Constitution Amendment Bill fails Lok Sabha test; govt vows to continue fight
Lok Sabha seats were to be increased to 816 from the current 543 to "operationalise" the women's reservation law before 2029 polls.
PTI
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While 298 members voted in support of the bill in Lok Sabha, 230 MPs voted against it (PTI)
New Delhi, 17 April
In a major setback to the government, a Constitution
Amendment Bill to implement 33 per cent reservation for women in legislatures
in 2029 and increase the number of Lok Sabha seats to 816 was defeated on
Friday, with the ruling dispensation asserting that the struggle to give the
rights to women will continue.
While 298 members voted in support of the bill in Lok Sabha,
230 MPs voted against it. Out of 528 members who voted, the bill required 352votes for a two-third majority.
According to the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, Lok
Sabha seats were to be increased to 816 from the current 543 to
"operationalise" the women's reservation law before the 2029 Parliamentary
polls, following a delimitation exercise based on the 2011 Census.
Seats were also to be increased in State and Union territory
Assemblies to accommodate 33 per cent reservation for women.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, senior ministers Rajnath Singh
and Amit Shah, Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi were among those present
during the voting.
This was for the first time a bill under the Modi government
was defeated in Parliament.
After the legislation was defeated during the voting, Lok
Sabha Speaker Om Birla adjourned the House for the day and announced that it
would meet again on Saturday.
The three-day special sitting was convened from 16 to 18 April
for getting the Parliament's approval to the bill.
When the Constitution Amendment Bill was defeated,
Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju conveyed to the Speaker that the
government has no intention to move ahead with the two other bills - the
Delimitation Bill and the Union Territories Laws (Amendment) Bill - as both the
legislations were interlinked with the Constitution Amendment Bill.
Rijiju said the Opposition lost a historic opportunity to
honour the country's women but the Modi government's struggle to give rights to
women will continue.
"We will not take rest till we ensure that the
country's women get reservation in legislatures," he said.
After the bill was defeated, Union Home Minister Amit Shah
blamed Congress, TMC, DMK, and Samajwadi Party for not allowing its passage.
He said after the bill was defeated, the Opposition parties
were celebrating and raising victory cries which is beyond imagination and
condemnable.
"Now, the women of the country will not get the 33 per
cent reservation in the Lok Sabha and state assemblies, which was their right.
The Congress and its allies have done this not for the first time, but
repeatedly. Their mindset is neither in the interest of women nor of the
country," he said in a post on X in Hindi.
Shah said this "insult to the women of the country will
not stop here but will travel far and wide".
"The Opposition will have to face the wrath of women
not only in the 2029 Lok Sabha elections, but at every level, in every
election, and at every place," he said.
Earlier, in a bid to get the bill passed, while replying to
the two-day long debate, Shah assured the Opposition of an official amendment
mentioning a 50 per cent increase in Lok Sabha seats in all States and Union
territories if the opposition parties support the women's reservation bill.
However, the opposition did not budge.
"The women's reservation amendment bill will fall flat
if the opposition does not vote in its favour. But women of the country are
watching who the obstacle is," he said.
The home minister alleged that the Opposition parties are
against women's reservation in Lok Sabha and state assemblies as well as an
increase in the number of SC, ST seats.
The home minister also said that there are 127 seats where
there are more than 20 lakh voters and it goes against the spirit of the
principle of 'one person, one vote and one value'.
Shah also dismissed the claim that the Constitution
amendment bill brought for providing women reservation in legislatures was
aimed at delaying caste enumeration during census.
"A meeting of the Union Cabinet in 2025 decided to
carry out caste enumeration along with the census exercise and the process has
already started," he said.
Earlier, in social media posts, Modi urged all Lok Sabha MPs
to vote in favour of the bill and said the time has come to ensure that half of
the nation's population receives its rightful due in decision-making.
Shortly before the voting on the Constitution Amendment
Bill, he urged all members not to do anything that may hurt the sentiments of
women across India.
"I would like to appeal to all members of Parliament...
Please reflect upon your conscience, remembering the women in your own
families. Please do not deprive our 'nari shakti' of new opportunities,"
he said.
While participating in the debate, Gandhi said the
Constitution amendment bill has nothing to do with women's reservation and is
instead an attempt to change the country's electoral map to retain power - a
"shameful act".
The Congress leader said the proposal does not address
women's empowerment.
"This (bill) is an attempt to change the country's
electoral map, using and hiding behind India's women," he said.
Shah also said that a false narrative has been created that
the southern states would be discriminated against during the delimitation
exercise.
"I want to say that the southern states have as much
right over this House as the northern states do. This country should not be
divided by a North-South narrative. When we take the oath, we take it with our
heart. Those who have taken the oath with the Constitution in hand are trying
to create a divide between north and south. We will not allow this," he
said.
Shah said some members have spread the misconception thatMuslim women should get reservations but he would like to clarify that the
Constitution does not accept reservations based on religion.
After the bill was defeated, Rahul Gandhi said if the PM is
serious in providing women reservation in Parliament, he should bring the 2023
law and the Opposition would extend its support outrightly.
"As I have said, it was an attack on the Constitution
and we defeated that. We clearly said that this was not a women's bill, but an
attempt to change India's electoral structure which we have stopped," he
said.
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