Friday, April 17, 2026

BJP is leveraging Women’s reservation push in West Bengal :::: One State, One Mamata: Can Modi’s Women Quota Crack Bengal?

What is BJP’s strategy for 2026 in Bengal?

-- The BJP is leveraging the women’s reservation push and delimitation debate to counter TMC’s welfare-based appeal.

How strong is Mamata Banerjee’s position among women?

Very strong — TMC has maintained a double-digit lead among women voters in multiple elections.


Q4. What role does delimitation play in this election?
Delimitation could reshape constituencies and is being positioned alongside women’s reservation as a structural reform with electoral implications.  




(by Nirendra Dev)

One State, One Mamata: Can Modi’s Women Quota Crack Bengal?  


With women voters at the centre, BJP links reservation and delimitation to take on Mamata Banerjee’s welfare-driven dominance in West Bengal.  


The 2026 West Bengal Assembly election is shaping into a sharply defined political duel: one state, one leader — Mamata Banerjee — versus the full electoral machinery of Narendra Modi and Amit Shah.


At the heart of this contest lies a decisive voter bloc: women.


Across India, the BJP-led NDA has successfully consolidated women voters through targeted welfare schemes. In states like Assam, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, and Maharashtra, programmes such as Orunodoi, Ladli Behna, and Ladki Bahin have delivered electoral dividends. 

These schemes worked not just because of design, but because the BJP or its allies were in power — they could deliver cash, not just promises.


West Bengal presents a fundamentally different battlefield.  Here, it is Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress that has mastered the politics of direct benefit transfer through schemes like Lakshmir Bhandar. 


The result is a deeply entrenched support base among women voters — one that has repeatedly tilted elections in her favour.


The Numbers That Matter


In the 2021 Assembly elections, the Trinamool Congress won 213 out of 294 seats with a vote share of 48%, while the BJP secured 77 seats with 39%. The 9% vote share gap tells only part of the story.


Among women voters, the gap was far wider.


Surveys indicated that nearly 50% of women voters backed TMC, giving it a 13% advantage over the BJP. This gender gap has been consistent — even in 2016, TMC enjoyed a 12% lead among women over its rivals.  






Turnout trends reinforce this advantage. In the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, women voters in West Bengal turned out at an estimated 82%, compared to 78% among men. 


TMC went on to win 29 of the state’s 42 parliamentary seats.  


Women are not just a voting bloc in Bengal — they are the electoral fulcrum.


Locked out of power in the state, the BJP cannot replicate its welfare model on the ground. Instead, it has attempted a structural intervention: linking women’s political representation to its broader electoral strategy.


The push for 33% reservation for women in Parliament and state assemblies — tied to the contentious delimitation exercise — is not just a governance reform. It is a political signal aimed squarely at Bengal’s women voters. By framing itself as the architect of “Nari Shakti” empowerment at a national level, the BJP hopes to offset TMC’s local welfare advantage.


This is a high-risk move.






The BJP introduced these proposals despite lacking a two-thirds majority in both Houses of Parliament, fully aware that delimitation would trigger resistance — especially in southern states like Tamil Nadu, where fears of seat redistribution remain politically explosive.

Yet, the gamble suggests urgency. 


Bengal is not just another state election — it is a prestige battle the BJP cannot afford to lose repeatedly.


Mamata Banerjee is not ceding ground easily.
The Trinamool Congress continues to double down on women’s representation. For the 2026 elections, it has fielded 52 women candidates — around 20% of its total slate — compared to the BJP’s 11%.
In Parliament, TMC already leads among major parties in women’s representation. 


Of its 29 Lok Sabha MPs, 11 are women — nearly 38%.  


Whether it dents Mamata Banerjee’s fortress — or reinforces it — is something only the ballot will decide.







courtesy - The Raisina Hills 




ends 

Women Quota : A Self goal by Modi or a job well done to win Bengal elections :::: Congress may be ultimate loser .. it has earlier lost support of Brahmins, Muslims, OBC and Dalits and now if WOMEN also go away .....

A Self goal !! 

Or Opposition Lawmakers 'betrayed women' ?


It was a totally unwarranted situation. All eyes were on West Bengal elections and a bit of it for Tamil Nadu - where in any case the Lotus party is not the principal challenger to DMK. 


Then why invite this embarrassment with a half-baked move on Women Quota and Delimitation draft legislation? Or it was a job 'done well' to win West Bengal elections ? 








Turn the table.  Despite an impressive increase in turnout of women voters in recent polls across India, women keen to join electoral politics face deep-rooted structural constraints.  


