Lok Sabha elections 2024 refers to the general elections scheduled to take place starting 19 April in seven phases. The results of these election will give India its next government.
Lok Sabha elections or General Elections are conducted every five years in India. Held across 543 constituencies, Members of Parliament to the lower house are elected through these polls. The party with a majority in the Lok Sabha then forms the government at the Centre, so these elections eventually lead to the election of the Prime Minister and their cabinet.
The Lok Sabha, or the House of the People, is the lower house of India’s bicameral Parliament. The upper house is called the Rajya Sabha. Members of the Lok Sabha are elected by an adult universal suffrage and a first-past-the-post system to represent their respective constituencies.
The first Lok Sabha elections were held in 1951 when the Indian National Congress came to power with Jawaharlal Nehru as Prime Minister. The last such election was held in 2019, where the Bharatiya Janta Party came to power with an overwhelming majority with Narendra Modi as prime minister. The next elections are scheduled to take place in 7 phases starting 19 April 2024. The Election Commission of India is responsible for conducting these elections.
Manmohanji what all you say is OK, but in the times we live, you be too kind, too respectful, too considerate, too mindful – the world and the neighbors around us will “aapko kacchha kha jayenge”. Na rahega India na rahegi aapki wasiyat.
Kaliyuga hai, prabhoo. Aur Kaliyuga main jab tamas bhav ka rajya hai, toe jo jyada Satwik banta hai, uski vishwa pragati peechey reh jaati hai.
Amreeka ka udharan dekhiye. Sabse tamasik desh aur samaj par sab ko yahan aanay ki chestha hai.
Kaliyuga main Sri Narayan Bhagwan tamasikon kay taraf ho jatey hain. Jaisay Satyuga main Satwik bhav aur Treta yuga main rajasik bhav.
Chaar maanav jati – Brahmin, Shatriya, Vaishya aur Sudra. Aur Chaar yuga- Satya, Treta, Dwarpa aur Kali. Har yuga main ek jaati doosron sey jyada tarakki karti hai.
Jyada nahi boloonga but I’ll leave you with a quote.
“We believe in the virtue of moderation. And, if you pardon the paradox, the moderation of virtue itself.”
From the book – The Lost Horizon by Robert Bolton. Spoken by high priest Chang in the mythic place of Shangrila – between Kashi and Kailash.