Fast-tracking Bill on women’s quota may influence U.P. polls
Fast-tracking the Women's Reservation Bill & U.P. Elections
UPSC Study Note — GS-II (Polity & Governance)
1. At a Glance
- The Constitution (One Hundred and Sixth Amendment) Act, 2023 — officially titled Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam — reserves 33% of seats in the Lok Sabha, State Legislative Assemblies, and the Delhi Legislative Assembly for women. [S1]
- Implementation is contingent on two prior events: (i) the next Census after the Act's commencement, and (ii) the subsequent Delimitation exercise — creating a potentially decade-long lag before any seats are actually reserved. [S1][S3]
- The government's reported outreach to Opposition leaders in early 2026 to "advance the timeline" is a politically charged move because the 2027 Uttar Pradesh Assembly elections loom large. [S4]
- UPSC aspirants must track this topic across GS-II (constitutional amendments, women's political representation) and Essay papers (gender equity, democracy).
2. Why in the News
- March 2026: The central government began informal pre-legislative consultations with Opposition leaders about amending the 2023 Act to decouple implementation from the census/delimitation trigger, potentially fast-tracking women's reservation. [S4]
- The move is seen as strategically timed — Uttar Pradesh (403-seat Assembly) goes to polls in 2027, and the BJP faces a challenging contest: it fell from 312 seats in 2017 to 255 seats in 2022, and Samajwadi Party leads in an estimated 178 segments if 2024 Lok Sabha votes are mapped to Assembly constituencies. [S4]
- The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026 (Delimitation Bills of 2026) is simultaneously in Parliament, adding complexity to the implementation roadmap. [S3]
- Only about 14% of MPs in the 18th Lok Sabha are women, underscoring the urgency of the debate. [S4]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1996 | First Women's Reservation Bill introduced in Lok Sabha (11th Parliament); lapsed. |
| 1998–2003 | Re-introduced thrice; blocked/lapsed repeatedly. |
| 2010 | Passed by Rajya Sabha (186–1); never put to vote in Lok Sabha. |
| Sep 2023 | Constitution (128th Amendment) Bill, 2023 introduced in Lok Sabha; passed 454–2. [S2] |
| Sep 2023 | Passed by Rajya Sabha unanimously. [S1] |
| Sep 2023 | Received Presidential assent; enacted as the Constitution (One Hundred and Sixth Amendment) Act, 2023 — Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam. [S1] |
| 2024 | Census (deferred from 2021) still not conducted; delimitation therefore cannot begin; reservation remains unimplemented. |
| Mar 2026 | Government floats idea of amending the Act to advance the trigger mechanism. [S4] |
Note on numbering: The Bill was introduced as the 128th Amendment Bill but enacted as the 106th Amendment Act — a common exam trap (see §10).
4. Core Static Facts
- Formal name of the Act: Constitution (One Hundred and Sixth Amendment) Act, 2023 [S1]
- Popular name: Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam [S1]
- Reservation quantum: 33% (one-third) of total seats, including seats already reserved for SC/ST (i.e., one-third of the SC/ST quota also goes to women) [S1][S2]
- Scope: Lok Sabha + all State Legislative Assemblies + Delhi Legislative Assembly [S1]
- Rotation: Reserved seats shall rotate after each delimitation [S2]
- Trigger condition: Reservation becomes operative only after (a) first Census post commencement, and (b) subsequent Delimitation [S1]
- Rajya Sabha / State Legislative Councils: NOT covered — upper houses excluded [S2]
- Duration: 15 years initially (sunset clause); extendable by Parliament [S2]
- OBC sub-quota: Not included; the Act does not carve out a separate OBC women's quota (contentious issue) [S2]
- Lok Sabha vote: 454 in favour, 2 against [S1]
- Ministry responsible: Ministry of Law & Justice (legislative drafting); Ministry of Women & Child Development (political champion)
- Current women MPs (18th Lok Sabha): ~14% [S4]
- Enabling constitutional provision: New Article 330A (Lok Sabha) and Article 332A (State Assemblies) inserted by the Act [S2]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Social
- Women's share in elected legislatures has historically been among the lowest in South Asia; the Act addresses this democratic deficit structurally. [S1]
- Low female representation at 14% in the 18th Lok Sabha demonstrates the failure of voluntary/party-driven mechanisms to achieve parity. [S4]
- The Act does not address OBC women, estimated at ~40% of the female population, leaving a representation gap that is politically contested.
