What Happened
- Parliament resumed debate on the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026, the Delimitation Bill, 2026, and the Union Territories Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 — three bills introduced together to restructure Lok Sabha representation and accelerate women's reservation.
- The Home Minister responded to Opposition fears of a "north-south divide," arguing that delimitation based on updated population data would actually increase the number of seats for southern states — projecting that five southern states would see their Lok Sabha seat count rise to 195, improving their share to 23.87% of the expanded House.
- Opposition parties, particularly from southern states, countered that population-based delimitation would disproportionately reward northern states that saw higher population growth, effectively penalising southern states that performed better on family planning.
- The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026, proposes increasing the Lok Sabha seat cap from 543 to 815 seats for states and up to 35 for Union Territories; delimitation would be based on the 2011 Census rather than waiting for the post-2026 Census.
- The bills together aim to implement women's reservation in time for the 2029 Lok Sabha elections.
Static Topic Bridges
Article 82 — Delimitation After Each Census
Article 82 of the Constitution mandates readjustment of allocation of seats in the Lok Sabha and the division of each state into territorial constituencies after every Census. The process is carried out by a Delimitation Commission constituted under the Delimitation Act.
- Seat allocation to each state is proportional to its population (Article 81); delimitation recalibrates constituencies within states to reflect demographic changes.
- A 1976 Constitutional Amendment (42nd Amendment) froze the total number of Lok Sabha seats at 543 until the first Census after 2000. The 84th Amendment (2001) extended this freeze to the first Census after 2026, to give states an incentive to control population growth.
- The current freeze means states with high population growth have not yet gained proportional representation; this imbalance is the core of the "one person, one vote, one value" argument for delimitation.
Connection to this news: The 131st Amendment Bill, 2026 proposes lifting the seat freeze and conducting delimitation based on the 2011 Census — the most recent census before the post-2026 exercise — accelerating the timeline without waiting for new demographic data.
Delimitation Commission — Composition and Powers
The Delimitation Commission is a statutory body constituted under the Delimitation Act (currently the Delimitation Act, 2002). It is the authoritative body for redrawing constituency boundaries.
- The Commission comprises: (i) a serving or retired Supreme Court judge as Chairperson; (ii) the Chief Election Commissioner or a nominated Election Commissioner; and (iii) the concerned State Election Commissioner.
- Its orders have the force of law and cannot be challenged in any court (protected under Article 329).
- There have been four Delimitation Commissions so far: 1952, 1963, 1973, and 2002.
Connection to this news: The Delimitation Bill, 2026 sets up the framework for a fresh delimitation exercise to follow immediately upon passage of the constitutional amendment, rather than waiting for the post-2026 Census mandated under the 84th Amendment.
The North-South Demographic Divide
The fear of southern states losing relative representation stems from divergent demographic trends. Southern states (Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana) achieved replacement-level fertility decades ago; northern states (Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh) have higher population growth rates.
- Since 1973, the Lok Sabha seat count of states has been frozen, preventing northern states from gaining seats at the expense of southern states.
- If seats are reallocated purely by population (2011 or later Census), southern states' share of seats would decline in relative terms even as their absolute seat count might increase under a larger House.
- The argument for a larger House (543 → 815) is that all states can gain seats without any state losing seats, reducing zero-sum competition.
Connection to this news: The government's position is that increasing the total seat count eliminates the trade-off — southern states retain or gain seats, addressing the north-south concern. The Opposition disputes whether the proportional share remains equitable.
Women's Reservation — Article 334A and the Census-Delimitation Linkage
The Constitution (106th Amendment) Act, 2023, introduced Article 334A, which reserves one-third of all seats in the Lok Sabha, State Legislative Assemblies, and the Delhi Assembly for women (including one-third of SC/ST reserved seats).
- Article 334A(2) as originally enacted ties the commencement of women's reservation to: (i) the publication of the first Census after the Act's commencement; and (ii) a delimitation exercise based on that Census.
- The 131st Amendment Bill, 2026, proposes to remove this Census linkage and allow women's reservation to be implemented after the current delimitation exercise (based on 2011 Census data).
- The Centre notified the 106th Amendment Act into force on April 16, 2026 — one day before this parliamentary debate — even as the amendment to remove the Census linkage was under discussion.
Connection to this news: The government argues that the 2026 bills together will deliver women's reservation for the 2029 Lok Sabha elections; critics allege this timeline is still uncertain and that the Census linkage protected the integrity of the exercise.
Key Facts & Data
- Lok Sabha seats: currently 543; proposed cap under 131st Amendment — 815 from states + 35 from UTs = 850 total.
- Five southern states' projected seats post-delimitation: 195 (up from current ~130), representing ~23.87% of the expanded House (per government figures).
- Women's Reservation Act (106th Amendment) notified into force: April 16, 2026.
- Four Delimitation Commissions have been constituted: 1952, 1963, 1973, 2002.
- The 84th Amendment (2001) froze seat allocation until after the first Census following 2026.
- The 131st Amendment Bill proposes using the 2011 Census as the basis for the new delimitation exercise.
- The bills failed to secure the required two-thirds majority in Lok Sabha in the April 17, 2026 vote: 298 in favour, 230 against.