Centre Assures Seat Increase Without Changing State Representation

Centre Assures Seat Increase Without Changing State Representation

Why in the News ?

The Centre has clarified that after delimitation, all States will see a 50% increase in Lok Sabha seats without losing their proportional representation, addressing concerns over redistribution based on the latest Census figures.

Centre’s Assurance on Delimitation and Seat Increase:

  • The Union government stated that all States will gain around 50% more Lok Sabha seats after delimitation.
  • It assured that no State will lose its current proportional strength in Parliament.
  • The clarification comes amid debate on the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill and the Delimitation Bill.
  • Union Home Minister Amit Shah is expected to elaborate on this in Parliament.
  • For example, Tamil Nadu’s seats may rise from 39 to 58, and Kerala’s from 20 to 30.
  • The government emphasised that the aim is expansion, not redistribution at the cost of any State.

Concerns, Debate, and Clarifications

  • Earlier draft proposals had raised concerns about inter-State redistribution of seats based on 2011 Census data.
  • Southern States feared loss of relative representation due to better population control measures.
  • Critics pointed out that the draft Bills did not explicitly mention the 50% proportional increase assurance.
  • Government officials termed these concerns as a “misreading” of the proposals.
  • It was clarified that details of the mechanism will be explained during parliamentary debate.
  • The issue remains politically sensitive, involving questions of federal balance and representation fairness.

About Delimitation in India:

  Delimitation refers to redrawing constituencies and reallocating seats based on population changes.

  Governed by Articles 81 and 82 of the Constitution.

  Conducted by the Delimitation Commission, an independent authority.

  Seat allocation was frozen based on the 1971 Census to promote population stabilisation.

  The next delimitation is expected after the first Census post-2026.

  It ensures the principle of “one person, one vote” while balancing regional representation.