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Sia ? 4 years, 6 months ago
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National parties |
Regional parties |
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National parties are powerful in the nation, it deals with national issues |
Regional parties’ power is limited to a specific region or state, only the issues and demands of a specific region are discussed by regional parties. |
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National parties’ actions offer preference to national issues over regional problems |
Regional parties’ operations are confined to the country or the state in which they work, concentrating mostly on local issues. |
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A party must gain at least six percent of the total votes in lok sabha or assembly elections in four states in order to be a national party and win at least four seats in lok sabha. |
A party has to receive at least six percent of the total votes in the legislative election to become a regional party and win at least two seats. |
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Instances of national parties are the BJP, Congress and BSP. |
The instances of regional parties are Anta Dal, Manipur People Party, Assam United Decomcractic Front etc |
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Gaurav Seth 7 years, 4 months ago
(i) The prices of rubber and rice fell, leading to rising rural debts, unemployment
and rural uprisings; such as in the provinces of Nghe An and Ha Jinh.
(ii) These provinces were among the poorest, had an old radical tradition, and have been called the ‘electrical fuses’ of Vietnam—when the system was under pressure they were the first to blow.
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Gaurav Seth 7 years, 4 months ago
Dalit participation was limited in the Civil Disobedience Movement. There were
several reasons behind it:
(i) The congress had ignored the dalits for a long time because it suffered from a
fear of offending the Sanatans, who were the conservative high caste Hindus.
But Mahatma Gandhi declared that Swaraj would not come for a hundred years
if untouchability was not eliminated.
(ii) He organised statyagrahas to secure them entry into temples and access to
public wells, roads, etc. He persuaded upper castes to change their heart and
give up the ‘sin of untouchability’.
(iii) But many dalit leaders were keen on a different political solution to the
problems of the community. They began organising themselves, demanding
reserved seats in educational institutions and a separate electorate that would
choose dalit members for legislative councils.
(iv) Dalit participation in Civil Disobedience Movement was therefore limited,
particularly in the Maharashtra and Nagpur region where their organisation
was quite strong.
Posted by Khushi Pundir 7 years, 4 months ago
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Gaurav Seth 7 years, 4 months ago
Women participated in large numbers in the Civil Disobedience Movement.
(i) During the Salt March thousands of women came out of their homes to
participate in protest marches, boycott of foreign clothes and liquor shops and
the manufacture of salt.
(ii) Many women even went to jail.
(iii) In urban areas women came from high caste families.
(iv) In rural areas women who participated belonged to rich peasant households.
(v) Women were moved by Gandhi’s call to see the service to the nation as a sacred
duty of women. So they responded by giving their whole hearted participation.
(vi) Though for a long-time Congress was reluctant to allow women to hold any
position of authority within the party
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Gaurav Seth 7 years, 4 months ago
(i) In the First World War, Ottoman Turkey was defeated and a harsh peace treaty
was imposed on the Ottoman emperor, the spiritual head of the Islamic world
(the Khalifa).
(ii) To defend the Khalifa’s temporal powers, a Khilafat Committee was formed in
Bombay in March, 1919.
(iii) A young generation of Muslim leaders like the brothers Muhammad Ali and
Shaukat Ali, began discussing with Mahatma Gandhi about the possibility of
a united mass action on the issue. Gandhiji saw this as an opportunity to bring
Muslims under the umbrella of a unified national movement.
(iv) At the Calcutta session of the Congress in 1920 he convinced other leaders of
the need to start a non-cooperation movement in support of Khilafat and Swaraj
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