Centre moots inter-State redistribution of Lok Sabha seats based on 2011 Census
Govt circulates drafts of Constitution Amendment Bill and Delimitation Bill; If proposals are accepted, share of Lok Sabha seats of southern States will shrink; Bills propose increase in size of Lok Sabha to a maximum of 850 seats
360° Perspective Analysis
Deep-dive into Geography, Polity, Economy, History, Environment & Social dimensions — AI-powered, on-demand
Context
The Union government has proposed the and the Delimitation Bill to redistribute Lok Sabha seats among States based on the 2011 Census and implement 33% women's reservation. The drafts propose an inter-State redistribution of seats based on the 2011 Census, sparking major federal tensions as Southern states fear losing parliamentary representation due to their stabilized populations.
UPSC Perspectives
Polity
Under and of the Constitution, parliamentary seats are meant to be reallocated after every census to accurately reflect population changes, ensuring the democratic ideal of proportional representation. However, to incentivize family planning across all states, the of 1976 froze the state-wise allocation of Lok Sabha seats based on the 1971 Census. This freeze was later extended to 2026 by the under the Vajpayee government to ensure states were not penalized for controlling their populations. The newly proposed seeks to legally bypass this impending 2026 deadline by empowering Parliament to use the 2011 Census for immediate inter-state seat redistribution, raising the maximum Lok Sabha strength to 850. The accompanying legislation establishes a —typically headed by a sitting or retired Supreme Court judge alongside Election Commission officials. Orders passed by this statutory body are uniquely powerful; they have the force of law and cannot be challenged in any court. For UPSC aspirants, mastering the historical timeline of these constitutional freezes and the unchallengeable nature of the is critical for Prelims.
Governance
The primary stated objective of these new legislative drafts is to fast-track the implementation of the 33% quota for women in the Lok Sabha and State Assemblies. The landmark (106th Amendment Act, 2023) legally mandated this gender-based reservation but explicitly conditioned its practical rollout on the completion of the first census taken after 2023 and a subsequent delimitation exercise. Because the 2021 Census was heavily delayed and the new census cycle is significantly delayed, waiting for fresh demographic data would inevitably push women's reservation beyond the upcoming 2029 general elections. By amending the Constitution to allow the use of the already published 2011 Census figures, the government aims to bypass this multi-year procedural delay. The bills also lay down the framework mandating that the seats earmarked for women will be allotted on a rotational basis across different territorial constituencies to ensure equitable distribution of representation over time. Aspirants should closely analyze how complex structural electoral reforms—such as nationwide delimitation—are being legally intertwined with long-pending gender justice policies to force legislative action.
Federalism
The most contentious aspect of utilizing the 2011 Census for immediate delimitation is the severe threat it poses to cooperative federalism via the concept of a demographic penalty. Southern states such as Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and Andhra Pradesh strictly adhered to national population control policies over the past five decades, successfully stabilizing their demographic growth and improving human development indices. In stark contrast, Northern states in the Hindi heartland continued to experience massive population expansion. If parliamentary seats are strictly redistributed based on the 2011 population figures, the political weight of the Northern states will surge dramatically, while the relative parliamentary share of Southern states will shrink. This creates a profound governance paradox where progressive states are politically punished in the national legislature precisely for successfully achieving the Centre's socio-economic goals. UPSC Mains frequently tests the friction areas in Indian federalism; this impending delimitation debate serves as the ultimate contemporary case study of the tension between the core democratic principle of 'one person, one vote' and the federal necessity of equitable inter-state representation.