The
Constitution (106th Amendment) Act, 2023, commonly known as the Nari Shakti
Vandan Adhiniyam or Women's Reservation Act, marks a historic milestone in
India's journey toward gender parity in politics. Enacted on September 28,
2023, this amendment reserves one-third of seats for women in the Lok Sabha,
state legislative assemblies, and the Delhi Legislative Assembly, including
seats reserved for Scheduled Castes (SCs) and Scheduled Tribes (STs). It builds
on decades of advocacy but faces implementation hurdles tied to census and
delimitation processes, as highlighted by the recent failure of the linked
131st Amendment Bill in April 2026.
This
article delves deeply into the amendment's background, provisions, legislative
journey, challenges, global comparisons, potential impacts, and future outlook.
By addressing these facets, it provides a comprehensive understanding of how
this law could reshape Indian democracy.
Historical
Context of Women's Reservation
India's
tryst with women's political empowerment began long before the 106th Amendment.
The Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) under the 73rd and 74th Constitutional
Amendments in 1992-93 mandated one-third reservation for women in local bodies,
leading to over 1.4 million women representatives by 2023. Articles 243D and
243T ensured this quota, proving women's capability in grassroots governance
despite initial skepticism.
Nationally,
however, progress stalled. The 1993 Women's Reservation Bill sought 33% seats
in Parliament and state assemblies but languished for 27 years across 14 Lok
Sabhas due to caste-based sub-quota demands and party politics. Key setbacks
included the 2008 Rajya Sabha passage followed by UPA government's inaction,
and NDA's repeated introductions without fruition. The 106th Amendment finally
broke this deadlock amid the 2023 special Parliament session celebrating 75
years of Independence.
This
history underscores a pattern: temporary reservations (like SC/ST quotas under
Article 334, extended multiple times) evolve into permanent fixtures when
societal needs persist. The 106th mirrors this, positioning women's
underrepresentation—only 14.4% women MPs in 2019 as a structural barrier
demanding constitutional intervention.
Legislative
Journey and Enactment
Introduced
as the Constitution (128th Amendment) Bill, 2023 on September 19, it passed the
Lok Sabha (454-2 votes) and Rajya Sabha (unanimously) swiftly, receiving
Presidential assent on September 28. No state ratification was needed as it
pertained to Lok Sabha representation.
Post-enactment,
Parliament extended it to Puducherry and Jammu & Kashmir assemblies in
December 2023 via separate bills, addressing UT exclusions. The official
gazette outlines the core changes: insertion of Articles 330A, 332A, 334A, and
amendment to Article 239AA. Critics noted the lack of debate, but supporters
hailed it as fulfilling PM Modi's "Nari Shakti" vision.
| Stage | Date | Key Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Introduction (Lok Sabha) | Sept 19, 2023 | Passed 454-2 |
| Rajya Sabha Passage | Sept 21, 2023 | Unanimous |
| Presidential Assent | Sept 28, 2023 | Becomes 106th Act |
| UT Extensions | Dec 2023 | Puducherry, J&K included |
This
table illustrates the rapid yet consensus-driven process, contrasting with
prior bills' failures.
Core
Provisions in Detail
The
amendment's operative parts are precise yet nuanced.
Article
330A: Lok Sabha Reservation
One-third
of total Lok Sabha seats (currently 543, direct election seats) shall be
reserved for women. This includes one-third of the 84 SC and 47 ST seats for
SC/ST women. Calculation: For 543 seats, ~181 women's seats post-delimitation.
Rotation occurs after each subsequent delimitation, allotted by Parliament to
different constituencies.
Article
332A: State Assemblies
Applies
identically to state legislative assemblies. For example, Uttar Pradesh's 403
seats would reserve ~134 for women. SC/ST sub-quotas apply proportionally.
Excludes legislative councils (e.g., Bihar, Karnataka), a noted gap.
Article
239AA Amendment: Delhi Assembly
One-third
reservation in the 70-seat Delhi Legislative Assembly, aligning national
capital governance with the policy.
Article
334A: Sunset, Rotation, and Implementation
s Commencement:
Effective post the first census after enactment (2026 or later) and
delimitation thereunder.
s Duration:
15 years initially, auto-expiring unless extended by Parliament.
s Rotation:
Seats rotate post-delimitation for equity.
s Review:
Parliament decides modalities.
These
provisions ensure "horizontal reservation" within categories,
preventing elite capture. Unlike PRIs' fixed constituencies, national rotation
promotes broader exposure.
