Modi pushes to get more women into Parliament

Modi pushes to get more women into Parliament
April 17, 2026

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Modi pushes to get more women into Parliament

New Delhi – India’s Parliament opened debate on Thursday on a landmark bill that would reserve one-third of all legislative seats for women, a move that could trigger a sweeping redrawing of voting boundaries and deepen political tensions across the world’s most populous democracy.

The bill, if passed, would fast-track a 2023 law mandating 33% reservation for women in Parliament and state legislatures. Political analysts describe it as one of the most consequential shifts in representation since India gained independence, with the potential to dramatically widen female participation in a system where women have long been sidelined.

Women currently occupy only about 14% of seats in the lower house of Parliament, despite India already requiring that one-third of seats be reserved for women in local governance structures.

The quota is, however, tied to a separate and contentious bill that would redraw voting boundaries, a process that could expand the number of seats in the lower house from 543 to approximately 850.

Although there appears to be broad bipartisan support for increasing women’s representation in Parliament, opposition parties have raised serious concerns over the proposed boundary changes, warning they could tilt the political scales in favour of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party.

Indian women lawmakers pose outside Parliament House before the start of the debate on a landmark bill to reserve one-third of seats for women, in New Delhi, India, Thursday, April 16, 2026. (AP Photo)

Both bills are being considered during a three-day special session of Parliament and will each require a two-thirds majority in both houses to pass. Modi’s ruling National Democratic Alliance holds 293 seats, while a two-thirds majority would require 360.

India joins several Asian nations, including its neighbours Nepal and Bangladesh, that have adopted similar quotas for women in national legislatures.

Women’s rights advocate Ranjana Kumari said the move would make India’s “democracy truly representative” and compel political parties to field more female candidates.

“(The) door is little open. Women will enter and fill the room slowly,” Kumari said.

For many young Indian women, the proposed change carries deep symbolic meaning. Pranita Gupta, a 23-year-old law graduate, said it would instil “a sense of confidence that we can participate in politics and we can be part of Parliament not only as an exception but as well as a norm.”

The rollout of the quota is linked to a population-based redrawing of electoral boundaries, using data from India’s last completed census conducted in 2011. Opposition parties warn that anchoring constituencies to population figures could shift political power toward faster-growing northern states, while reducing the parliamentary influence of southern regions that have recorded slower population growth but built stronger economies.

India’s Constitution requires that parliamentary seats be allocated according to population and revised after each census. Boundaries have not, however, been redrawn since the 1971 census, as successive governments delayed the process amid concerns over uneven population growth across the country.

Modi’s party rejected the criticism, insisting it would apply a uniform 50% increase in seats across all states to preserve proportional representation. The draft legislation does not, however, explicitly commit to this.

Addressing Parliament, Modi said the legislation is “not discriminatory” and “will not do injustice to anyone.”

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