@CSEWhy Times β June 03, 2026 | Wednesday
Indian Express
1. In navigating Trump's US & Xi's China, Japan is imagining a new story
(read for awareness)
2. Take the right lessons from Indonesia, don't dress the flawed system
(case studies on Indonesia & India)
The Hindu π° : None today
CSEWhy Newspaper Recos
Indian Express
1. In navigating Trump's US & Xi's China, Japan is imagining a new story
(read for awareness)
2. Take the right lessons from Indonesia, don't dress the flawed system
(case studies on Indonesia & India)
The Hindu π° : None today
π1
Pre & Mains Notes
1. FDs OVER SAVINGS ACCOUNTS: WHY DEPOSITOR PREFERENCES ARE CHANGING
WHAT HAPPENED
RBI data shows households are increasingly shifting money from low-interest savings accounts to higher-yield fixed deposits (FDs).
ISSUE
Changing savings behaviour in response to interest-rate dynamics.
KEY DETAILS
β’ Share of savings deposits declined significantly between 2022 and 2026.
β’ Share of term deposits increased correspondingly.
Key Concepts
β’ Savings Account:
High liquidity.
Lower returns.
Suitable for day-to-day transactions.
β’ Fixed Deposit (FD):
Fixed tenure.
Higher interest rate.
Lower liquidity.
Role of RBI
β’ RBI influences deposit and lending rates through monetary policy.
β’ Repo rate changes affect bank deposit rates over time.
Related Terms
β’ Repo Rate
β’ Real Interest Rate
β’ Financial Savings
β’ Household Savings
Background
β’ Higher inflation reduces real returns on savings accounts.
β’ Households seek instruments that preserve purchasing power.
WHY IT MATTERS
β’ Reflects changing financial behaviour of Indian households.
β’ Provides stable funding to banks for lending.
β’ Influences investment, consumption and economic growth.
β’ Important for understanding monetary policy transmission.
2. SC UPHOLDS DNA TEST IN PATERNITY DISPUTE
WHAT HAPPENED
The Supreme Court upheld a civil court's direction for a DNA test in a paternity dispute, balancing privacy concerns with the need to establish truth and justice.
ISSUE
Conflict between the right to privacy and the need for scientific evidence in judicial proceedings.
KEY DETAILS
β’ DNA evidence is increasingly used in:
Paternity disputes
Inheritance cases
Family law matters
Constitutional Provisions
β’ Article 21 β Right to Life and Personal Liberty (includes Right to Privacy).
Important Supreme Court Cases
β’ Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017)
Recognised privacy as a Fundamental Right.
β’ Goutam Kundu v. State of West Bengal (1993)
Courts should not order DNA tests routinely.
β’ Banarsi Dass v. Teeku Dutta (2005)
DNA tests must be ordered cautiously.
β’ Dipanwita Roy v. Ronobroto Roy (2014)
Courts may permit DNA testing when necessary to establish truth.
Legal Provision
β’ Section 112, Indian Evidence Act, 1872
Presumption regarding legitimacy of children born during a valid marriage.
Can be challenged through strong evidence in exceptional circumstances.
WHY IT MATTERS
β’ Highlights balancing of privacy rights with justice delivery.
β’ Shows growing role of scientific evidence in courts.
β’ Important for family law, evidence law and Article 21 jurisprudence.
3. THE NEED FOR STRENGTHENING INDIA'S EV SUPPLY CHAINS
WHAT HAPPENED
As EV adoption accelerates in India, concerns are growing regarding dependence on imported battery materials and vulnerabilities in global supply chains.
ISSUE
Strategic dependence on critical minerals and battery ecosystems.
KEY DETAILS
β’ EV batteries require:
Lithium
Cobalt
Nickel
Graphite
Rare Earth Elements (in some technologies)
β’ India remains heavily dependent on imports for several critical minerals.
Government Initiatives
β’ National Programme on Advanced Chemistry Cell (ACC) Battery Storage.
β’ Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme for ACC Batteries.
β’ National Critical Mineral Mission.
