66. The ‘Doctrine of Ministerial Responsibility’ states that:
a) Ministers are responsible to the Centre and not to the states
b) Ministers are responsible to the states and not to the Centre
c) Ministers are responsible to both the Centre and the states
d) Ministers are not responsible to either the Centre or the states
67. The ‘Doctrine of Equitable Distribution’ implies that:
a) Resources and opportunities should be equally distributed among states
b) Resources and opportunities should be concentrated in the hands of the Centre
c) Resources and opportunities should be concentrated in the hands of the states
d) Resources and opportunities should be concentrated in the hands of the Union territories
68. The ‘Doctrine of Non-Discrimination’ implies that:
a) The Centre cannot discriminate against the states in matters of legislation and administration
b) The states cannot discriminate against the Centre in matters of legislation and administration
c) The Centre and the states cannot discriminate against each other in matters of legislation and administration
d) Discrimination is allowed in matters of legislation and administration
69. The ‘Doctrine of Res Judicata’ refers to:
a) The Centre’s power to adjudicate disputes between the states
b) The states’ power to adjudicate disputes between the Centre and the states
c) The Centre’s power to adjudicate disputes between the Union territories
d) The principle that a matter already adjudicated upon cannot be re-litigated
70. The ‘Doctrine of Inter-Governmental Immunities’ deals with:
a) The immunity of the Centre from the states’ laws
b) The immunity of the states from the Centre’s laws
c) The immunity of the Union territories from the states’ laws
d) The immunity of the Union territories from the Centre’s laws