To hike Lok Sabha strength, Government works on more clarity; eyes South, DMK support
Following the defeat of the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill in April 2026, the government is working to build broader political support for a revised app...
What Happened
- Following the defeat of the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill in April 2026, the government is working to build broader political support for a revised approach — focused on providing explicit constitutional guarantees to southern States that their seat count will not decrease even after delimitation.
- The strategy involves seeking support from the DMK (which has been among the most vocal opponents) and other southern parties by offering clarity on how the seat-expansion formula would work in practice.
- The government's emerging position appears to be that a net expansion of total Lok Sabha seats to approximately 850 will protect existing southern seat counts — southern States would retain their current seats, with gains accruing proportionally, thereby insulating them from representation loss.
- Behind-the-scenes outreach to DMK MPs and leaders has intensified, with the government signalling openness to including protective provisions or a floor guarantee within the bill itself.
- The bill is expected to be reintroduced in the Monsoon Session (third week of July 2026), contingent on sufficient coalition-building across party and regional lines.
Static Topic Bridges
Article 81 — Composition of the House of the People
Article 81 of the Constitution specifies the maximum composition of the Lok Sabha. It provides that the total number of elected seats shall not exceed 550 (increased from 500 by the 42nd Amendment), with allocation to each State determined on the basis of population.
- Article 81(1)(a): The number of seats allotted to each State in the House of the People shall be determined so that the ratio between the number of seats and the population of the State is, so far as practicable, the same for all States.
- Article 81(3) (as amended by the 84th Amendment): Sustains the 1971-census freeze until the census after 2026 is published.
- Expanding the Lok Sabha beyond the constitutional maximum requires a constitutional amendment (under Article 368) — hence the need for the 131st Amendment Bill.
- Proposed strength post-amendment: approximately 850 seats.
Connection to this news: The government's guarantee to southern States is precisely about how Article 81's proportionality principle will operate in an expanded House — ensuring the proportionality formula does not punish States that controlled population.
Article 55 — Manner of Election of President (Proportionality Principle)
Article 55(2) provides that the number of votes each elected Member of Parliament and each elected Member of the State Legislative Assembly is entitled to cast is determined by a formula that maintains parity between the elected wings of the electoral college.
- The formula ensures that total Lok Sabha votes (MPs × value per MP) is proportional to total State Assembly votes (MLAs × value per MLA).
- Expanding Lok Sabha seats changes the relative weight of each MP's vote in Presidential elections.
- Any such change must preserve the federal compact between the Union and States in Presidential election arithmetic.
Connection to this news: Delimitation and seat expansion have downstream constitutional effects on Article 55 calculations, meaning southern State Chief Ministers have an additional institutional reason to be concerned about their States' overall weight in the presidential electoral college.
The Delimitation Commission
The Delimitation Commission is a statutory body constituted under the Delimitation Act (currently the Delimitation Act, 2002). It is chaired by a retired Supreme Court judge and works in coordination with the Election Commission of India.
- The Commission's orders have the force of law and cannot be challenged in any court (Article 329(a) of the Constitution).
- Previous Delimitation Commissions: 1952, 1963, 1973, and 2002 (last operational commission, which redrew boundaries using 2001 census data).
- The proposed Delimitation Bill, 2026 (a statutory companion to the 131st Amendment Bill) would constitute a new commission to conduct delimitation using 2011 Census data.
- The 2002 Commission froze boundary changes for SCs and STs based on 1971 population data but redrew constituency boundaries based on 2001 data.
Connection to this news: The government's outreach to southern parties is also an attempt to shape the political consensus around the Delimitation Commission's mandate — specifically, its mandate to allocate the additional seats in a manner that preserves southern States' representation share.
Cooperative Federalism and Inter-State Equity
The Constitution envisions India as a Union of States (Preamble, Article 1) with federal features including separate legislative domains (Schedule 7), independent State finances, and proportional representation. The delimitation debate has renewed attention on the tension between parliamentary democracy's majoritarian logic (seats proportional to population) and federal equity (protecting smaller or slower-growing units).
- The 42nd and 84th Amendments reflected a political consensus that population-based seat allocation should not disincentivise demographic stabilisation — a form of positive federalism.
- Southern states (Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana) have had TFRs at or below replacement level (2.1) for over two decades, while several northern states continue at higher TFRs.
- The proposed seat increase from 543 to 850 is framed as avoiding zero-sum redistribution, but any proportional allocation still shifts the balance if northern States grow fastest.
Connection to this news: The government's strategy of seeking DMK support by offering "clarity" reflects the constitutional challenge of reconciling population-based representation (Article 81) with the federal principle of equitable State weight — the core of the southern States' grievance.
Key Facts & Data
- Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill vote result (April 17, 2026): 298 for, 230 against; required 352 (two-thirds of 528).
- Proposed Lok Sabha expansion: 543 seats → approximately 850 seats.
- Delimitation basis proposed: 2011 Census.
- Southern States' current seats: approximately 129 across Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, and Telangana.
- Projected southern seat count under population-proportional delimitation (543-seat base): approximately 103.
- Tamil Nadu: currently 39 seats; projected 31 seats under pure proportionality.
- North Indian gain: UP, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan together projected to gain approximately 22 additional seats.
- DMK holds 22 Lok Sabha seats (2024 election result) — a significant bloc for any two-thirds majority calculation.
- Monsoon Session target: third week of July 2026.
- Last Delimitation Commission: 2002 (boundaries redrawn using 2001 Census; seat totals kept frozen at 1971 levels).