β’ PM E-DRIVE and EV promotion initiatives.
Global Context
β’ China dominates:
Lithium processing
Battery manufacturing
Critical mineral refining
β’ Supply-chain disruptions can affect:
EV affordability
Manufacturing competitiveness
Energy transition goals
Background
β’ Energy security is increasingly linked to mineral security.
β’ Many countries are pursuing "friend-shoring" and supply-chain diversification strategies.
WHY IT MATTERS
β’ Critical for India's net-zero and clean-energy goals.
β’ Reduces strategic dependence on external suppliers.
β’ Strengthens manufacturing competitiveness under Make in India.
β’ Links energy transition with economic and national security.
β€7π1π1
Semicon Chips, Nvidia & Next AI evolution are in news
Wrote this blog in the morning sharing imp. UPSC Pov
Click here to read
Wrote this blog in the morning sharing imp. UPSC Pov
Click here to read
π₯°3π₯1π1
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Siddharth sir, founder of Margdarshan IAS hired one of the students from our 1st AI cohort
This is what he has to say about our studentβs skill!
If you want to make money with UPSC prep, invest in AI CREATOR FELLOWSHIP today
Enrol at https://www.csewhy.com/planb/aiFellowship
This is what he has to say about our studentβs skill!
If you want to make money with UPSC prep, invest in AI CREATOR FELLOWSHIP today
Enrol at https://www.csewhy.com/planb/aiFellowship
β€3π₯3π1π1
@CSEWhy Times β June 04, 2026 | Wednesday
1. IS CLIMATE RESEARCH BEING HELD BACK BY LOCAL INSTRUMENTATION?
WHAT HAPPENED
Mega Science Vision-2035 flagged India's heavy dependence on imported climate research instruments and stressed the need for indigenous scientific equipment to improve research quality and self-reliance.
CORE ISSUE
India can develop prototypes but struggles to commercialise scientific instruments, creating technological dependence.
KEY DETAILS
β’ Report prepared under the Principal Scientific Adviser (PSA).
β’ India imports most advanced climate-monitoring instruments.
β’ Lack of indigenous manufacturing affects calibration, maintenance and data reliability.
β’ Recommends preference for domestic instruments in public procurement.
β’ Calls for Climate & Health Observatory and expanded climate modelling capacity.
β’ Supports carbon-pricing based on the Polluter Pays Principle.
β’ Linked to India's climate targets, including 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030.
β’ Relevant to Atmanirbhar Bharat in high-technology sectors.
WHY IT MATTERS
Climate research underpins weather forecasting, disaster management and climate policy. Indigenous scientific infrastructure improves strategic autonomy, reduces import dependence and strengthens India's climate resilience.
2. HORMUZ TO NUCLEAR ISSUE: RUBIO'S TESTIMONY TEMPERS EXPECTATIONS
WHAT HAPPENED
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio cautioned that significant gaps remain in Iran nuclear negotiations and broader West Asia ceasefire efforts despite ongoing diplomatic engagement.
CORE ISSUE
The Iran nuclear issue intersects with regional security, energy markets and global geopolitics.
KEY DETAILS
β’ Iran continues negotiations over limits on its nuclear programme.
β’ JCPOA (2015) aimed to restrict Iran's nuclear activities; US exited in 2018.
β’ IAEA monitors Iran's nuclear facilities.
β’ Strait of Hormuz carries nearly one-fifth of global oil trade.
β’ Any disruption can sharply increase crude oil prices.
β’ China has emerged as an important diplomatic actor in West Asia.
β’ US sanctions and waivers on Russian oil remain relevant for India.
β’ Chabahar Port and INSTC make Iran strategically important for India.
WHY IT MATTERS
Developments in Iran and the Strait of Hormuz directly affect India's energy security, trade routes and diplomatic interests. Stability in West Asia remains critical for global oil markets and regional peace.
