Meghalaya CM Hails Women's Quota Bill, Eyes More Parliamentary Seats

Meghalaya Chief Minister Conrad K. Sangma has welcomed the Women's Reservation Bill as a significant step towards strengthening democratic representation. He expressed optimism that Meghalaya could gain additional parliamentary seats following the upcoming delimitation exercise, citing the state's unique terrain and demographics. Sangma highlighted that while Meghalaya has a matrilineal society, women's presence in formal political institutions remains limited, a gap this law aims to bridge. He urged a balanced approach, with reservation and delimitation processes progressing simultaneously through careful deliberation.

Key Points: Meghalaya CM on Women's Reservation Bill & Delimitation

  • Bill addresses long-pending demand for women's political participation
  • Will empower women in decision-making roles
  • Delimitation may increase seats for states like Meghalaya
  • Calls for balanced, simultaneous implementation of reservation and delimitation
2 min read

Crucial democratic reform; number of seats expected to rise: Meghalaya CM on women quota bill

Meghalaya CM Conrad Sangma welcomes Women's Reservation Bill as crucial democratic reform, expects state to gain more parliamentary seats after delimitation.

"This reform should have come much earlier, but credit must be given to Prime Minister Narendra Modi for taking this bold initiative. - Conrad K. Sangma"

Shillong, April 17

Meghalaya Chief Minister Conrad K. Sangma on Friday welcomed the Women's Reservation Bill as a significant step towards strengthening democratic representation, expressing optimism that Meghalaya could gain additional seats in Parliament following the proposed delimitation exercise.

The Centre introduced three bills in the Lok Sabha on April 16, including measures to amend provisions related to women's reservation and to set up a delimitation commission.

Reacting to the development, CM Sangma termed the move a "very welcome step" that addresses a long-pending demand for enhanced political participation of women.

"This reform should have come much earlier, but credit must be given to Prime Minister Narendra Modi for taking this bold initiative," Sangma said.

Highlighting the relatively low representation of women in legislative bodies, the Chief Minister said the proposed law would help bridge the gap and empower women in decision-making roles.

He noted that while Meghalaya follows a matrilineal social structure where women hold important societal roles, their presence in formal political institutions remains limited.

"This will be a crucial democratic reform that enables greater participation of women at the highest levels. Their involvement in policymaking will benefit society as a whole," he added.

CM Sangma also pointed to the potential impact of delimitation on smaller and geographically challenging states like Meghalaya.

He expressed hope that the state would see an increase in parliamentary representation, taking into account its unique terrain and demographic considerations.

"I expect that the number of seats for Meghalaya will rise, and I am hopeful that both the Government of India and the delimitation commission will take a positive view on this matter," he said.

At the same time, the Chief Minister urged a balanced approach in implementing the reservation and delimitation processes.

He stressed that both should progress simultaneously with careful deliberation to avoid disruptions.

CM Sangma also dismissed concerns about any reduction in seats for existing states, expressing confidence that the overall strength of Parliament would be expanded to accommodate the changes.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good step, but implementation is key. The CM is right to ask for delimitation and reservation to move together. We can't have one without the other, or it will create chaos. Also, expanding Parliament seats is necessary to make this work smoothly.
A
Aman W
While I support women's empowerment, I have a respectful criticism. Reservation should be based on capability, not just gender. I hope this doesn't become a tool for political families to just field more women from their own circles. The focus must be on genuine representation.
S
Sarah B
Interesting to see a CM from a matrilineal society championing this. It shows the gap between social custom and political power. Hope Meghalaya gets those extra seats too – the North-East needs a stronger voice in Delhi.
V
Vikram M
Finally! Our mothers and sisters deserve a seat at the table where laws are made. This will change the kind of issues that get priority in Parliament. Better policies for education, health, and safety will follow. Bharat mata ki jai!
K
Karthik V
The delimitation part is crucial. States with difficult terrain like Meghalaya, Himachal, Uttarakhand have unique challenges. Their representation should reflect that. Hope the commission takes a fair and geographical view, not just population.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50