Indian Federalism
How power is divided between the central government and India's 28 states, and the tensions this creates.
Federal Structure
India's Constitution creates a federal system with a strong centre. Powers are divided into three lists: the Union List (97 subjects like defence and foreign affairs, exclusively for the centre), the State List (66 subjects like police, health, and agriculture, for states), and the Concurrent List (47 subjects like education and criminal law, where both can legislate but central law prevails in conflicts).
India has 28 states and 8 Union Territories. States have their own elected legislatures, chief ministers, and governors (appointed by the centre). The system is sometimes called 'quasi-federal' because the centre has exceptional powers: it can redraw state boundaries, impose President's Rule to suspend state governments, and the Rajya Sabha can empower Parliament to legislate on state subjects.