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Indian Councils Act 1892

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Indian Councils Act 1892[a]
Act of Parliament
Citation55 & 56 Vict. c. 14
Introduced byR. A. Cross, 1st Viscount Cross on 9 February 1892
Dates
Royal assent20 June 1892
Commencement3 February 1893
Other legislation
Repealed byGovernment of India Act 1915
Status: Repealed

The Indian Councils Act 1892 (55 & 56 Vict. c. 14) was an Act of British Parliament that introduced various amendments to the composition and function of legislative councils in British India. Most notably, the act expanded the number of members in the central and provincial councils. For example, the number of additional members elected to the Governor-General's council[b] was increased from twelve to sixteen members[1] of whom – as per the Indian Councils Act 1861 – not less than half were to be non-officials, i.e. persons not in the civil or military service of the Crown. The Governor-General was empowered to invite different bodies in India to elect, select or delegate their representatives and to make regulations for their nomination.[2]

After being presented to the House of Lords in 1890, the Act was passed in 1892 in response to nationalist movements beginning to surface across British India.[citation needed] This scheme would be overturned by the passage of the Indian Councils Act 1909 – also called the Morley-Minto reforms – which introduced indirect elections to Indian councils along with special electoral preferences for muslim minorities and various commercial and functional interests.

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Transcription

Membership

Under the regulations adopted, the Governor-General's council was to consist of nine ex-officio members (the Governor-General, six members of the Executive Council, the Commander-in-Chief, and the head of the province in which the council shiva met), six official additional members and ten non-official members of the Legislative Councils of Bengal, Bombay, Madras and the Northwestern province. When Legislative Councils were established in Punjab and Burma, one member each was returned from these also. In conjunction with the ex-officio members, the official members constituted a majority.[citation needed]

Similar changes were introduced in the composition of provincial legislative Councils. In all the provinces – with some exception in Bombay – an official majority,[c] while not required by statute, was maintained.[3]

While the Central Legislative Council was expanded to include between 10 and 16 Additional Members, specifics in provinces varied: Bombay came to have 8 Additional Members; Madras 20; Bengal 20; Northwestern Province & Oudh 15.[citation needed]

The universities, district board, municipalities, zamindars and chambers of commerce were empowered to recommend members to provincial councils. While such recommendations could theoretically be rejected, in practice, they were not refused.[2] Thus, while failing to answer calls for direct elections, the principle of representation was introduced[citation needed].

Council powers

In addition to these changes, the Act relaxed restrictions imposed by the Indian Councils Act 1861 in allowing councils to discuss – but not vote on – each year's annual financial statement.[4] Councilors could also put questions within certain limits to the government on the matter of public interest after giving six days' notice, but none of them had the right to ask supplementary questions.[5]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Short title as conferred by section 8 thereof included a comma. Modern conventions for short titles omit the comma after "Act".
  2. ^ The Governor-General's Council also is called the Viceroy's council and the Central council.
  3. ^ An official majority being when a majority of councillors are British civil service or military officials.

References

  1. ^ Ilbert 1911, p. 246.
  2. ^ a b Ilbert 1911, p. 248.
  3. ^ Ilbert 1911, p. 247.
  4. ^ Ilbert 1911, pp. 251–52. 'Under this power one or two days were allotted annually in every council to a discussion of a budget already settled by the executive government'.
  5. ^ Ilbert 1911, p. 254.

Sources

  • Ilbert, Courtenay (1898). The Government of India: Being a Digest of the Statute Law Relating Thereto. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Ilbert, Courtenay (1911). "The Indian Councils Act, 1909". Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation. 11 (2): 243–254. ISSN 1479-5973. JSTOR 752520.
This page was last edited on 19 February 2024, at 04:26
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