Indian Express
1. Great Nicobar task: Pursuing national security with ecological responsibility
(read for interesting pov)
2. How new pancreatic cancer pill doubles survival rate
(VERY important article)
The Hindu π°
1. Is shoot-to-disable the new normal?
(op langda details)
Pre & Mains Notes
1. IS CLIMATE RESEARCH BEING HELD BACK BY LOCAL INSTRUMENTATION?
WHAT HAPPENED
Mega Science Vision-2035 flagged India's heavy dependence on imported climate research instruments and stressed the need for indigenous scientific equipment to improve research quality and self-reliance.
CORE ISSUE
India can develop prototypes but struggles to commercialise scientific instruments, creating technological dependence.
KEY DETAILS
β’ Report prepared under the Principal Scientific Adviser (PSA).
β’ India imports most advanced climate-monitoring instruments.
β’ Lack of indigenous manufacturing affects calibration, maintenance and data reliability.
β’ Recommends preference for domestic instruments in public procurement.
β’ Calls for Climate & Health Observatory and expanded climate modelling capacity.
β’ Supports carbon-pricing based on the Polluter Pays Principle.
β’ Linked to India's climate targets, including 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030.
β’ Relevant to Atmanirbhar Bharat in high-technology sectors.
WHY IT MATTERS
Climate research underpins weather forecasting, disaster management and climate policy. Indigenous scientific infrastructure improves strategic autonomy, reduces import dependence and strengthens India's climate resilience.
2. HORMUZ TO NUCLEAR ISSUE: RUBIO'S TESTIMONY TEMPERS EXPECTATIONS
WHAT HAPPENED
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio cautioned that significant gaps remain in Iran nuclear negotiations and broader West Asia ceasefire efforts despite ongoing diplomatic engagement.
CORE ISSUE
The Iran nuclear issue intersects with regional security, energy markets and global geopolitics.
KEY DETAILS
β’ Iran continues negotiations over limits on its nuclear programme.
β’ JCPOA (2015) aimed to restrict Iran's nuclear activities; US exited in 2018.
β’ IAEA monitors Iran's nuclear facilities.
β’ Strait of Hormuz carries nearly one-fifth of global oil trade.
β’ Any disruption can sharply increase crude oil prices.
β’ China has emerged as an important diplomatic actor in West Asia.
β’ US sanctions and waivers on Russian oil remain relevant for India.
β’ Chabahar Port and INSTC make Iran strategically important for India.
WHY IT MATTERS
Developments in Iran and the Strait of Hormuz directly affect India's energy security, trade routes and diplomatic interests. Stability in West Asia remains critical for global oil markets and regional peace.
CSEWhy Newspaper Recos
Indian Express
1. Great Nicobar task: Pursuing national security with ecological responsibility
(read for interesting pov)
2. How new pancreatic cancer pill doubles survival rate
(VERY important article)
The Hindu π°
1. Is shoot-to-disable the new normal?
(op langda details)
β€2π1
@CSEWhy Times β June 05, 2026 | Friday
1. CONGESTION, RESOURCES, RULES: WHY RESIDENTIAL AREAS ARE MORE VULNERABLE TO FIRE
WHAT HAPPENED
A major fire in Delhi's Malviya Nagar has renewed concerns about fire safety in residential areas. Despite an overall decline in fire incidents, homes continue to account for the largest share of fire-related deaths in India.
CORE ISSUE
Weak enforcement of building norms, lack of fire-safety infrastructure, and unplanned urbanisation make residential buildings particularly vulnerable to fires.
KEY DETAILS
β’ Around 60% of fire-related deaths in 2024 occurred in residential buildings.
β’ Many residential structures lack smoke alarms, fire suppression systems, evacuation plans, and Fire NOCs.
β’ Common causes: short circuits and gas leaks.
β’ Fire services are a State subject; municipalities handle fire services under Article 243W and the 12th Schedule.
β’ The National Building Code (NBC) 2016 provides fire-safety standards, including smoke management and evacuation norms.
β’ Rapid urbanisation, narrow access roads, and illegal building modifications worsen risks.
β’ The 15th Finance Commission recommended βΉ5,000 crore for strengthening fire services.