"The joy of apparent victory born out of arrogance is, in reality, is a hidden great defeat" - Amit Shah mocking Opposition







Between 1996 and 2023; six attempts to pass the Women bill were stalled or decades in the decades since it was first introduced. 


In 2026, right from the moment the initiative or a special Parliament session was convened; the impression was the PM Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah must have done some homework. Secondly, it was almost taken that "poorer but more populous northern states" - somehow considered the BJP’s political heartland – stand to gain the most seats after the Delimitation.

The debate is not over. Some of it will be answered in the mandate on April 23 and 29 in West Bengal and also in Tamil Nadu where the polling is slated for April 29th.  


Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress has mastered the politics of direct benefit transfer through schemes like Lakshmir Bhandar. The result is a deeply entrenched support base among women voters for TMC. In the 2021 Assembly elections, Mamata won 213 out of 294 seats with a vote share of 48%, while the BJP secured 77 seats with 39%. The 9% vote share gap tells only part of the story. 


Among women voters, the gap was far wider. Surveys indicated that nearly 50% of women voters backed TMC, giving it a 13% advantage over the BJP.









The BJP strategists led by Amit Shah and guided by PM Modi must have presumed TMC will be 'trapped' by women empowerment card and now that they have voted against the same; perhaps an overwhelming section of women voters would betray Mamata. 


But this is more in theory and also hypothesis. The real concern for Mamata's women voters and also their families in not women empowerment. They would be more keen about the cash doles. Hence, the BJP's optimism may be over stated.  





The road direction says 'Grand Mom' - Feminine power matters in Bengali life




The BJP has highlighted incidents like Sandeshkhali focusing on security, dignity, and empowerment. But it did not make any difference in 2024 Lok Sabha polls.  


Other Opposition MPs questioned why women’s representation had been linked to a much larger political exercise, the Delimitation. LoP Rahul Gandhi comparatively made a better speech than his previous performances and said: 

“The first truth is that this is not a women’s bill. This has nothing to do with the empowerment of women. This is an attempt to change the electoral map of India.”  


It's true Delimitation is clearly a divisive issue. Even Shashi Tharoor, who often finds ways to support the Modi government at critical junctures, along with others suggested that "prosperous southern states" Tamil Nadu and Kerala, which have reduced population growth, should not be penalised.


The last time that India’s electoral map was redrawn was in 1971.

MPs from DMK arrived in parliament on Friday dressed in black.

Earlier, Tamil Nadu’s chief minister, M K Stalin called the government move a “punishment” for southern states and burned a copy.   







While the government has to negotiate with reality and a rare setback; the Opposition has won an opening against Modi. But for them too the road will be slippery. If BJP can really push the line that the Congress and other opposition parties yet again sabotaged the historic occasion; the impact could be disastrous especially for Congress as it has already lost its previous vote banks - the upper caste Hindus to BJP, the OBC to Yadavs (SP and RJD), 

-- Dalits to Mayawati and 

Muslims to AIUDF, SP and RJD. 


If women too go away; a near annihilation (complete destruction) stage now could be awaiting the grand old party.





Amit Shah has already tweeted :  

"How can anyone celebrate victory after deceiving half the country's population..."


"The Congress and its allies have done this not for the first time, but repeatedly. Their mindset is neither in the interest of women nor of the country.


"I want to tell them that this insult to Nari Shakti will not stop here; it will travel far and wide. The opposition will have to face the 'wrath of women' not only in the 2029 Lok Sabha elections, but at every level, in every election, and at every place".



ends 


UNTHINKABLE ... ? It has happened .... the Women Quota and Delimitation Bills have been defeated in Lok Sabha

It was a calculated risk taken by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. 

The Modi Govt had tabled the bills related to Delimitation and Women Quota despite not having a two-thirds majority in both the Rajya Sabha and the Lok Sabha.


The Bill (s) especially on women reservation was seen as a testament to Narendra Modi's 'Naya Bharat' (New India) vision --- defeated


 





The BJP leaders knew there would be serious opposition to Delimitation in Tamil Nadu. Yet they took the big risk. They might have been blinded by the need to counter Mamata Banerjee's immense 'popularity' with women voters. Thanks to her Lakhi Bhandar and other freebies.  


Now the issue of Delimitation has become a major political issue and could possibly help DMK stage a come back. 

Tamil Nadu goes to polls on April 29.


What will happen in West Bengal is anyone's guess.  


