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Polity & Governance April 19, 2026 6 min read Daily brief · #11 of 49

We know how to bring debt under control, improve finances of Tamil Nadu: Edappadi Palaniswami

The delimitation question — the redrawing of Lok Sabha and State Assembly constituency boundaries based on population — has become a central issue in souther...


What Happened

  • The delimitation question — the redrawing of Lok Sabha and State Assembly constituency boundaries based on population — has become a central issue in southern state politics ahead of assembly elections, with Tamil Nadu's impending constituency revision potentially reducing its Lok Sabha seat share from current levels.
  • The Union Home Minister has clarified that under the proposed delimitation framework, Tamil Nadu's share of Lok Sabha seats will increase from the current 7% — indicating the total number of Lok Sabha seats will be expanded significantly rather than seats being redistributed among existing constituencies.
  • The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026, introduced in Parliament in April 2026, proposes to use the 2011 Census as the basis for the next delimitation exercise (rather than the 2001 Census currently in use or waiting for a post-2026 census), and enables women's reservation implementation under the 106th Amendment.
  • The bill faced significant opposition from southern states and was voted down in the Lok Sabha, raising unresolved constitutional questions about which census will govern the next delimitation and when it will be conducted.
  • State-level fiscal concerns — particularly Tamil Nadu's elevated public debt levels and its demands for greater fiscal autonomy — are contextually linked to the delimitation debate, as states with better demographic performance fear reduced political leverage in resource allocation negotiations.

Static Topic Bridges

Delimitation — Constitutional Framework (Articles 82 and 170)

Delimitation is the process of fixing the number of seats in the Lok Sabha and state legislative assemblies, and redrawing constituency boundaries, based on population data from the census. It is mandated by Articles 82 (Lok Sabha) and 170 (State Legislatures) of the Constitution of India.

  • Article 82 states that upon the completion of each census, the allocation of seats in the House of the People (Lok Sabha) to states and the division of each state into territorial constituencies shall be readjusted by an authority prescribed by Parliament.
  • Article 170 provides the same framework for state legislative assemblies.
  • The 84th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2002 froze the total number of Lok Sabha seats (and the apportionment of seats among states) based on the 1971 Census until the publication of the first Census after the year 2026 — an incentive measure to encourage state governments to pursue population stabilisation without electoral penalty.
  • Delimitation under Article 82 is conducted by a Delimitation Commission constituted under the Delimitation Commission Act (most recently, the Delimitation Commission Act, 2002). Delimitation Commission orders have the force of law and cannot be questioned in any court.
  • The 106th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2023 (Women's Reservation Act) provides 33% reservation for women in Lok Sabha and state assemblies — but this reservation takes effect only after the next delimitation exercise, creating constitutional pressure to conduct delimitation promptly.

Connection to this news: The 84th Amendment freeze expires with the first post-2026 census. The 2026 constitutional bills seek to determine which census to use and whether to expand total seats, directly shaping southern states' representation prospects.

The North-South Representation Asymmetry in Delimitation

The core concern of southern states (Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Karnataka) is that they have achieved better population stabilisation outcomes than northern states — through investments in education, healthcare, and women's empowerment — but a population-based delimitation would reward northern states with more seats while penalising southern states for their demographic success.

  • Under a pure population-based reallocation (using 2011 data), Tamil Nadu's Lok Sabha seats could decline from 39 to approximately 32; similarly Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, and Telangana could lose seats.
  • Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Rajasthan, and Madhya Pradesh — states with higher population growth rates — would gain seats under population-based reallocation.
  • Tamil Nadu currently holds 39 of 543 Lok Sabha seats (approximately 7.2%), a share disproportionately higher than its population share reflects based on current national population distribution.
  • The proposed expansion of total Lok Sabha seats (to approximately 848 under some proposals) is intended to ensure no state loses absolute seat numbers even as relative shares shift — addressing the "no losses" political commitment.

Connection to this news: The clarification that Tamil Nadu's seat share will go up from 7% reflects the total-seat expansion approach, where all states retain or gain absolute seats even as relative population-based reapportionment occurs.