β’ Urban fires are recognised as a major disaster risk in the UN Global Assessment Report (2018).
WHY IT MATTERS
Fire safety is an important urban governance issue linked to planning, disaster management, and public safety. As Indian cities become denser and more vertical, stronger enforcement of safety norms and better-equipped fire services become critical.
2. THE POWER OF MANGROVES OVER SEAWALLS
WHAT HAPPENED
The article argues that India relies heavily on engineered coastal protections like seawalls, while ecosystem-based solutions such as mangroves, seagrasses, and coral reefs remain underutilised despite their proven effectiveness.
CORE ISSUE
Nature-based coastal adaptation offers long-term resilience but receives less policy attention and funding than conventional infrastructure.
KEY DETAILS
β’ Ecosystem-based Adaptation (EbA) uses biodiversity and ecosystem services to reduce climate risks.
β’ Mangroves, seagrass meadows, coral reefs, and wetlands act as natural buffers against cyclones, erosion, and storm surges.
β’ Cyclone Dana highlighted the protective role of Bhitarkanika's mangroves.
β’ India has over 11,000 km of coastline exposed to climate risks such as sea-level rise and cyclones.
β’ States spent heavily on seawalls and embankments, while funding for ecosystem-based adaptation remains limited.
β’ Mangroves also support fisheries, livelihoods, carbon sequestration, and biodiversity conservation.
β’ Relevant initiatives include MISHTI (Mangrove Initiative for Shoreline Habitats & Tangible Incomes) launched in Budget 2023-24.
β’ Supports India's commitments under climate adaptation and disaster-resilience frameworks.
WHY IT MATTERS
Nature-based solutions are often cheaper, more sustainable, and provide multiple ecological benefits. Mainstreaming EbA can strengthen coastal resilience while simultaneously supporting livelihoods and biodiversity conservation.
3. UNDERSTANDING SPF NUMBER ON SUNSCREEN LOTION AND HOW IT IS MEASURED
WHAT HAPPENED
The article explains what Sun Protection Factor (SPF) measures, how sunscreen effectiveness is assessed, and why higher SPF numbers do not necessarily mean proportionately better protection.
CORE ISSUE
Consumers often misunderstand SPF ratings and ignore factors such as UVA protection, proper application, and reapplication.
KEY DETAILS
β’ SPF measures protection against UVB radiation, which primarily causes sunburn.
β’ SPF 30 blocks roughly 95β97% of UVB rays; SPF 50 blocks about 97β98%.
β’ Protection gains increase only marginally at higher SPF levels.
β’ SPF does not measure UVA protection, which contributes to skin ageing and skin cancer risks.
β’ Experts recommend broad-spectrum sunscreens with SPF and UVA protection (PA rating).
β’ Sunscreen should be applied 15β20 minutes before exposure and reapplied every 2β3 hours.
Pre & Mains Notes
1. CONGESTION, RESOURCES, RULES: WHY RESIDENTIAL AREAS ARE MORE VULNERABLE TO FIRE
WHAT HAPPENED
A major fire in Delhi's Malviya Nagar has renewed concerns about fire safety in residential areas. Despite an overall decline in fire incidents, homes continue to account for the largest share of fire-related deaths in India.
CORE ISSUE
Weak enforcement of building norms, lack of fire-safety infrastructure, and unplanned urbanisation make residential buildings particularly vulnerable to fires.
KEY DETAILS
β’ Around 60% of fire-related deaths in 2024 occurred in residential buildings.
β’ Many residential structures lack smoke alarms, fire suppression systems, evacuation plans, and Fire NOCs.
β’ Common causes: short circuits and gas leaks.
β’ Fire services are a State subject; municipalities handle fire services under Article 243W and the 12th Schedule.
β’ The National Building Code (NBC) 2016 provides fire-safety standards, including smoke management and evacuation norms.
β’ Rapid urbanisation, narrow access roads, and illegal building modifications worsen risks.
β’ The 15th Finance Commission recommended βΉ5,000 crore for strengthening fire services.