But the defeat of the Bills is certainly a 'setback' to the strategy of Team Modi-Shah. They, however, will now put the entire blame on the opposition. 


Amit Shah has made the political intent clear by saying from Triple Talaq to surgical strike and from Article 370 to Op Sindoor - the opposition parties and Congress have opposed everything.


Congress MP Priyanka Gandhi's Chanakya reference about Amit Shah would now sound like rubbing insults to injuries. 


Worse, thanks to the Lok Sabha debate, Rahul Gandhi on Friday (second day) of the Special session got a chance to call Narendra Modi - a 'magician' who has been 'caught'.  

Rahul Gandhi during the debate in Lok Sabha on Friday said -- the Prime Minister aimed to send two signals: 

-- first, to redraw India’s electoral landscape, 

and second, to reinforce his pro-women image. 



“Why he is doing that, I leave to your imagination,” Rahul remarked, before launching a pointed critique: 


“The magician has been caught — the magician of Balakot, the magician of demonetisation… suddenly caught.”


 



The Leader of the Opposition said: "...it is important that everyone understands. The BJP knew, they knew very clearly that this bill actually cannot be passed. They knew it. 


"They're not stupid. They knew every opposition person would oppose it. This bill cannot be passed. This was a panic reaction."   


Making things appear pretty bad for the ruling dispensation and especially for Modi; Rahul Gandhi left people guessing after mentioning in his speech the 'Number 16' riddle.


The social media quickly erupted in speculation over what exactly the Congress leader was hinting at. 


It could possibly be a 16-minute video expose to an international scandal to which scores of rich and the powerful have been linked to. 


"Yesterday, I was watching the Prime Minister speak. Low energy, broken. Nothing, nothing transmitting," Rahul Gandhi said.

The LoP then leader said he noticed that it was April 16.






"He [Modi] was not able to engage because clearly trying to pass this bill was a mistake, because everybody knew that wasn't going to pass panic reaction," he said.


"So I was watching him, and I noticed on my phone sixteenth of April. And I was like, 'My God, how crazy. That's the number. Sixteen! 

This sixteen number, this is the number. The whole answer to the riddle is in the number sixteen. Everything is in the number sixteen," he said.  



The Congress' official Twitter (X) handle dropped almost a clear hint. 
  

It said, "Sixteen sounds a lot like Epstein, doesn't it?"


All these may not form part of the best parliamentary practices; but this is perhaps the second time since 2019 Rahul has sought to embarrass PM Modi big time in the Lok Sabha.

Various allegatations made from time to time notwithstanding. 

In 2019 on the day No Trust motion was taken up against Modi 1.0 Govt; Rahul had surprised all and sundry by embracing Modi in Lok Sabha. 

The Prime Minister was furious about the gesture and later Rajnath Singh and the then Speaker Sumitra Mahajan had slammed Rahul's conduct in the House.


Dr Farooq Abdullah of National Conference had tried to defend Rahul and to that Sumitra Mahajan said - "All these cannot be done in the House ... Rahul unke ghar jae aur galey lagey (Rahul could go to PM's House and give him the bear hug)".


Late night replying to the marathon debate; PM Modi mimicked Rahul a number of times and sounded the displeasure. He said Rahul was actually behaving as a dynast with a sense of entitlement and he wanted me to 'get away from the PM's chair'.  









Importantly, Henceforth, essentially no one would trust the male-dominated political system. 

Everyone will be cynical as this for yet another time that such a fanfare around Women Quota has ended in a damp squib manner.


On multiple occasions — 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2008 and even 2010 — the Bill for Women Quota was brought in with much fanfare, but eventually the draft laws quietly lapsed.

Even the hyped slogan - Modi-hae-toh-Mumkin-Hae ... every goal or milestone can be achieved under PM Modi -- did not yield expected results.  

It's not without good reason, Supriya Sule (NCP) had in 2023 said -- the Women Reservation Bill is "post-dated cheque drawn from a crashing bank."



ends 




Govt braces for defeat of Women and Delimitation Bills? :::::: Amit Shah slams Opposition ... says all of them opposed the Women Quota Bill by using "Ifs and buts"

Govt braces for defeat of Women and Delimitation Bills? 








Amit Shah says - "If they do not vote, the Bill will fall ... but outside you will not be able to face the wrath of women's anger.  By now they know ... who are the real hurdles"  


 "No one has objected to the women's reservation. But, if we see closely, all members of the INDI alliance have opposed it by using 'ifs and but' ", says Union Home Minister Amit Shah, replying to the debate on the Women's Reservation Bill and the Delimitation Bill in the Lok Sabha.










