NEW DELHI: India´s government was seeking to expand the size of parliament by two-fifths to increase representation of women lawmakers, but opposition parties have cried foul, saying it would benefit the ruling party.
“We´re set to take historic steps to empower women,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi said, ahead of the special sitting of parliament on Thursday, to debate constitutional amendments to both expand seats for women and the overall size of parliament to over 800. The bill proposes fast-tracking implementation of a 2023 law in the world´s largest democracy of 1.4 billion people, reserving 33 per cent of seats for women.
Increasing the number of women in parliament has, in principle, broad cross-party support.
“We are all united to give rightful positions to women in India,” Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju said on Thursday.
Women currently account for just 14 per cent of India´s 543 members of the Lok Sabha, the lower house of parliament. To achieve the expansion, the government said it plans to redraw parliamentary boundaries based on population, a move that would increase the number of seats by nearly 40 per cent to more than 800.
Modi´s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) draws much of its support from the densely populated north, and critics say expanding seats in parliament would therefore benefit it the most.
Opposition parties, which control states in southern India where the population is lower, fear they would lose overall power in parliament.
Opposition leader Rahul Gandhi said that while his Congress party supports increasing the number of women in parliament, the government´s approach is aimed at consolidating power.
“The proposal that the government is now bringing has no connection to women´s reservation,” Gandhi said, in a statement on social media.