Govt. sends feelers to Opposition on women’s quota Act implementation

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UPSC Study Note: Women's Quota Act — Government Reaches Out to Opposition on Implementation


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1974 Committee on the Status of Women in India recommends political reservation for women.
1992–93 73rd & 74th Constitutional Amendments mandate 33% reservation for women in Panchayats and Urban Local Bodies — the successful precedent.
1996 First Women's Reservation Bill introduced (81st Amendment Bill) — lapsed in Lok Sabha.
1998–2003 Bills reintroduced in successive Lok Sabhas; never put to vote.
2008 Bill tabled in Rajya Sabha; passed RS in 2010 but never taken up in LS — lapsed with dissolution of 15th Lok Sabha.
September 19, 2023 Constitution (128th Amendment) Bill, 2023 introduced in Lok Sabha in a Special Session — first sitting in the new Parliament building. [S1]
September 20, 2023 Lok Sabha passes: 454 votes for, 2 against. [S4]
September 21, 2023 Rajya Sabha passes: 214 votes for, 0 against (unanimous). [S4]
September 29, 2023 Presidential assent — enacted as Constitution (One Hundred and Sixth Amendment) Act, 2023. [S1][S4]
December 2025 Cabinet approves Census timetable; delimitation timeline remains ambiguous. [S4]
April 2026 Delimitation Bills introduced to advance implementation. [S2]

4. Core Static Facts

The Act - Formal name: Constitution (One Hundred and Sixth Amendment) Act, 2023 - Popular name: Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam (NSVA) - Original Bill number: Constitution (128th Amendment) Bill, 2023 [S1] - Reservation quantum: One-third (33%) of total seats in: Lok Sabha, State Legislative Assemblies, Delhi Legislative Assembly - Sub-reservation: One-third of the 33% reserved for SC/ST women within existing SC/ST reserved constituencies

Constitutional Provisions - Inserts Articles 330A (reservation in Lok Sabha), 332A (State Assemblies), 334A (sunset clause — reservation ceases after 15 years) - Section 5 of the Act: Reservation comes into effect only "after an exercise of delimitation is undertaken … after the relevant figures for the first Census taken after commencement of Act" [S1][S4]

Implementing Ministry - Ministry of Law & Justice (legislative drafting) - Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs (floor management) — Minister: Kiren Rijiju [S4] - Delimitation: Ministry of Home Affairs / Election Commission of India [S2]

Key Numbers - Lok Sabha seats presently: 543 → ~181 seats would be reserved for women - Rajya Sabha: excluded from the Act's ambit - Duration of reservation: 15 years from commencement (sunset clause under Article 334A) - Rotation of reserved constituencies: every delimitation exercise


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Political / Governance

Social

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Constitution (One Hundred and Sixth Amendment) Act, 2023 is also known as the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam. [S1]
  2. The Women's Reservation Bill was originally introduced in the 18th Lok Sabha's Special Session — the first sitting in the new Parliament building (September 2023). [S4]
  3. Lok Sabha passed it with 454 votes for and 2 against; Rajya Sabha passed it unanimously with 214 votes. [S4]
  4. Reservation quantum: one-third (33%) of total seats — applies to Lok Sabha, State Assemblies, and Delhi Assembly; excludes Rajya Sabha. [S1]
  5. The sunset clause under the Act prescribes cessation of reservation after 15 years from commencement. [S1]
  6. Implementation is triggered by Section 5: reservation applies only after delimitation conducted using data from the first Census post-enactment. [S1][S4]
  7. The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026 proposes removing the Census-first precondition and using 2011 Census data for delimitation instead. [S2]
  8. Delimitation Commission orders are non-justiciable — they cannot be challenged in any court (Article 329). [S2]
  9. The precedent for women's reservation at grassroots level: 73rd and 74th Constitutional Amendments, 1992–93 (Panchayats and Urban Local Bodies). [S1]
  10. The three 2026 Bills were introduced in Lok Sabha on April 16, 2026 to operationalise the women's quota. [S2]
  11. The Union Cabinet approved the Census timetable on December 12, 2025 — houselisting (April–September 2026), enumeration (February 2027). [S4]
  12. One-third of the reserved seats for women will be from constituencies already reserved for SCs and STs. [S1]
  13. The implementing nodal ministry for delimitation is Ministry of Home Affairs / Election Commission of India — not the Ministry of Women and Child Development. [S2]
  14. Rotation of reserved seats occurs at every delimitation — not every election — to distribute benefits across constituencies over time. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping: - GS-II: Indian Polity — Constitutional Amendments, Parliament, Representation of Marginalized Groups, Federal Structure - GS-I: Indian Society — Women's Empowerment, Social Justice

Syllabus headings: - "Salient features of the Representation of People's Act" (GS-II) - "Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population" (GS-II) - "Role of women and women's organisation" (GS-I)

Plausible Mains questions: 1. "The Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023 is a landmark legislation but its implementation is contingent on preconditions that render it distant from immediate operationalisation. Critically analyse." (GS-II) 2. "The 73rd and 74th Constitutional Amendments provided a tested template for women's political reservation. Can the same model be successfully scaled to Parliament? Discuss the opportunities and structural challenges." (GS-I / GS-II) 3. "Using the 2011 Census for delimitation to fast-track women's reservation raises concerns about federal equity. Examine the tension between representative urgency and demographic accuracy." (GS-II)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
73rd & 74th Constitutional Amendments The original women's reservation precedent at Panchayat/ULB level — the model NSVA seeks to replicate upward
Delimitation Commission of India The body whose constitution and functioning directly unlocks NSVA implementation; powers, composition, non-justiciability
Census of India — Organisation and Process NSVA's Section 5 trigger is Census-dependent; understanding enumeration phases, reference date, Registrar General's role
Article 368 — Constitutional Amendment Procedure Any timeline change requires a special majority; some argue state ratification may be needed
Electoral Reforms in India Broader context: NOTA, EVMs, simultaneous elections, anti-defection — situates women's quota debates
OBC Sub-quota Demand within Women's Reservation Recurrent political fault line; parties demand separate sub-reservation for OBC women within the 33%
Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) Gender Data Provides benchmarks on global women's political participation for answer enrichment
Representation of the People Act, 1950 & 1951 Governs delimitation and elections; interplay with the new Delimitation Bill, 2026

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong amendment number: The Act is the 106th Amendment to the Constitution; the original Bill was called the 128th Amendment Bill (bills are numbered differently from enacted amendments). Do not confuse them. [S1]
  2. Rajya Sabha inclusion myth: The reservation applies only to directly elected bodies — Lok Sabha, State Assemblies, Delhi Assembly. Rajya Sabha and State Legislative Councils are excluded.
  3. Immediate applicability assumption: Many aspirants assume the Act is already in force. It is not yet operative — Section 5 makes it contingent on Census + Delimitation. [S1][S4]
  4. Wrong implementing ministry: Delimitation (the key trigger) is handled by the Election Commission / MHA, not by the Ministry of Women and Child Development.
  5. Conflating the 15-year sunset with tenure: The 15-year limit applies to the reservation regime itself (Article 334A), not to any individual MP's tenure. After 15 years, Parliament must re-enact if reservation is to continue.
  6. Census phases confusion: The 2025-cleared Census has two phases — houselisting (2026) and population enumeration (2027) — not one single exercise; the Section 5 trigger requires publication of final figures, further delaying implementation.

11. Sources


Note: All facts from [S4] are sourced from the newspaper article excerpt provided as the primary fallback source. Facts from [S1]–[S3] are independently verified from Tier 1 (PIB/PRS India) search results.