Women’s Reservation Act, 2023: Constitutional Dilemma

women’s reservation act, 2023

Syllabus: GS2/Governance; Issues Related To Women

Context

  • The reservation of women under Women’s Reservation Act, 2023 (106th Constitutional Amendment Act) will take effect only after the first Census conducted after 2026 and the subsequent delimitation exercise.
  • It creates a constitutional and logistical barrier, making implementation in the 2029 General Elections practically impossible.

About Women’s Reservation Act, 2023 (106th Constitutional Amendment Act)

  • Background: Popularly known as the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023.
    • Passed by Parliament and received Presidential assent in September 2023.
    • Seeks to enhance women’s political representation in legislatures.
  • Key Provisions: Provides one-third reservation for women in Lok Sabha (Article 82), State Legislative Assemblies (Article 170), and Legislative Assembly of Delhi (NCT).
    • The reservation includes SC/ST women within the SC/ST quota.
  • Constitutional Amendments: The Act inserts the following Articles:
    • Article 330A: Reservation of seats for women in Lok Sabha.
    • Article 332A: Reservation of seats for women in State Legislative Assemblies.
    • Article 334A: Duration and operational details of reservation.
  • Duration: Reservation to continue for 15 years from commencement.
    • Parliament may extend it further.
  • Rotation of Seats: Reserved seats will rotate after each delimitation exercise (Article 82).
    • Specific mechanism to be determined later.
  • Implementation Clause: Reservation will come into effect only after the first Census conducted after 2026, and Delimitation exercise based on that Census.
    • Thus, it will likely be implemented only after 2031 Census-based delimitation, possibly from the 2034 General Elections.

Do You Know?

  • First Women’s Reservation Bill introduced in 1996.
  • Reintroduced multiple times; lapsed repeatedly.
  • Passed in Rajya Sabha in 2010 but not in Lok Sabha.
  • Finally, the Women’s Reservation Act, 2023 was enacted after 27 years of debate.

Significance: Linking Reservation To Delimitation

  • Political Arithmetic: If implemented immediately within the existing 543 Lok Sabha seats:
    • 181 seats would become women-only, and 181 male MPs would lose eligibility in their constituencies.
  • Expected Expansion of Lok Sabha: After delimitation, Lok Sabha seats may increase significantly (estimated 750–888 seats).
    • It allows 33% reservation without removing sitting male MPs, and political adjustment through expansion rather than replacement.
  • Major step toward gender justice and political empowerment.
  • Enhances substantive equality under Article 15(3).
  • Aligns with India’s commitment to SDG-5 (Gender Equality).
  • Builds upon 33% reservation for women in Panchayats and Municipalities (73rd & 74th Amendments).

Related Concerns & Issues

  • North–South Divide: Delimitation has been frozen since 1976 (42nd Amendment) and extended in 2001 (84th Amendment) to maintain balance among States.
    • When delimitation occurs, states with higher population growth (mostly northern States) may gain seats.
    • Southern States may lose proportional representation due to effective population control.
  • Design Gaps in the Act:
    • Exclusion of Upper Houses: Act does not apply to Rajya Sabha or State Legislative Councils, and raises questions of equality in representation.
    • No OBC Sub-Reservation: SC/ST women receive proportional quotas. But no specific sub-quota for OBC women, despite their large demographic share.
  • Rotation of Constituencies: Reserved constituencies will rotate after each general election. There is operational ambiguity like building long-term political bases alongside delimitation.

Way Ahead: Constitutional and Policy Alternatives

  • The delay is not constitutionally unavoidable. Parliament can:
    • Amend the Constitution to delink reservation from delimitation.
    • Implement reservation within existing constituencies for two election cycles.
    • Expand Lok Sabha immediately by adding seats earmarked for women.
    • Freeze state-wise seat allocation temporarily to avoid federal conflict.
  • Under Article 15(3), Parliament has enabling power to provide special provisions for women.
  • For meaningful implementation of Act, there is a need to:
    • Clarify roadmap for Census and delimitation timeline.
    • Consider interim implementation mechanisms.
    • Extend reservation to Upper Houses.
    • Address OBC sub-reservation concerns.
    • Ensure transparent rotation policy.

Conclusion

  • The Women’s Reservation Act, 2023 represents a historic constitutional promise. But, by tying implementation to Census and delimitation, Parliament has deferred that promise.
  • The women’s representation in Parliament will remain postponed until at least 2034 unless corrective constitutional action is taken.
  • In a democracy founded on equality, prolonged delay risks turning constitutional commitment into symbolic legislation.
  • Representation delayed is representation denied.
Daily Mains Practice Question
[Q] Examine the constitutional, political, and federal implications of linking women’s reservation to the delimitation process.

Source: TH

 

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