β’ Urban fires are recognised as a major disaster risk in the UN Global Assessment Report (2018).
WHY IT MATTERS
Fire safety is an important urban governance issue linked to planning, disaster management, and public safety. As Indian cities become denser and more vertical, stronger enforcement of safety norms and better-equipped fire services become critical.
2. THE POWER OF MANGROVES OVER SEAWALLS
WHAT HAPPENED
The article argues that India relies heavily on engineered coastal protections like seawalls, while ecosystem-based solutions such as mangroves, seagrasses, and coral reefs remain underutilised despite their proven effectiveness.
CORE ISSUE
Nature-based coastal adaptation offers long-term resilience but receives less policy attention and funding than conventional infrastructure.
KEY DETAILS
β’ Ecosystem-based Adaptation (EbA) uses biodiversity and ecosystem services to reduce climate risks.
β’ Mangroves, seagrass meadows, coral reefs, and wetlands act as natural buffers against cyclones, erosion, and storm surges.
β’ Cyclone Dana highlighted the protective role of Bhitarkanika's mangroves.
β’ India has over 11,000 km of coastline exposed to climate risks such as sea-level rise and cyclones.
β’ States spent heavily on seawalls and embankments, while funding for ecosystem-based adaptation remains limited.
β’ Mangroves also support fisheries, livelihoods, carbon sequestration, and biodiversity conservation.
β’ Relevant initiatives include MISHTI (Mangrove Initiative for Shoreline Habitats & Tangible Incomes) launched in Budget 2023-24.
β’ Supports India's commitments under climate adaptation and disaster-resilience frameworks.
WHY IT MATTERS
Nature-based solutions are often cheaper, more sustainable, and provide multiple ecological benefits. Mainstreaming EbA can strengthen coastal resilience while simultaneously supporting livelihoods and biodiversity conservation.
3. UNDERSTANDING SPF NUMBER ON SUNSCREEN LOTION AND HOW IT IS MEASURED
WHAT HAPPENED
The article explains what Sun Protection Factor (SPF) measures, how sunscreen effectiveness is assessed, and why higher SPF numbers do not necessarily mean proportionately better protection.
CORE ISSUE
Consumers often misunderstand SPF ratings and ignore factors such as UVA protection, proper application, and reapplication.
KEY DETAILS
β’ SPF measures protection against UVB radiation, which primarily causes sunburn.
β’ SPF 30 blocks roughly 95β97% of UVB rays; SPF 50 blocks about 97β98%.
β’ Protection gains increase only marginally at higher SPF levels.
β’ SPF does not measure UVA protection, which contributes to skin ageing and skin cancer risks.
β’ Experts recommend broad-spectrum sunscreens with SPF and UVA protection (PA rating).
β’ Sunscreen should be applied 15β20 minutes before exposure and reapplied every 2β3 hours.
β€7π2
β’ Water-resistant formulations are preferable for outdoor activities. β’ No sunscreen blocks 100% of UV radiation.
WHY IT MATTERS
Rising temperatures and increased UV exposure make sun protection a public health concern. Scientific awareness about sunscreen use can reduce skin damage, premature ageing, and long-term skin cancer risks.
Indian Express ποΈ
1. Magnifica Humanitas & MANAV: Creating a shared vision for AI
2. Old ties, New Nepal: What India needs to negotiate
(imp. read today)
The Hindu π°
1. When El NiΓ±o became an economic crisis
(Imp pov on El NiΓ±o)
WHY IT MATTERS
Rising temperatures and increased UV exposure make sun protection a public health concern. Scientific awareness about sunscreen use can reduce skin damage, premature ageing, and long-term skin cancer risks.
