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Democracy and federalism in the delimitation debate

Context : The delimitation debate involves a conflict between two principles:

  • Democracy: “One person, one vote, one value” — equal weight to each citizen’s vote.
    • Federalism: India is a Union of States — States must retain equitable power and identity regardless of population changes.

Relevance : GS 2(Polity , Constitution , Governance)

Legal & Constitutional Framework

  • Article 81(2) provides a two-step process for Lok Sabha seat allocation:
    • Step 1: Seats allocated among States based on population (Article 81(2)(a)).
    • Step 2: States divided internally into constituencies with roughly equal population (Article 81(2)(b)).
  • Both clauses include so far as practicable”, allowing for flexibility and political accommodation.

84th and 87th Constitutional Amendments (2001, 2003)

  • Apportionment between States frozen based on 1971 Census (to reward population control).
  • Delimitation within States done using 2001 Census.
  • Delimitation Commission (2002) recommendations implemented in 2008.
  • Next inter-State redistribution deferred until after first Census post-2026, per 84th Amendment.

Unequal Vote Values Across States

  • Due to freeze and population changes, voter representation per MP has become unequal.
  • In 1967: MPs represented ~4.2–5.3 lakh electors across States (more equal).
  • In 2024:
    • Kerala MP: 13.9 lakh electors.
    • UP/Bihar MP: 19.3 lakh electors.
    • Rajasthan MP: 21.4 lakh electors.

Vote Value Disparity – Explained

  • National median = 1 vote value.
  • If MP has double the population of median: vote value = 0.5.
  • If MP has half the population: vote value = 2.
  • In 2024:
    • Kerala: +30% vote value.
    • Tamil Nadu: +13%, Odisha: +12%, Punjab: +9%.
    • Rajasthan: –16%, UP & Bihar: –7% each.

Impact of Redrawing on State Representation

  • If delimitation is done on current population:
    • High-population growth States gain more seats.
    • States with stable populations lose representation.
  • Example:
    • Rajasthan could go from 4.6% to 5.5% of LS seats.
    • Kerala could drop from 3.7% to 2.8%.

Analogy: Joint Family and Landholding

  • India = joint family; States = constituent families.
  • Seats = land parcels allocated by family size.
  • Over time, families (States) grew/declined unevenly.
  • Thus, per capita share (vote value) has become inequitable, like unequal land division.

Key Takeaways

  • Federal democracy requires balancing two values:
    • Individual equality (democracy).
    • Collective equity among States (federalism).
  • Upcoming delimitation post-2026 will require delicate political negotiation.
  • Raises questions:
    • Should States that controlled population be penalized?
    • Can equal vote value be achieved without federal imbalance?

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