"The dominion of India was reborn on January 26, 1950, as a sovereign democratic republic and
a union of states.
With universal adult franchise, India’s
electorate was the world’s largest, but the traditional feudal roots
of most of its illiterate populace were deep, just as their
religious caste beliefs were to remain far more powerful than more
recent exotic ideas, such as secular statehood.
Elections were to be held, however, at least every five years, and
the major model of government followed by India’s constitution was
that of British parliamentary rule, with a lower House of the People
(Lok Sabha),
in which an elected prime
minister and a cabinet sat,
and an upper Council of States (Rajya
Sabha). Nehru led his ruling Congress
Party from New
Delhi’s Lok Sabha until his death in 1964.
The nominal head
of India’s republic, however, was a president, who was indirectly
elected. India’s first two presidents were Hindu Brahmans, Rajendra
Prasad and Sarvepalli
Radhakrishnan, the latter a distinguished Sanskrit scholar who
had lectured at the
University of Oxford.
Presidential powers were mostly
ceremonial, except for brief periods of “emergency” rule, when the
nation’s security was believed to be in great danger and normal constitutional procedures
and civil
rights were feared to be too cumbersome or threatening."