POWER 50 · Day 21 — Statutory & Constitutional Bodies: the commissions that make constitutional democracy work

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POWER 50 is fifty capsules across fifty days — the whole PSIR syllabus revised once, in the order the syllabus is actually built, one topic a day. The method is plain: read the capsule, write the same day, don’t break the chain. PSIR Dynamics 2026 and the PYQ Vault run alongside — 560 previous-year questions across the fifty days, roughly eleven a day.

Day 21 — Statutory & Constitutional Bodies

Indian democracy runs on more than the legislature, executive and judiciary. A second tier of independent bodies regulates elections, audits public money, recruits the services, protects rights and advises on fiscal transfers — what Gautam Bhatia calls “fourth branch institutions.” Today’s capsule opens with the distinction between constitutional, statutory and executive bodies, and why a stronger source of authority buys stronger insulation. It then takes each commission in turn — the Election Commission (Art. 324), the CAG (Arts. 148–151), the Finance Commission (Art. 280), the UPSC (Arts. 315–323), the NCSC, NCST and NCBC (Arts. 338, 338A, 338B), and the NHRC, NCM and NCW under their respective Acts — and closes by mapping each body to the constitutional value it guards. The analytical spine throughout is one test: a commission’s worth turns on autonomy, mandate, and the extent to which its recommendations are actually implemented. This unit has appeared in Mains across nine of the last ten years — 2016 through 2025 — so it repays careful preparation.

Write before the evening:

  1. “The success of electoral democracy can partly be attributed to the status and role of the Election Commission of India.” Explain. (UPSC 2021, 20m)
  2. Discuss, in brief, the role of the National Commission for Women. Do you think it is a toothless organisation? (UPSC 2019, 15m)
  3. How far is the National Commission for Backward Classes an empowered body? Assess its role amid rising demand for backwardness among dominant communities. (UPSC 2022, 10m)

If you go blank on a point — a provision, a case, a scholar’s line — it is built out in full in your Foundation and OGP class notes and handouts. Revise the point there, then come back and write the answer.

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