Why in the News?
India’s electoral framework is undergoing potential transformation through, delimitation based on population changes, expansion of Lok Sabha strength (543 to 850) and implementation of 33% women’s reservation. These reforms aim to restore representational parity but create inter-state asymmetry risks.
Why is delimitation being revisited after decades of freeze?
- Constitutional Mandate: Ensures periodic readjustment under Articles 81 and 82 based on Census.
- Frozen Representation: Maintained seat distribution since 1976, extended till 2026 via amendments.
- Political Sensitivity: Successive governments avoided redistribution due to interstate conflict (“kicking the can”).
- Demographic Change: Population growth uneven across regions, creating representational distortion.
What are the competing models of seat redistribution?
- Uniform Expansion Model (Scenario 1): Maintains interstate proportion while increasing seats by ~50%; ensures political stability but limits correction of imbalance.
- Population-Based Model (Scenario 2): Allocates seats strictly by 2011 population; ensures representational equity but disrupts federal balance.
- Policy Trade-off: Balances electoral fairness vs political acceptability.
How does delimitation address the ‘value of vote’ principle?
Delimitation addresses the “value of vote” principle by redrawing electoral boundaries to ensure that constituencies have roughly equal population sizes, giving each citizen’s vote equal weight. By readjusting seat allocations based on the latest census data, it corrects demographic disparities to uphold the core democratic tenet of “one person, one vote, one value”.
- Representation Inequality: Bihar MP represents ~25 lakh people vs Himachal MP ~17 lakh.
- Constitutional Principle: Upholds “one vote, one value” across constituencies.
- Corrective Mechanism: Reduces constituency size from ~22 lakh to ~14 lakh.
- Outcome: Ensures equal weight of citizen votes across regions.
Does population-based redistribution distort federal balance?
- North-South Divide: Northern states gain seats due to higher population growth.
- Southern Disadvantage: States like Tamil Nadu, Kerala risk reduced proportional influence.
- Political Power Shift: Concentrates legislative power in demographically larger states.
- Coalition Impact: Alters parliamentary arithmetic and bargaining dynamics.
Does delimitation create an incentive distortion in population policy?
Delimitation can create an incentive distortion in population policy by potentially rewarding regions with higher population growth and penalizing those that successfully implemented family planning. This phenomenon is often termed a “demographic penalty“.
- Population Control Success: Southern states achieved lower fertility rates.
- Reward Mechanism: Higher population states gain more seats.
- Policy Distortion: Penalises demographic governance efforts.
- Outcome Conflict: Undermines long-term population stabilisation goals.
What contradictions exist in the government’s approach?
- Expansion vs Redistribution Conflict: Increasing Lok Sabha seats to ~850 implies a need for fresh allocation, while maintaining existing interstate proportions prevents meaningful redistribution based on population.
- Equity vs Status Quo Tension: Delimitation aims to restore “one vote, one value”, but preserving current seat shares perpetuates existing representational inequalities.
- Reform vs Political Comfort: Structural reform requires correcting regional imbalances, whereas status quo assurance reflects political reluctance to disturb existing power equations.
- Population Principle vs Federal Sensitivity: Population-based allocation strengthens democratic fairness, but maintaining proportions prioritises federal stability-creating a policy deadlock.
- Outcome Ambiguity: Simultaneous pursuit of expansion and proportional stability lacks a clear operational formula, leading to uncertainty in implementation.
What role does Census play in delimitation and reservation?
- Operational Dependency: Delimitation linked to Census data.
- Delay Factor: Next Census expected ~2027.
- Reservation Impact: Women’s reservation implementation postponed.
- Administrative Constraint: Constitutional reform tied to data availability.
What are the implications for women’s political representation?
- Reservation Provision: 33% seats reserved in Lok Sabha and Assemblies.
- Deferred Realisation of Inclusion: Linkage with delimitation and Census postpones implementation, delaying actual political empowerment despite constitutional provision.
- Rotational System: Periodic change of reserved constituencies affects continuity.
- Power Redistribution within Parties: Reservation compels internal restructuring in party hierarchies, altering candidate pipelines and leadership dynamics.
- Outcome: Enhances inclusion but delays execution.
How does the issue reflect intra-state vs inter-state equity tensions?
- Internal Equalisation vs External Imbalance: Delimitation equalises constituency population within states but increases disparities in seat share across states.
- Electoral Fairness vs Federal Parity: Equal voters per MP improves fairness locally, while population-based allocation weakens parity among states.
- Local Gain vs National Shift: Smaller constituencies enhance local accountability but shift legislative power toward high-growth states.
- Correction vs Stability: Updating seats corrects representational distortion but disrupts the existing federal balance.
Does delimitation affect federal trust and political cohesion?
Delimitation significantly affects federal trust and political cohesion, particularly in “holding together” federations like India. While its technical goal is to ensure equal representation (“one person, one vote”), it often acts as a major source of political tension by altering the balance of power between regions with different population growth rates
- Regional Concerns: Delimitation based solely on population growth disadvantages states that have successfully implemented family planning (e.g., Southern Indian states) and rewards those with higher population growth (e.g., Northern Hindi-heartland states). This causes resentment, as progressive states fear losing political representation due to success in national objectives.
- Trust Deficit: Perception of bias in redistribution process.
- Cooperative Federalism: Risk of weakening consensus-based governance.
Impact on Political Cohesion
- Regional Divide: Delimitation can strengthen cultural, linguistic, and economic divisions, specifically exacerbating north-south disparities in India.
- Shift in Political Power: The projected shift in seats (e.g., southward to northward in India) threatens to create a “majority” in the parliament that is concentrated in specific linguistic and geographic regions, weakening the cohesiveness of a diverse nation.
- Risks to Unity: If a large segment of the federation perceives the process as unfair or a tool for centralizing power, it can lead to political unrest and undermine national unity.
What alternatives can balance equity and federalism?
Alternatives to balance equity and federalism in legislative representation and fiscal devolution aim to reconcile the principle of “one person, one vote” with the need to protect the political influence and financial viability of smaller or more developed states.
- Weighted Allocation Model: Moves beyond a strictly population-based model to include other performance indicators. This model integrates criteria like Total Fertility Rate (TFR), Human Development Index (HDI), and fiscal performance to ensure that states with successful population control or better development outcomes are not penalized.
- Dual Criteria System: Incorporates economic contribution alongside population numbers to determine resource sharing. The 16th Finance Commission in India, for example, introduced a 10% weightage for a state’s contribution to GDP to balance equity (assisting poorer states) with efficiency (rewarding states that drive economic growth).
- Cap Mechanism(Cap on Seat Shares): Limits the maximum seat share for any single state to prevent a few populous states from dominating the national legislature. This mechanism is used in other federal structures to maintain a balance of power, ensuring regional diversity in policy-making.
- Phased Redistribution (Gradualism): Implements changes to seat allocations slowly over time rather than all at once, allowing states to adapt to changes in their political weight without immediate, severe disruption.
- “Seat-Addition” Model: Increasing the total size of the legislature to add seats for under-represented states while ensuring no state loses its existing number of seats.
Conclusion
Delimitation and seat expansion aim to restore electoral equality, but risk disrupting federal balance and policy incentives. A calibrated approach must integrate population justice, governance performance, and cooperative federalism to ensure long-term institutional stability.
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2020] How far do you think cooperation, competition and confrontation have shaped the nature of federation in India? Cite some recent examples.
Linkage: Delimitation directly affects cooperative vs confrontational federalism by altering political power distribution among states. Seat redistribution and representation shifts can intensify Centre-State tensions, reflecting evolving federal dynamics in India.