CSEWhy Newspaper Recos
Indian Express ποΈ
1. Magnifica Humanitas & MANAV: Creating a shared vision for AI
2. Old ties, New Nepal: What India needs to negotiate
(imp. read today)
The Hindu π°
1. When El NiΓ±o became an economic crisis
(Imp pov on El NiΓ±o)
β€3π1
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β€7π2π€―2
@CSEWhy Times β June 10, 2026 | Wednesday
1. EASY PILL TO SWALLOW: NEW ORAL GLP-1 DRUG SHOWS ENCOURAGING RESULTS DURING TRIALS
WHAT HAPPENED
A clinical trial of ecolecglipron, an experimental oral GLP-1 drug, showed significant reductions in blood sugar levels and body weight among Type-2 diabetes patients, raising hopes for a convenient alternative to injectable therapies.
CORE ISSUE
Current GLP-1 drugs are largely injectable and often inconvenient. An effective oral version could improve treatment adherence and diabetes management.
KEY DETAILS
β’ GLP-1 drugs mimic gut hormones that regulate blood sugar and appetite.
β’ Ecolecglipron is a once-daily oral GLP-1 receptor agonist with no food or water restrictions.
β’ Phase-2 trial involved 406 participants across multiple countries.
β’ Up to 89.6% of participants achieved HbA1c below 7%, a key diabetes-control target.
β’ Participants also recorded significant weight loss over 26 weeks.
β’ Particularly relevant for India, which has over 100 million diabetes patients.
β’ India's "thin-fat phenotype" (high visceral fat despite lower BMI) increases metabolic risks.
β’ Larger Phase-3 trials are required before regulatory approval.
WHY IT MATTERS
India faces a rapidly growing diabetes burden. An affordable and convenient oral therapy could improve treatment compliance, reduce complications, and strengthen long-term diabetes management.
2. EC RULES ON COCKROACH AS A SYMBOL
Following public attention around the proposed "Cockroach Janata Party", questions arose over whether a political party can obtain a cockroach as its election symbol under Election Commission rules.
CORE ISSUE
Election symbols are regulated to ensure uniformity, voter recognition, and fairness in the electoral process.
KEY DETAILS
β’ Election symbols are governed by the Election Symbols (Reservation and Allotment) Order, 1968.
β’ Recognised National and State Parties receive reserved symbols (e.g., BJP's Lotus, Congress's Hand).
β’ Unrecognised parties and independent candidates choose from a list of free symbols notified by the Election Commission.
β’ The latest free-symbol list (2025) contains 184 symbols.
β’ Symbols include everyday objects such as balloons, dustbins, frying pans, fruits, etc.
β’ Since the 1990s, the EC has generally avoided allotting animal symbols following concerns raised by animal welfare groups.
β’ Therefore, a cockroach symbol is unlikely to be allotted under current practice.
β’ Authority of the EC flows from Article 324 of the Constitution, which vests it with the superintendence and conduct of elections.
WHY IT MATTERS
Election symbols play a crucial role in India's electoral democracy, especially for voters with limited literacy. The issue highlights the EC's regulatory powers and the importance of maintaining a clear and recognisable symbol system.
Indian Express
1. In age of AI, Pope returns to older concern: Technology, wealth, inequality
(imp. read)
The Hindu π°
1. Indiaβs road through Myanmar is one of engagement
(read this for sure today)
2. A new phase in India-Nepal relations
(beautiful read)
Subscribe to my free blog: blog.csewhy.com
Pre & Mains Notes
1. EASY PILL TO SWALLOW: NEW ORAL GLP-1 DRUG SHOWS ENCOURAGING RESULTS DURING TRIALS
WHAT HAPPENED
A clinical trial of ecolecglipron, an experimental oral GLP-1 drug, showed significant reductions in blood sugar levels and body weight among Type-2 diabetes patients, raising hopes for a convenient alternative to injectable therapies.
CORE ISSUE
Current GLP-1 drugs are largely injectable and often inconvenient. An effective oral version could improve treatment adherence and diabetes management.
KEY DETAILS
β’ GLP-1 drugs mimic gut hormones that regulate blood sugar and appetite.
β’ Ecolecglipron is a once-daily oral GLP-1 receptor agonist with no food or water restrictions.
β’ Phase-2 trial involved 406 participants across multiple countries.
