CORE Constitutional frame of Rajasthan's state power
Rajasthan's State executive begins with Article 153 Governor of a State, which says that every State shall have a Governor. Article 154 vests executive power in the Governor, but Rajasthan follows the parliamentary form: the elected majority in the Rajasthan Legislative Assembly supplies the Chief Minister and the Council of Ministers. Article 163 Council of Ministers to aid and advise Governor is the working bridge between the nominal head and the responsible executive. It makes the Chief Minister-led Council the Governor's normal advisory channel, except where the Constitution requires discretion. This Article 163 Council aid-advice provision keeps policy responsibility with elected ministers. Article 164 then completes the daily frame by making the Chief Minister appointed by the Governor and other Ministers appointed on the Chief Minister's advice. The Council is collectively responsible to the Legislative Assembly, so the Assembly is not only a lawmaking chamber; it is the body before which the executive survives or falls. Rajasthan's 200-member Assembly also matters for the ministerial ceiling. Article 164(1A) caps the total number of Ministers including the Chief Minister at fifteen percent of Assembly strength and sets a floor of twelve. In Rajasthan, fifteen percent of 200 is 30, but the minimum can never fall below 12. These provisions explain why Governor questions, Chief Minister questions and Council strength questions belong to one constitutional unit. For Rajasthan, this framework also fixes a boundary between ceremonial acts and executive responsibility: the Governor signs appointments, summons and assent, but budget choices, department directions and daily administration remain tied to ministers who must answer in the Jaipur Assembly.
