political science CBSE class 11 course B Chapter 8 – Recent Developments in Indian Politics


🟩 Chapter 8 – Recent Developments in Indian Politics


🔹 Introduction

  • Indian politics has undergone significant transformations since the late 1980s.
  • The 1990s marked a shift from single-party dominance to coalition politics.
  • Social, economic, and political changes reshaped party systems, governance, and public participation.

🔹 Context of the 1990s

  • End of Congress Dominance: Decline in single-party majority.
  • Economic Liberalization: 1991 reforms opened India to global markets.
  • Rise of Regional Parties: Increased influence in state politics and national coalitions.
  • Caste and Community Politics: Mandal Commission (reservation for OBCs) led to identity-based mobilization.
  • Communal Tensions: Babri Masjid demolition (1992) and rise of communal politics.

🔹 Era of Coalitions

  • Coalition Era (Post-1989): No single party could secure majority in the Lok Sabha.
  • Key Coalitions:
    • National Front (1989–1991): Led by V.P. Singh.
    • United Front (1996–1998): Non-Congress coalition supported externally by Congress.
    • National Democratic Alliance (1998–2004): Led by BJP.
    • United Progressive Alliance (2004–2014): Led by Congress.
    • BJP-led NDA (2014–present): Stable majority since 2014.
  • Challenges of Coalition Politics:
    • Frequent changes in government.
    • Policy compromises to satisfy regional partners.
    • Difficulties in long-term planning and governance.

🔹 Central Governments Since 1989

  • V.P. Singh (1989–1990): Introduced Mandal Commission implementation, focused on social justice.
  • Chandra Shekhar (1990–1991): Short-lived government with limited mandate.
  • P.V. Narasimha Rao (1991–1996): Economic liberalization, reforms, globalization.
  • H.D. Deve Gowda / I.K. Gujral (1996–1998): United Front governments, coalition management.
  • Atal Bihari Vajpayee (1998–2004): NDA coalition, economic growth, nuclear tests.
  • Manmohan Singh (2004–2014): UPA coalition, social welfare schemes (MGNREGA, Right to Information).
  • Narendra Modi (2014–present): BJP-led NDA, strong central leadership, focus on development, nationalism, and governance reforms.

🔹 Communalism, Secularism, Democracy

  • Communalism: Politics based on religion, caste, or community, often leading to polarization.
  • Secularism: Constitutional commitment to equal respect for all religions, avoiding state preference.
  • Democracy: Indian democracy is resilient despite challenges of coalition politics, communal tensions, and identity politics.
  • Interplay: Communalism challenges secularism; democracy requires tolerance, dialogue, and political compromises.

🔹 Emergence of a New Consensus

  • New Political Consensus:
    • Recognition of regional parties and coalition politics.
    • Emphasis on inclusive growth and social justice.
    • Economic reforms accepted by major parties.
    • Focus on decentralization and local governance.
    • Broad agreement on democratic norms, secularism, and development priorities.
  • Key Features:
    • Cooperative politics between national and regional parties.
    • Policy focus shifts from ideological debates to pragmatic governance.
    • Public expectation of accountability and transparency increases.

🔹 Party Position in 17th Lok Sabha (2019–present)

  • BJP-led NDA: 353 seats (out of 543), clear majority.
  • Congress-led UPA: 92 seats, main opposition.
  • Regional Parties:
    • Trinamool Congress (TMC), DMK, YSR Congress, AIADMK, etc. play key roles in state politics and coalition dynamics.
  • Observations:
    • BJP dominance at the national level.
    • Regional parties continue to influence state policies and act as coalition partners when required.
    • Parliamentary democracy strengthened by multi-party system and regional representation.

🔹 Conclusion

  • Indian politics since the 1990s has shifted from single-party dominance to coalition and multi-party politics.
  • Economic liberalization, identity politics, and regional aspirations shaped national debates.
  • Despite challenges of coalition governments, communalism, and regionalism, Indian democracy has survived and adapted.
  • The emergence of a new political consensus emphasizes inclusive growth, social justice, and strong democratic institutions.
  • The multi-party system and coalition politics have strengthened representation and regional voices while maintaining national integration.

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