Some provisions can be amended by a simple majority of Parliament (e.g., creation of new states, citizenship, 5th and 6th Schedule areas). These are NOT governed by Article 368.
- Special Majority — Most constitutional provisions are amended by a majority of total membership of each House AND 2/3rd majority of members present and voting in each House.
- Special Majority + State Ratification — Certain provisions require special majority of Parliament PLUS ratification by at least half of the State Legislatures (e.g., election of President, extent of executive power of Union and States, SC and HC, representation of states in Parliament, distribution of powers between Centre and States, Article 368 itself).
Important SC Cases on Amendment:
— Shankari Prasad Case (1951): Parliament can amend any part of the Constitution including Fundamental Rights.
— Golaknath Case (1967): Parliament cannot amend Fundamental Rights.
— Kesavananda Bharati Case (1973): Parliament can amend the Constitution but cannot alter its Basic Structure.
— Minerva Mills Case (1980): Reaffirmed the Basic Structure doctrine.
18. Other Important Articles for TNPSC
| Article | Topic |
|---|---|
| 243 | 73rd Amendment — Panchayati Raj Institutions; Gram Sabha defined |
| 243P | 74th Amendment — Municipalities; Ward Committees |
| 280 | Finance Commission — constituted every 5 years by President |
| 300-A | Right to Property — legal right (not fundamental right; 44th Amendment 1978) |
| 301 | Freedom of trade, commerce, and intercourse throughout India |
| 309 | Recruitment and conditions of service of persons serving the Union or States |
| 312 | All India Services (IAS, IPS, IFS) — created by Rajya Sabha by special resolution |
| 315 | UPSC and State Public Service Commissions |
| 320 | Functions of UPSC |
| 324 | Election Commission of India — superintendence, direction, and control of elections |
| 325 | No person to be ineligible for inclusion in electoral rolls on grounds of religion, race, caste, or sex |
| 326 | Elections to Lok Sabha and State Assemblies — adult suffrage (18 years — lowered from 21 by 61st Amendment 1988) |
| 330 | Reservation of seats for SCs and STs in Lok Sabha |
| 343 | Official language of Union — Hindi in Devanagari script (English to continue for 15 years — now continuing by Parliament) |
| 344 | Official Language Commission and Committee of Parliament |
| 350 | Language to be used in representations for redress of grievances |
| 351 | Directive for development of the Hindi language |
| 370 | Special status of Jammu & Kashmir — Abrogated by Presidential Order on 5 August 2019 |
| 371 | Special provisions for States — Maharashtra, Gujarat (371), Nagaland (371A), Assam (371B), Manipur (371C), Andhra Pradesh & Telangana (371D), Sikkim (371F), Mizoram (371G), Arunachal Pradesh (371H), Goa (371I), Karnataka (371J) |
19. Previous Year TNPSC Question Patterns with Answers
Q1. Which article of the Indian Constitution deals with the "Right to Constitutional Remedies"?
Answer: Article 32 — Dr. Ambedkar called it the "Heart and Soul of the Constitution."
Q2. The Right to Education (6–14 years) was added by which Constitutional Amendment?
Answer: 86th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2002 — Article 21-A was inserted.
Q3. Under which article does the President proclaim National Emergency?
Answer: Article 352
Q4. Which article provides for Uniform Civil Code?
Answer: Article 44 (a Directive Principle of State Policy)
Q5. Article 17 deals with ________.
Answer: Abolition of Untouchability
Q6. Fundamental Duties were added to the Constitution by which amendment?
Answer: 42nd Amendment Act, 1976 (on Swaran Singh Committee recommendation)
Q7. Which article gives the Supreme Court advisory jurisdiction?
Answer: Article 143
Q8. The writ of Habeas Corpus is issued for ________.
Answer: To release a person from illegal detention. Literally means "you may have the body."
Q9. The voting age in India was reduced from 21 to 18 by which amendment?
Answer: 61st Amendment Act, 1988 — Article 326 was amended.
Q10. Which article deals with the Election Commission of India?
Answer: Article 324
20. TNPSC Exam Strategy for Articles
- Memorise the Part-Article mapping first — This helps narrow down answers quickly in MCQs.
- Focus on Part III (Art. 12–35) — This section alone yields 2–4 questions per exam.
- Emergency provisions (Art. 352, 356, 360) — Always 1–2 questions in every TNPSC exam.
- Amendments linked to articles — Know which amendment added/changed which article (42nd, 44th, 61st, 73rd, 74th, 86th, 103rd).
- Writ jurisdiction — Clearly differentiate Article 32 (SC) vs Article 226 (HC).
- Create a one-page article number cheat sheet and revise it daily 2 weeks before the exam.
- Solve at least 100 previous year questions specifically on Constitutional Articles.
21. Final Revision — Most Important Articles (TNPSC Frequency Chart)
| Frequency | Articles |
|---|---|
| Very High (appears in almost every exam) | 14, 17, 19, 21, 21-A, 32, 44, 51-A, 352, 356, 368 |
| High | 1, 3, 12, 13, 15, 16, 22, 32, 72, 74, 80, 81, 110, 123, 124, 141, 226, 312, 324, 326, 343 |
| Medium | 2, 5, 20, 23, 24, 25, 29, 30, 40, 48A, 54, 61, 72, 76, 108, 131, 143, 161, 163, 280, 300-A, 370 |
| Lower but relevant | 4, 7, 8, 9, 26, 27, 28, 33, 34, 35, 38, 39, 41, 42, 43A, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 66, 67, 85, 100, 109, 112, 114, 117, 128, 130, 171, 213, 233, 246, 249, 253, 263 |
22. Conclusion
Mastering the Articles of the Indian Constitution is not just about memorizing numbers — it is about understanding the vision of the Constitution makers and the framework within which India's governance operates. For TNPSC aspirants, especially those targeting Group 1, 2, 2A, 4, and VAO exams, a strong command over constitutional articles is non-negotiable.
The key areas — Fundamental Rights (Part III), DPSPs (Part IV), Fundamental Duties (Part IV-A), Emergency Provisions (Part XVIII), and the Amendment process (Article 368) — form the core of almost every TNPSC polity section. Regular revision of article numbers, combined with understanding of their scope and recent amendments, will significantly improve your score.
Final Advice: Make a daily habit of reading 10 articles each day with their context. In 45 days, you will have covered all major articles. Use mnemonics and association techniques to lock in article numbers permanently. All the best for your TNPSC preparation!
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