A. Its membership is narrower
B. Member of one pressure group cannot become that of the other
C. Group does not contest elections
D. Group tries to create bolly in its favour
E. It acts from behind
Political Parties and Pressure Group
Political Parties and Pressure Group
A. Karl Marx
B. MacIver
C. Burke
D. Gettel
E. Laski
A. Trying to use students to its advantage
B. Trying to keep students away from politics
C. Ignoring the students and adopting indifferent attitude
D. Leaving the students to its own care
A. It finances political parties
B. It organises demonstrations
C. It clearly aligns with a political party
D. It tries to influence policy makers
A. It has no political programme
B. It does no aim at capturing power
C. It exerts pressure on executive
D. It tries to have formal control over the government
E. It tries to use persuasive methods
A. It tries to influence from outside
B. Its membership is large
C. It actively joins political parties
D. Its members can join any number of groups
A. Multi-party system
B. Single party system
C. Bi-party system
D. No party system
A. Multi-party system
B. No party system
C. Bi-party system
D. Single party system
A. People have common opinion
B. People who have united for achieving political ends
C. People who have joined because they have common opinion
D. People who have different political viewpoints
A. Bi-party system
B. Single party system
C. Multi-party system
D. No party system