INDIA Bloc Opposes Delimitation Bill, Backs Women's Reservation

The opposition INDIA bloc has decided to oppose the government's delimitation bill in the upcoming special Parliament session, while reiterating its support for the women's reservation law. The bloc alleges the delimitation process is a politically motivated move that will weaken the representation of southern and northeastern states in the Lok Sabha. Leaders, including Mallikarjun Kharge and Jairam Ramesh, accused the government of using the delimitation commission as a weapon to gain an unfair majority. The government plans to amend the 2023 women's reservation act to implement it by 2029, potentially increasing Lok Sabha seats to 850.

Key Points: INDIA Bloc to Oppose Delimitation in Parliament Session

  • Opposes delimitation process
  • Supports women's reservation
  • Claims move is politically motivated
  • Alleges harm to southern & northeastern states
3 min read

INDIA bloc to oppose delimitation bill in special session; backs women's reservation

Opposition INDIA bloc supports women's reservation but will oppose the delimitation bill, calling it politically motivated and harmful to southern states.

"We are all in favour of the Women's Reservation Bill. But the way in which they have brought it, we have reservations about that. - Mallikarjun Kharge"

New Delhi, April 15

INDIA bloc leaders on Wednesday decided to oppose the delimitation bill pushed with an amendment to Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023, to provide 33 per cent reservation for women legislators in Lok Sabha and state assemblies.

The opposition clarified that it is not against the women's reservation and urged them to implement Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023 but objected to the delimitation process, which they believe weakens the representation of the southern and north-eastern states in the Lok Sabha.

The decision was made in a meeting at the residence of Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge in Delhi. Along with Congress President, Lok Sabha Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi, RJD Working President Tejashwi Yadav, NCP (SP) MP Supriya Sule, Shiv Sena (UBT) MP Sanjay Raut, Rajya Sabha MP Kapil Sibal, and other prominent INDIA bloc leaders attended the meeting.

After the meeting, Mallikarjun Kharge announced the INDIA bloc's decision, accusing the government of making a "politically motivated" move to suppress the opposition parties.

"We are all in favour of the Women's Reservation Bill. But the way in which they have brought it, we have reservations about that. It is politically motivated. Just to suppress the Opposition parties, the govt is doing this. Though we have supported the Women's Reservation Bill continuously, we insist that the earlier amendments be implemented. They are playing some tricks with delimitation. We all parties should unitedly should fight in Parliament. We will oppose this bill, but we are not against the reservation (for women)," Kharge said.

"The way in which they have put in the bill, be it delimitation, they have not even cleared the census. All powers of the Constitution are being taken by the executive. Mostly, the power which can be exercised by the institutions, the parliament they have given is so that they can change delimitation at any time...They have already deceived us in Assam and J&K," he added.

Adding to Kharge's statement, Congress MP Jairam Ramesh expressed concern over the delimitation move, alleging that the delimitation commission is a "weapon" in the hands of the BJP.

"This delimitation is very dangerous. According to this bill, the proportion of many states will decrease, especially for southern states and northeastern states. The way the delimitation commission has worked in Assam and Jammu and Kashmir, it is clear that the commission is a weapon in the BJP's hands to gain a majority. We are against the delimitation. We want women's reservation from the next Lok Sabha election," he said.

The Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023, which provides for 33 per cent reservation for women legislators, is linked to the delimitation process in the Lok Sabha. The government is planning to implement the women's reservation ahead of the 2029 General Elections by bringing in an amendment to the 2023 Act and a constitutional amendment to delink the delimitation process from the 2027 census.

According to sources, the government has proposed to increase the number of seats in the House to 850, with 815 seats proposed for the States and the remaining 35 for the Union Territories. The Lok Sabha has 543 seats at present.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone living in Tamil Nadu, I fully support the INDIA bloc's stance. The delimitation process seems designed to punish southern states for better population control. Our voices in Parliament should not be diluted. Implement women's reservation separately, please.
R
Rohit P
Finally some sense from the opposition! We need more women in Parliament, absolutely. But not at the cost of making some states second-class citizens in our own democracy. The Assam example is worrying. Why can't we have a transparent, fair process?
P
Priya S
I respectfully disagree with the opposition's move. Women have waited decades for this reservation. By opposing this bill, they are delaying empowerment further. The delimitation argument feels like an excuse. Implement the quota now, figure out the details later. Our mothers and sisters can't wait.
K
Karthik V
Increasing seats to 850? That's a massive change. Where is the public discussion? This shouldn't be decided in backroom meetings. The entire process needs to be more democratic. The concerns of the Northeast are very valid – they often get sidelined in these big national decisions.
M
Michael C
The principle is simple: reward states that controlled population growth, don't punish them. The current proposal seems to do the opposite. Linking women's reservation to this controversial delimitation is political gamesmanship, and it's unfortunate. Both are important, but handle them separately.

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