β’ Up to 89.6% of participants achieved HbA1c below 7%, a key diabetes-control target.
β’ Participants also recorded significant weight loss over 26 weeks.
β’ Particularly relevant for India, which has over 100 million diabetes patients.
β’ India's "thin-fat phenotype" (high visceral fat despite lower BMI) increases metabolic risks.
β’ Larger Phase-3 trials are required before regulatory approval.
WHY IT MATTERS
India faces a rapidly growing diabetes burden. An affordable and convenient oral therapy could improve treatment compliance, reduce complications, and strengthen long-term diabetes management.
2. EC RULES ON COCKROACH AS A SYMBOL
Following public attention around the proposed "Cockroach Janata Party", questions arose over whether a political party can obtain a cockroach as its election symbol under Election Commission rules.
CORE ISSUE
Election symbols are regulated to ensure uniformity, voter recognition, and fairness in the electoral process.
KEY DETAILS
β’ Election symbols are governed by the Election Symbols (Reservation and Allotment) Order, 1968.
β’ Recognised National and State Parties receive reserved symbols (e.g., BJP's Lotus, Congress's Hand).
β’ Unrecognised parties and independent candidates choose from a list of free symbols notified by the Election Commission.
β’ The latest free-symbol list (2025) contains 184 symbols.
β’ Symbols include everyday objects such as balloons, dustbins, frying pans, fruits, etc.
β’ Since the 1990s, the EC has generally avoided allotting animal symbols following concerns raised by animal welfare groups.
β’ Therefore, a cockroach symbol is unlikely to be allotted under current practice.
β’ Authority of the EC flows from Article 324 of the Constitution, which vests it with the superintendence and conduct of elections.
WHY IT MATTERS
Election symbols play a crucial role in India's electoral democracy, especially for voters with limited literacy. The issue highlights the EC's regulatory powers and the importance of maintaining a clear and recognisable symbol system.
CSEWhy Newspaper Recos
Indian Express
1. In age of AI, Pope returns to older concern: Technology, wealth, inequality
(imp. read)
The Hindu π°
1. Indiaβs road through Myanmar is one of engagement
(read this for sure today)
2. A new phase in India-Nepal relations
(beautiful read)
Subscribe to my free blog: blog.csewhy.com
β€13π₯1π1
went through entire newspaper today, nothing of value
skip reading it today, we'll be back tomorrow :)
Also, for the reference:
- Current Affairs Course going LIVE for UPSC 2027 within next 7 days
- Launching a selective batch of 50 people for Mains Answer Evaluation. Stay around, if you're interested :)
skip reading it today, we'll be back tomorrow :)
Also, for the reference:
- Current Affairs Course going LIVE for UPSC 2027 within next 7 days
- Launching a selective batch of 50 people for Mains Answer Evaluation. Stay around, if you're interested :)
β€10π7
@CSEWhy Times β June 12, 2026 | Friday
Indian Express
1. R&D underspending in India has no one cause. It's systemics as well as cultural
(read from Mains pov)
2. How NRIs can make equity-like returns - from bank deposits
(do read this article)
The Hindu π°
1. Why is Nicobar debating elections?
(imp. article for today's read)
2. Contraceptive use and the weight women carry: insights from NFHS-6
(read for awareness, add to notes!)
Subscribe to my free blog: blog.csewhy.com
CSEWhy Newspaper Recos
Indian Express
1. R&D underspending in India has no one cause. It's systemics as well as cultural
(read from Mains pov)
2. How NRIs can make equity-like returns - from bank deposits
(do read this article)
The Hindu π°
1. Why is Nicobar debating elections?
(imp. article for today's read)
2. Contraceptive use and the weight women carry: insights from NFHS-6
(read for awareness, add to notes!)
Subscribe to my free blog: blog.csewhy.com
β€2π₯1
Shall I curate some trusted courses from different coaching?
A lot of people are selling garbage and we need some real stuff for aspirants.
A lot of people are selling garbage and we need some real stuff for aspirants.
β€42π12π2