Opposition making up drama to oppose women's reservation: Sanjay Jha

Published : Apr 16, 2026, 01:00 PM IST
Janata Dal (United) MP Sanjay Kumar Jha (Photo/ANI)

Synopsis

JD(U) MP Sanjay Kumar Jha slammed the opposition for creating 'drama' to oppose the women's reservation bill by objecting to the delimitation bill. He denied it would widen the North-South divide, asserting all states will see a 50% increase.

Opposition Creating 'Drama' to Stall Women's Quota: Jha

Janata Dal (United) MP Sanjay Kumar Jha on Thursday slammed the opposition for opposing the introduction of the Constitutional Amendment Bills, including the delimitation bill, and refuted their claims that this bill would widen the gap between South and North India. He accused the opposition of "making up drama" to oppose the women's reservation. "How can the gap between South and North India widen? There's a 50% increase going to happen in every state. I think they (the opposition) just want to oppose the Women's Reservation Bill, so they're making up all this drama," Jha told ANI.

"The Women's Reservation Bill was passed back in 2023 itself, so why are they opposing it now? Our party has supported it from the very beginning, Nitish Kumar has always been in favour of it," he added.

Bills Tabled Amid Opposition Protests

The amendment bills to operationalise the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam of 2023 were introduced in the Lok Sabha today, even as the Opposition pressed for a division against the move to introduce three Bills, instead of a voice vote.

Secretary General of the Lok Sabha Utpal Kumar Singh had explained the procedure of casting a 'AYES', 'NOES', or 'ABSTAIN' vote to obtain the division through their respective systems in the Lok Sabha. Lok Sabha speaker Om Birla initiated the division to move to introduce the Constitution (One Hundred and Thirty-First Amendment) Bill, 2026. The Opposition members in the Lok Sabha had pressed for a division against the move to introduce the bill. As per the final division, there were a total of 251 AYES and 185 NOES out of the total 333 votes.

Details of the Amendment Bills

The three key bills--The Constitution (One Hundred and Thirty-First Amendment) Bill, 2026, The Delimitation Bill, 2026, The Union Territories Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026--were introduced subsequently.

The Constitutional Amendment bill's implementation is tied to a population-based revision of constituencies based on the 2011 census. It proposes delimitation--a wider political overhaul--aiming to change the size and composition of state legislative assemblies and Lok Sabha.

The opposition to the proposed delimitation bill has been mounting for a long time and has escalated after the Centre's recent approval of draft amendment bills to operationalise the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023. The government plans to implement the women's reservation ahead of the 2029 General Elections by bringing in an amendment to the 2023 Act and a constitutional amendment to delink the delimitation process from the 2027 census. The government has proposed to increase the number of seats in the House to 850, with 815 seats proposed for the States and the remaining 35 for the Union Territories. The Lok Sabha has 543 seats at present. (ANI)

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Asianet Newsable English staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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