Fiscal Federalism — Centre-State Financial Relations

Fiscal federalism refers to the constitutional and institutional framework governing the distribution of financial resources and fiscal powers between the Union and state governments in India. It encompasses tax devolution, grants-in-aid, borrowing limits, and the Finance Commission's role.

  • Article 280 of the Constitution mandates the constitution of a Finance Commission every five years to recommend the distribution of central taxes between the Union and states, and grants-in-aid to states. The 16th Finance Commission (2026–31) is currently in its consultation phase.
  • The Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act, 2003 sets fiscal discipline targets for the Union government; states have enacted corresponding state FRBM Acts (Tamil Nadu enacted its Fiscal Responsibility Act in 2003).
  • The FRBM Review Committee (N.K. Singh Committee, 2017) recommended a state debt-to-GSDP ceiling of 20% for states, to be achieved by 2023. In 2024–25, average state borrowings stand at approximately 27.2% of GSDP, indicating most states have exceeded this target.
  • Tamil Nadu's debt-to-GSDP ratio has remained elevated — a consequence of welfare expenditure commitments, post-COVID recovery spending, and infrastructure investment — placing the state in a structurally constrained fiscal position.
  • Southern states argue that the horizontal devolution formula (which currently assigns significant weight to demographic performance and forest area among other indicators) should not be diluted in ways that penalise states for population stabilisation.

Connection to this news: Southern states see a direct linkage between delimitation (political power) and fiscal federalism (resource allocation). Fewer seats mean reduced bargaining power in parliamentary negotiations over Finance Commission terms, centrally sponsored scheme funding, and resource allocation decisions — making delimitation a fiscal as well as political question.

Delimitation Commission Act and Process

The Delimitation Commission Act (most recently enacted in 2002) establishes the legal basis, composition, and procedure for delimitation exercises. The Commission is a high-powered statutory body whose orders have constitutional finality.

  • Composition: The Delimitation Commission consists of the Election Commission of India (ex officio), a retired Supreme Court judge (Chairperson), and the State Election Commissioner of the concerned state.
  • The Commission's orders are published in the Gazette of India and the Official Gazettes of concerned states — they take effect from a date specified by the President and are not subject to judicial review (Article 329 bars courts from questioning electoral arrangements made under the Delimitation Act).
  • Past delimitation exercises: 1952, 1963, 1973 (based on 1971 Census), and 2002–08 (internal constituency boundary changes only, seat numbers frozen under 84th Amendment).

Connection to this news: The 2026 constitutional bills and the associated Delimitation Bill represent the first substantive attempt to actually conduct a full delimitation since the 1970s, making the procedural and census-base choices consequential for decades of Indian political representation.

Key Facts & Data

  • Article 82 (Lok Sabha delimitation) and Article 170 (State Assembly delimitation) — both amended by the 84th Amendment, 2002
  • 84th Constitutional Amendment: froze delimitation until first census after 2026
  • Tamil Nadu current Lok Sabha seats: 39 out of 543 (~7.2% share)
  • Tamil Nadu projected seats under 2011 population data (current constituency size): ~32 seats (without total expansion)
  • 106th Constitutional Amendment, 2023: 33% women's reservation — operative only post-delimitation
  • 131st Constitutional Amendment Bill, 2026: proposes use of 2011 Census; voted down in Lok Sabha
  • FRBM Act, 2003 (Central); Tamil Nadu Fiscal Responsibility Act, 2003 (State)
  • NK Singh Committee (2017) recommended state debt-to-GSDP ceiling: 20%
  • Average state borrowings in 2024–25: ~27.2% of GSDP
  • 16th Finance Commission: covering 2026–31 award period
On this page
  1. What Happened
  2. Static Topic Bridges
  3. Delimitation — Constitutional Framework (Articles 82 and 170)
  4. The North-South Representation Asymmetry in Delimitation
  5. Fiscal Federalism — Centre-State Financial Relations
  6. Delimitation Commission Act and Process
  7. Key Facts & Data
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