Narendra Modi urged MPs to back the proposals, saying they were in the national interest. Photograph: Maxim Shemetov/ReutersNarendra Modi urged MPs to back the proposals, saying they were in the national interest. Photograph: Maxim Shemetov/ReutersIndia fails to pass bill to boost women’s representation after delimitation rowOpposition accuses Narendra Modi government of using quotas as cover for redrawing electoral map
The Indian government has failed to pass a bill to increase female representation in parliament after being accused of using the plan as a guise to redraw the country’s electoral map.
It was the first time in 12 years in power that a constitutional amendment proposed by Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata party (BJP) government was not passed by parliament.
The failure followed a fierce debate, with the government accused of an “attack on democracy” after it tethered a bill reserving one-third of parliamentary seats for women to a wider, controversial exercise of “delimitation”. The process would redraw parliamentary constituencies along population lines based on the 2011 census, and would increase the number of MPs in the lower chamber from 543 to about 850.
As a constitutional measure, the bill required a two-thirds majority, making it more challenging for the BJP and its National Democratic Alliance, which does not have an outright majority, to pass it. In the final tally, 298 MPs voted in favour and 230 against.
India’s often fragmented opposition parties showed rare unity in fighting the bill. The Indian National Congress member Priyanka Gandhi Vadra called it an “open attack” on democracy, while another senior figure, Gaurav Gogoi, accused the Modi government of trying to “bulldoze” delimitation through the backdoor.
India’s lower house votes to reserve a third of seats for womenRead moreDelimitation is one of the most divisive federal issues in India. It is particularly contentious in more prosperous southern states such as Tamil Nadu and Kerala, which have reduced population growth in recent years and fear their political representation would be penalised.
Meanwhile, poorer, more populous northern states – considered the BJP’s political heartland – stand to gain the most seats if redrawn.
The last time that India’s electoral map was redrawn was in 1971 and southern states want those boundaries frozen for another 25 years.
MPs from Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK), which governs Tamil Nadu, arrived in parliament on Friday dressed in black in protest. The previous day, Tamil Nadu’s chief minister, MK Stalin, described the bill as a “punishment” for southern states and burned a copy outside parliament.
Opposition MPs questioned why women’s representation had been linked to a much larger political exercise. Rahul Gandhi, a senior figure in the opposition Indian National Congress party, said: “The first truth is that this is not a women’s bill. This has nothing to do with the empowerment of women. This is an attempt to change the electoral map of India.”
A bill reserving one-third of the seats for women was passed unanimously by parliament back in 2023, but its implementation has been delayed until at least 2029 due to certain electoral processes. The BJP said the new bill would speed up the implementation of female parliamentary quotas.
Modi said: “Let all of us not miss this important opportunity to give reservation to women. I have come to appeal to you – do not see this from a political lens, this is in national interest.”
In parliament, the home affairs minister, Amit Shah, said delimitation was needed to reflect population growth in a country of more than 1.4 billion people. “Every voter should have an equal value for their right, and post this expansion, we believe, they will,” he said on Friday.
In response, the opposition MP Shashi Tharoor said that linking women’s reservations to delimitation “effectively holds the aspirations of Indian women hostage to one of the most contentious political exercises in our history”.
“We risk creating a tyranny of the demographic majority where a handful of large, poor states could theoretically determine the fate of the entire country,” he added.
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