April 16, 2026, is likely to be recorded as a special day in the history of Indian democracy. In a three-day special session of Parliament, the central government is set to introduce a comprehensive package of three historic bills: the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026; the Delimitation Bill, 2026; and the Union Territories Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026. The stated purpose of all three is the same: to implement the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam (106th Constitutional Amendment) passed in 2023. However, the political intent concealed behind these measures — and their impact on the federal balance — is far more profound. It is absolutely essential to understand this.
The Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam reserves one-third of seats in the Lok Sabha and state legislative assemblies for women. This decision is welcome. In the current 17th Lok Sabha, there are only 78 women members — merely 14.39 percent of the total seats. In the world’s largest democracy, this number is far below the global average of approximately 26.5 percent. No one rejects the principle of women’s reservation. But the real question is: why is the government not separating this reservation from delimitation? If the true objective is women’s empowerment, what is the difficulty in reserving one-third of the current 543 seats — about 181 seats — for women?
Opposition parties have raised exactly this point. Telangana Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy wrote an open letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, stating firmly that women’s reservation, national delimitation, and an increase in Lok Sabha seats need not be linked. The government, however, insists on moving forward with all three together. And in this insistence lies the real danger.
Under the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026, Lok Sabha seats would increase from 543 to 850 — 815 for states and 35 for Union Territories. With one-third reservation, about 270 seats would be reserved for women, and a majority would require roughly 426 seats. On the surface, these figures paint a picture of progress. But since this delimitation will be based on the 2011 census, its geographical consequences will vary drastically from state to state. According to available estimates, Uttar Pradesh’s seats would rise from 80 to 140, Bihar’s from 40 to 73, Rajasthan’s from 25 to 48, and Madhya Pradesh’s from 29 to 51. In contrast, in the south, Tamil Nadu’s seats would go from 39 to just 51, Kerala’s from 20 to 23, and the combined seats of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana from 42 to 59.
The political meaning of these figures is clear. Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Rajasthan, and Madhya Pradesh are traditional vote banks of the BJP. With their seat numbers increasing enormously, the BJP’s numerical strength in the Lok Sabha would automatically be reinforced. Meanwhile, southern states that meticulously followed population control policies — Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra, and Telangana — saw slower population growth. Now they will bear the “punishment” for that wisdom. States that made sincere efforts over decades to improve women’s education, reduce maternal mortality, and promote family planning will receive a smaller share of political power. This is a double penalty. Conversely, states that made less progress in these areas gain a major advantage. This picture does not teach a lesson in development; it empowers wrong policies.
These bills have caused enormous political upheaval in South India. Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. K. Stalin has called for black flags to be hoisted across the state and warned that if the political dominance of northern states is disproportionately increased, every family will take to the streets. He convened an emergency meeting of DMK parliamentarians and announced preparations for a major agitation. Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan, along with leaders from Andhra and Telangana, have joined the chorus. According to opposition leaders, delimitation is an attempt to strike at India’s federal structure. Although Union Home Minister Amit Shah has dismissed these allegations as “scaremongering,” the intense reaction from southern states is not mere political theater — it is a deep and legitimate awareness of structural imbalance.
The most important thread in this political equation is the delay in the census. India is supposed to hold a census every ten years. The census due in 2021 was first postponed citing the Covid-19 pandemic — partially understandable. But even after the pandemic subsided, the census did not take place. Without any concrete reason, the date kept being pushed forward, and it was quietly announced that the census would be completed in 2026–27. According to the Constitution, the restriction on inter-state allocation of Lok Sabha seats — based on the 1971 census — was to lapse only after the first census conducted after 2026 was published. This means that ordinarily, delimitation would have been carried out on the basis of the 2031 census. Instead, by advancing the census to fit within the constitutional timeframe, the government has fixed the timing of delimitation to suit its convenience. This is not a coincidence; it is calculated politics.
One complex layer is the initial ambivalence of opposition parties. They faced a difficult dilemma: oppose the bills, and the BJP would brand them as enemies of women’s reservation; support them, and the BJP’s political dominance would be strengthened through delimitation. However, opposition parties are gradually finding a way out. The Congress-led INDIA alliance has clarified its position: all parties are in favour of women’s reservation, but not of delimitation. A meeting of opposition leaders was held at Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge’s residence, where a resolution was passed to oppose this deeply flawed and anti-federal delimitation process. The opposition has also put forward two alternative proposals: freeze each state’s percentage share in Parliament, or implement women’s reservation first and keep delimitation aside for later.
Passing these bills requires a constitutional amendment, needing a special two-thirds majority in Parliament. While the BJP-led NDA currently has a simple majority in the Lok Sabha, the support of some opposition parties is unavoidable for a special majority. This makes the coming battle between the government and the opposition all the more decisive. Law Minister Arjun Ram Meghwal states that the objective is to make democracy more inclusive, giving half the population its rightful share. The government also argues that if women’s reservation is to be implemented before the 2029 Lok Sabha elections, the delimitation process must be carried out swiftly. But the same question resurfaces: why can reservation not be given without delimitation?
India’s parliamentary democracy stands on the principle of federalism. That every state — regardless of size, population, or location — has appropriate and just representation in Parliament is the very core of this structure. If delimitation based on population ignores the cause-and-effect relationship with states’ development, it becomes inconsistent with federal justice. Women’s reservation is undoubtedly the need of the hour. Many countries — Rwanda, where 61 percent of parliamentarians are women, Iceland, Sweden — have marched far ahead of India in women’s political participation. But is it necessary to jeopardize the federal balance to achieve this objective? The solution proposed by the opposition and southern chief ministers is logical: reserve one-third of the existing 543 seats for women, and resolve delimitation separately with broad political consensus. The government’s insistence on binding both together reveals its true intentions.
The decisions taken during the three days of April 16–18, 2026, will shape Indian democracy for decades. No one rejects women’s reservation. But if this reservation is being used as a political shield for delimitation, then it is not genuine respect for women’s rights — it is the political exploitation of women. The insistence on changing parliamentary geography, the deliberately orchestrated delay in the census, and now the use of this delay to engineer a delimitation of convenience — when all these threads are woven together, a clear picture emerges. That picture is not of women’s empowerment, but of political centralization of power.
The true test of democracy is this: is there genuine conviction behind our words? If we truly wish to deliver justice to women, then preserving both women’s quota and federal equality together is not impossible. For that, only honest political will is required — and that will has become the scarcest commodity today.
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*Independent journalist
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