Article 327 of the Indian
Constitution empowers Parliament to make
laws regulating elections to the Lok Sabha, Rajya Sabha, and State
Legislatures.
What Article 327 does
- It gives Parliament the power
to pass laws on all matters connected with elections, such as:
- Preparation and revision of
electoral rolls (voter lists).
- Delimitation of constituencies (drawing
boundaries of seats).
- Other matters needed to ensure
the proper constitution of Parliament and State Legislatures,
like voting procedures, nomination rules, and counting mechanisms.
- These laws must, however, stay
within the limits of the Constitution (for example, they cannot
override Article 326’s guarantee of adult suffrage).
Role in the election
process
- Article 327 is the constitutional
basis for ordinary election‑related statutes, such as:
- Representation of the People Act,
1950 (electoral rolls).
- Representation of the People Act,
1951 (conduct of elections, disqualification,
etc.).
- It helps maintain uniformity
and flexibility: Parliament can update or amend election laws from
time to time to keep the system free, fair, and in line with
constitutional values.
In short, Article
327 enables Parliament to “manage” the technical and legal side of elections,
while bodies like the Election Commission (under Article 324) operate within
that legal framework to conduct the elections.
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