Legal / Constitutional
- Inserts Articles 330A and 332A into the Constitution; falls under Part XV (Elections). [S2]
- Requires a Special Majority (2/3 of members present and voting + majority of total membership in each House) — procedural threshold met in both Houses. [S1]
- The census-delimitation trigger is a statutory condition precedent embedded in the Act itself, requiring legislative amendment to alter — hence the government's current consultations. [S4]
- The 131st Amendment Bill, 2026 (Delimitation) running in parallel may interact with implementation timelines. [S3]
Political / Governance
- The BJP's U.P. strategic calculus: a third term requires reversing the slide from 312 → 255 seats; fast-tracking the Bill creates a narrative of women's empowerment ahead of 2027. [S4]
- The "element of surprise" in timing: if seats to be reserved for women are notified close to elections, Opposition parties cannot finalise candidates for those constituencies — disrupting their campaign planning. [S4]
- Internal BJP tensions: In January 2026, a BJP MLA from Charkhari publicly protested against the State Water Minister — unusual dissent that signals pressure on the party. [S4]
- Uttar Pradesh's Assembly has historically had low female representation — the reservation could structurally transform composition of India's largest state legislature. [S4]
Historical
- The women's reservation debate spans 30 years (1996–2026), making it one of India's longest-running legislative campaigns.
- Earlier Bills failed due to resistance over the absence of an OBC sub-quota and opposition from regional parties protecting caste-based seat calculations.
- The 2023 Act's passage during a special session of Parliament (convened partly for this purpose) is historically notable.
Administrative
- Census delay (originally due 2021, still pending as of 2026) is the primary implementation bottleneck; without census data, delimitation cannot begin under the Delimitation Act, 2002.
- Delimitation exercises are conducted by the Delimitation Commission constituted under the Delimitation Act, 2002, chaired by a retired Supreme Court judge.
- Any amendment to delink implementation from the census trigger would require fresh constitutional amendment — not a simple executive order.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- September 2024: 18th Lok Sabha constituted post general elections; women's share remains ~14% with no reserved seats yet operational. [S4]
- 2025: Census exercise still pending; delimitation frozen; reservation implementation window pushed further.
- January 2026: BJP MLA from Charkhari, U.P., publicly protests against State Water Minister — symptom of intra-party stress ahead of 2027 polls. [S4]
- March 2026: Central government initiates informal consultations with Opposition leaders on amending the 2023 Act to advance the implementation timeline; framed as "pre-legislative consultation." [S4]
- 2026: The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026 and the Delimitation Bill, 2026 introduced in Parliament — linked procedurally to women's reservation implementation. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam is formally the Constitution (One Hundred and Sixth Amendment) Act, 2023 — it was introduced as the 128th Amendment Bill but enacted as the 106th Amendment Act. [S1][S2]
- The Act reserves one-third (33%) of seats in the Lok Sabha, State Assemblies, and the Delhi Legislative Assembly — but NOT Rajya Sabha or State Legislative Councils. [S1]
- In Lok Sabha, the Bill was passed with 454 votes in favour and 2 against; in Rajya Sabha it was passed unanimously. [S1]
- The reservation will be rotated after each delimitation exercise (not fixed to the same constituencies permanently). [S2]
- The Act has a sunset clause of 15 years, extendable by Parliament. [S2]
- Implementation is triggered only after the first Census post-commencement of the Act, followed by delimitation — both still pending as of 2026. [S1]
- The Act inserts new Articles 330A (Lok Sabha women's reservation) and 332A (State Assemblies) into the Constitution. [S2]
- The Act does not include a separate sub-quota for OBC women. [S2]
- Women comprise only ~14% of MPs in the 18th Lok Sabha (elected 2024). [S4]
- The special session of Parliament in September 2023 was convened partly to pass this legislation.
