Moreover, Parliamentary system can claim a high educative value. It cannot function without well-organised political parties. The object of every political party is to win elections and to capture government. To win elections means that the party should be in a position to secure the majority of votes and the electorate should approve its programme. It is like placing one’s cards on the table and acquainting the nation with the party’s political programme. It is for the people to judge one party and the other on its merits. If an issue of national importance arises subsequently, on which the verdict of the people had not been obtained by the party in power, the legislature may be dissolved and an appeal made to the electorate. Dissolution also helps to remove deadlocks between the executive and the legislature and makes the electorate the policy-determining factor. According to K. Leoewenstein, “In the authentic form of parliamentary government, dissolution is the democratic fulcrum of the entire process of adjusting power conflicts by making the electorate the ultimate policydetermining factor. Moreover, by-elections, which are so frequent during the life of Parliament, serve as a barometer of public opinion and the government corrects or adjusts its policies according to the results obtained from such elections. All this democratic process has immense educative value. It makes the people politically conscious of their rights and responsibilities, and vigilance is the true price of democracy.