Athawale Appeals to Stalin on Delimitation Bill for Women's Empowerment

Union Minister Ramdas Athawale has appealed to Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin to support the upcoming Delimitation Bill, asserting it is designed for women's empowerment and not against southern states. The bill, expected in a special Parliament session, could increase Lok Sabha seats to around 850, with 33% reserved for women. Southern states, however, fear population-based delimitation will reduce their parliamentary representation, a concern Union Minister Kiren Rijiju calls misinformation. Athawale reminded Stalin of his party's past NDA alliance and urged national support for the women's quota.

Key Points: Athawale Urges Stalin to Support Delimitation Bill

  • Bill aims to empower women with 33% reservation
  • Lok Sabha seats may increase to ~850
  • Athawale reassures southern states
  • Special Parliament session from April 16-18
  • Southern states fear reduced political clout
3 min read

Ramdas Athawale urges Stalin to support delimitation bill, says it will empower women

Union Minister Ramdas Athawale appeals to CM Stalin to back the Delimitation Bill, saying it empowers women and doesn't target South India.

"This is not a move against Tamil Nadu or the people of South India. - Ramdas Athawale"

Chennai, April 15

Union Minister Ramdas Athawale on Wednesday appealed to Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin to support the Delimitation Bill, asserting that it is aimed at empowering women and is not against any particular region.

His remarks came after Stalin warned of a massive protest that could "bring the state to a standstill" if the Centre's proposal resulted in reduced political representation for southern states while increasing that of northern states.

Speaking to IANS, Athawale said, "My party's stand is clear, we support the Bill. I represent the Republican Party of India and am a part of the NDA. The Government of India, under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, wants to extend greater support to women. Therefore, around 273 seats are expected to be reserved for women. At present, there are 543 seats in Parliament, and if the Bill is passed, a significant portion of the increased seats will be allocated to women."

He further clarified that the proposed expansion of Lok Sabha seats is not intended to disadvantage southern states.

"The number of seats will increase, and if the Lok Sabha strength rises to around 850 or 860, constituencies will become smaller, ensuring better representation. This is not a move against Tamil Nadu or the people of South India," he said.

Athawale also made a personal appeal to Stalin, referencing past political associations.

"I would like to remind Stalin that his party was once part of the NDA during the tenure of Atal Bihari Vajpayee. I urge him to support this Bill, as it is designed to benefit women across the country," he added.

Meanwhile, the Centre has proposed increasing the number of Lok Sabha seats to around 850 as part of its plan to implement the Women's Reservation Act, also known as the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, ahead of the 2029 general elections. Of the proposed seats, about 815 would be allocated to states and 35 to Union Territories.

Currently, the Lok Sabha has 543 seats. The government is expected to introduce a constitutional amendment Bill during a special session of Parliament scheduled from April 16 to 18 to enable 33 per cent reservation for women in the Lok Sabha.

Meanwhile, Union Minister Kiren Rijiju addressed concerns raised by southern states, stating on social media that misinformation was being spread.

Union Minister Kiren Rijiju wrote on X: "Some people are trying to mislead the South Indian States on Women Reservation by providing wrong Delimitation figures. There should be no politics in giving reservations to Women in Lok Sabha & Legislative Assemblies. All political parties are united for Nari Shakti."

Southern states have expressed apprehension that population-based delimitation could reduce their representation in Parliament. Leaders from these states argue that they are being penalised for successfully implementing population control and family planning policies, while states with higher population growth may gain more seats.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul R
As someone from Tamil Nadu, I stand with CM Stalin on this. We followed family planning norms for the nation's good. Now we are told our political power will shrink? This feels like punishment. Women's reservation is needed, but not at the cost of federal balance. 🚫
S
Sarah B
Interesting to see the debate. From an outside perspective, Minister Rijiju has a point about not politicizing women's empowerment. If the total seats are increasing to 850+, and 273 are for women, that's a huge step forward. The details on state-wise allocation need to be crystal clear though.
K
Karthik V
Athawale's appeal to Stalin's past NDA association is pure political drama. 😂 The issue is simple: will the new formula use only the 1971 census data for delimitation, or a newer one? If it's the latter, southern states get a raw deal. Centre must provide a written guarantee.
M
Meera T
Finally! More women in Parliament means more diverse voices on issues like education, health, and safety. This is Nari Shakti in action. I hope all parties support it without letting regional politics block progress for half the country's population. 🙏
V
Vikram M
The concern is genuine. Smaller constituencies might mean better representation, but if the seat increase disproportionately benefits states that didn't control population, it sets a wrong precedent. The bill must have a clause to protect the representation of states that achieved population stability.

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