- The Delimitation Commission is constituted under the Delimitation Act, 2002 and is chaired by a retired Supreme Court judge.
- U.P. Assembly has 403 seats; BJP won 312 in 2017, fell to 255 in 2022. [S4]
- Seven States hold elections in 2027, of which four are BJP-ruled — the fast-tracking debate is directly linked to this electoral cycle. [S4]
- The Samajwadi Party, if 2024 Lok Sabha votes are mapped to Assembly segments, leads in 178 U.P. Assembly seats. [S4]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II (Polity, Constitution, Governance, Social Justice) Also relevant: GS-I (Role of Women, Social Empowerment); Essay
Syllabus headings: - Significant provisions of the Constitution and their application - Parliament and State Legislatures — structure, functioning, conduct of business - Representation of minorities and women in governance - Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector / Services (Women)
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023, while historic, contains implementation triggers that may render it a 'paper reform' for the foreseeable future. Critically evaluate." 2. "Examine the constitutional and procedural challenges in implementing the women's reservation law in India. What reforms could expedite its operationalisation?" 3. "How does the linkage between Census, Delimitation, and women's political reservation reflect the tension between democratic representation and administrative capacity in India?"
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Delimitation Commission & Process | Directly gates implementation of women's reservation; the 2026 Delimitation Bill is a live legislative development. |
| Census of India — History & Delays | The 2021 Census delay is the proximate cause of the reservation's non-implementation. |
| 73rd & 74th Constitutional Amendments | Already operationalised 33% (now 50% in many states) women's reservation in local bodies — a working model to compare. |
| Representation of the People Act, 1951 | Governs elections; delimitation and reservation of seats are inter-linked with its provisions. |
| OBC Political Representation | Contentious debate over why OBC sub-quota was not included; links to Mandal Commission legacy. |
| State Assemblies — Composition & Elections (U.P. 2027) | The political context driving fast-tracking; understand first-past-the-post implications. |
| Electoral Reforms in India | Broader context: NOTA, simultaneous elections, EVM debates — all link to structural reform of democratic participation. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Bill number vs. Act number: The Bill was introduced as the 128th Amendment Bill but enacted as the 106th Amendment Act. Confusing the two is the most common MCQ trap. [S1][S2]
- Scope confusion: The Act covers the Lok Sabha, State Assemblies, and Delhi Legislative Assembly — but NOT the Rajya Sabha, State Legislative Councils, or Union Territory legislatures other than Delhi.
- Immediate vs. conditional implementation: Many aspirants assume the reservation is already in force. It is NOT — it requires Census + Delimitation first.
- OBC sub-quota: The Act does not include a separate quota for OBC women; confusing this with the 73rd/74th Amendment (which many states have extended to OBC women in local bodies) is a frequent error.
- Sunset clause duration: The reservation is for 15 years (not permanent, not indefinite) — extendable by Parliament. Do not confuse with the SC/ST reservation (which has also been extended periodically but under a different mechanism).
11. Sources
- [S1] "Government adopts comprehensive strategy for Women's Empowerment, focusing on Political Participation and Local Governance" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2112762 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] "Women's Reservation Bill 2023 — The Constitution (128th Amendment) Bill, 2023" — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-constitution-one-hundred-twenty-eighth-amendment-bill-2023 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] "The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026 [Delimitation Bills of 2026]" — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-constitution-131st-amendment-bill-2026 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "Fast-tracking Bill on women's quota may influence U.P. polls" — The Hindu, 11 March 2026 (Article excerpt supplied as primary source) — (Tier 4)