Key Points

Upendra Kushwaha, RLM's leader, has launched a powerful critique of India's census and delimitation processes. He argues that constitutional amendments since 1976 have unfairly frozen seat allocations, severely disadvantaging states like Bihar. Kushwaha claims Bihar could have over 60 Lok Sabha seats instead of 40 if proper population-based redistricting occurred. The RLM plans to transform this issue into a major political movement ahead of the 2025 Bihar Assembly elections.

Key Points: Upendra Kushwaha Demands Census Reform for Bihar Representation

  • Census freeze violates constitutional provisions since 1976
  • Bihar loses 20+ Lok Sabha seats due to delimitation delay
  • 10 lakh vs 30 lakh voters per MP reveals representation disparity
2 min read

RLM Chief Upendra Kushwaha bats for census and delimitation

RLM Chief exposes constitutional delays in census and delimitation, revealing massive representation gaps affecting Bihar's political landscape

"This is one of the least discussed but most impactful issues in Indian politics - Upendra Kushwaha"

Patna, April 29

Rajya Sabha MP and Rashtriya Lok Morcha (RLM) president Upendra Kushwaha on Tuesday strongly raised the issue of delayed census and delimitation, claiming that constitutional provisions have been subverted for decades, adversely affecting states like Bihar and undermining the principle of equal representation.

Addressing the media persons, Kushwaha said: "According to the Constitution, a census must be conducted every 10 years, and delimitation should follow based on the updated population. This was strictly followed until 1971, but after the Emergency, unconstitutional amendments extended the freeze on delimitation for 25 years in 1976 through the 42nd Amendment."

Kushwaha argued that a second 25-year extension further delayed delimitation, resulting in a 50-year gap without updates to parliamentary and assembly seat allocations.

"If delimitation had occurred based on regular census updates, Bihar's Lok Sabha representation would have increased from 40 to more than 60, and the state assembly would have more than its current 243 seats," he asserted.

Kushwaha criticised what he called the "black law" imposed during the Emergency, claiming it continues to deny equal political representation to states with larger and growing populations like Bihar.

"Today, in some states, 10 lakh voters elect one MP, while in Bihar, 30 lakh voters elect a single MP. This disparity violates the very foundation of equal suffrage," he said.

The RLM leader vowed to take this issue to the public ahead of the 2025 Bihar Assembly elections, highlighting the disproportionate impact on caste groups and common citizens alike.

"This is one of the least discussed but most impactful issues in Indian politics. It affects every community. We will make it a people's movement in Bihar," Kushwaha declared.

He noted that some MPs from southern states have recently raised the issue in Parliament, applying pressure on the Centre, but added that leaders from Bihar and northern states have largely remained silent.

The RLM's Valmikinagar session focused on two core agendas: the long-delayed delimitation and preparations for the upcoming Bihar Assembly elections.

Kushwaha emphasised that the fight for representation and equality in democracy will be central to the party's campaign narrative.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Finally someone speaking truth to power! The population-representation mismatch is shocking. Southern states have been benefitting at Bihar's expense for decades. #FairRepresentation
P
Priya M.
Interesting points, but I wonder if increasing seats would actually help Bihar's development? More politicians doesn't always mean better governance 🤔
A
Amit S.
As someone from South India, I have to respectfully disagree. The current system helps balance regional development. More seats for Bihar means less for us - where does it end? 🧐
S
Sunita R.
This is such an important issue that no one talks about! My vote in Bihar carries 1/3 the weight of someone in Kerala. How is that democratic? 😠
V
Vikram J.
While I agree with the principle, I wish Kushwaha had proposed solutions too. Just increasing seats without electoral reforms might create more problems than it solves.
N
Neha P.
️‍🔥 This is the real political revolution Bihar needs! Not caste-based politics but fighting for equal rights. More power to Kushwaha for raising this!

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

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50