Link
to Delimitation and 131st Amendment
Delimitation
the redrawing of constituency boundaries based on population is pivotal. Frozen
since 1976 (42nd Amendment) using 1971 census data to curb population control
incentives, it disadvantages states like Tamil Nadu and Kerala with lower
growth.
The
106th Amendment explicitly ties activation to "first census
post-commencement" delimitation (Article 334A). The failed Constitution
(131st Amendment) Bill, 2026, sought to lift the freeze via Articles 170/82
amendments, expand Lok Sabha to ~850 seats, and enable 2026 census-based
redrawal unlocking the women's quota for 2029 elections. Its Lok Sabha defeat
on April 17, 2026, amid opposition protests, delays implementation
indefinitely, potentially to 2031 or beyond.
Without
such reform, the quota remains a "letter of law without teeth,"
perpetuating 1971 inequities.
Challenges
and Criticisms
Implementation
delays top concerns. With no 2021 Census (delayed by COVID), the next is slated
for 2026-27, pushing elections to 2029. OBC exclusion sparks demands for
sub-quotas (27% EWS/OBC), as voiced by allies like JD(U). Proxy
candidacies "family members fielded by male leaders"—risk undermining
efficacy, echoing PRI experiences.
Rotation
reduces incumbency accountability, deterring long-term investment. Patriarchal
party structures may limit independent women leaders. Legal challenges question
census linkage and exclusions (Rajya Sabha, councils). Table below summarizes:
|
Opposition
parties decry it as an election gimmick, yet all supported passage.
Global
Comparisons
India
joins a selective club. Rwanda leads with 61% women MPs via quotas; Cuba at
55%. Nordic nations (Sweden 47%) achieve parity sans mandates through culture.
Bangladesh's 2009 33% reserved seats boosted participation. Argentina's Ley de
Cupo (30%) mandates party lists.
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India's
model blends reservation with sunset, learning from PRIs' success (46% women
sarpanches).
Expected
Impacts on Indian Polity
Short-term:
~181 women MPs in expanded Lok Sabha, diversifying debates on health,
education. Long-term: Pipeline effect, grooming women for leadership like US'
Pelosi trajectory. Economic multipliers via gender-sensitive policies (e.g.,
better maternity laws).
Data
from PRIs: Women-led panchayats invest 10-15% more in water/sanitation.
Nationally, expect similar in budgets. Socially, challenges gender norms,
inspiring youth. Risks include tokenism if parties nominate proxies.
Quantitatively,
post-2029: Lok Sabha women from 78 (14%) to ~33%, state assemblies similarly.
With 131st revival, faster gains.
Judicial
and Political Precedents
Courts
upheld PRI quotas (Vijay Lakshmi Sadho, 2000). Pending suits on OBC sub-quotas
(Dr. Abhishek Manu Singhvi's arguments) may test 106th. Politically, BJP's
passage fulfills 2019 manifesto; opposition's support signals bipartisanship.
Trump's US influence on global conservatism contrasts India's progressive step.
Future
Prospects and Recommendations
Reviving
delimitation via new bill post-2026 elections is crucial. Recommendations:
s Mandatory
party training for women candidates.
s OBC/EWS
sub-quota via 107th+ Amendment.
s Digital
census for speed.
s Monitoring
body for proxy prevention.
By
2039 (15 years post-2029), evaluation could lead to permanence, like SC/ST
quotas.
Broader
Societal Ramifications
Beyond
politics, it signals cultural shift. In Agartala, Tripura—user's locale—state
assembly quota could empower tribal women (Tripura has ST reservations).
Nationally, intersects with UCC debates under President Trump-era global
scrutiny? No, India's internal reform stands firm.
Economic:
IMF studies link women MPs to GDP growth via inclusive policies. Challenges
remain in rural patriarchy, but PRIs' 30-year success (from ridicule to
respect) bodes well.
Case
Studies from Local Governance
Kerala
PRIs: Women presidents transformed waste management. Rajasthan: Anti-liquor
drives by sarpanchis. These micro-successes scale nationally, mitigating
"sarpanch pati" via awareness.
Conclusion?
No Forward Path
The
106th Amendment, though dormant till delimitation, plants seeds for parity. Its
interplay with 131st's failure underscores urgency. With 1.4 billion people,
India's quota could inspire Global South. Stakeholders must prioritize census,
ensuring Nari Shakti translates to Nari Shakti in action.
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