Amit Shah said: "Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Tamil Nadu, and Keralam - the strength of these five states in the 543 parliamentary seats is currently 129, which is 23.76%. 


After a 50% increase, when we allocate the seats for these five states, it will rise from 129 to 195, which will represent 23.87% in 816 seats. No one will be at a loss."



"Those opposing delimitation are actually opposing an increase in SC/ST seats," says Union Home Minister Amit Shah. "I assure them that if they support us for delimitation, then the value of each vote will have equal value across constituencies," he said. 


Shah said creating the north-south narratives was an ill-motive design. 


"Desh ka vivajan karke koi satta prapt nahi kar paogey" 








In his intervention in Lok Sabha on Thursday, PM Modi had said:

"I believe that (women's) voice in this ⁠house will bring new strength, fresh thinking, and a greater sense of sensitivity".


The government ​said the alterations to boundaries reflected population changes since seats were last fixed after a 1971 census.


OPPOSITION SAYS ​BOUNDARIES MOVE UNCONSTITUTIONAL


The NDA government does not have the two-thirds majority it needs to get the measures through both houses of parliament.

The hope to convince some smaller parties and opposition groups to back the bills perhaps did not yield expected results.


Larger ​opposition groups said they supported quotas for women, but accused the government of seeking to manipulate the ​system to get more votes.










Shah also said:

"In 1972, the then PM Indira Gandhi's government brought the Delimitation Bill and increased the number of seats from 525 to 545, and then froze it at this. 

In 1976, to save power during the Emergency period, the 42nd Amendment imposed a ban on delimitation. 


Even at that time, it was the Congress party that deprived the country's people of delimitation, and today too, it is the Congress party that is depriving them of delimitation."

Number 16 riddle that Rahul Gandhi referred to in Lok Sabha :::: In 2019, Rahul had embarrassed Modi by the 'bear hug' in the House

 

Making things appear pretty bad for the ruling dispensation and especially for Modi; Rahul Gandhi left people guessing after mentioning in his speech the 'Number 16' riddle.


The social media quickly erupted in speculation over what exactly the Congress leader was hinting at. 









It could possibly be a 16-minute video expose to an international scandal to which scores of rich and the powerful have been linked to. 


"Yesterday, I was watching the Prime Minister speak. Low energy, broken. Nothing, nothing transmitting," Rahul Gandhi said.

The LoP then leader said he noticed that it was April 16.






"He [Modi] was not able to engage because clearly trying to pass this bill was a mistake, because everybody knew that wasn't going to pass panic reaction," he said.


"So I was watching him, and I noticed on my phone sixteenth of April. And I was like, 'My God, how crazy. That's the number. Sixteen! 

This sixteen number, this is the number. The whole answer to the riddle is in the number sixteen. Everything is in the number sixteen," he said.  



The Congress' official Twitter (X) handle dropped almost a clear hint. 
  

It said, "Sixteen sounds a lot like Epstein, doesn't it?"


All these may not form part of parliamentary practice; but this is perhaps the second time since 2019 Rahul has sought to embarrass PM Modi big time.

Various allegataions made from time to time notwithstanding. 

In 2019 on the day No Trust motion was taken up against Modi 1.0 Govt; Rahul had surprised all and sundry by embracing Modi in Lok Sabha. 

The Prime Minister was furious about the gesture and later Rajnath Singh and the then Speaker Sumitra Mahajan had slammed Rahul's conduct in the House.

Dr Farooq Abdullah had tried to defend Rahul and to that Sumitra Mahajan said - "All these cannot be done in the House ... Rahul unke ghar jae aur galey lagey (Rahul could go to PM's House and give him the bear hug)".

Late night replying to the marathon debate; PM Modi mimicked Rahul a number of times and sounded the displeasure. He said Rahul was actually behaving as a dynast with a sense of entitlement and he wanted me to 'get from the PM's chair'. 






ends 

“Post-dated cheque in a crashing bank" ::::::: Poison, "whistle" for women MPs ... and all that .... Long road to women’s quota reflects India’s shifting political and social landscape

 By NIRENDRA DEV

New Delhi

The journey of India’s Women’s Reservation Bill — proposing 33% quota for women in Parliament and state assemblies — is as much about political resistance as it is about social change. First introduced in 1996 under Prime Minister H. D. Deve Gowda, the bill has taken nearly three decades to reach its current stage.


Between 1996 and 2026, the bill has seen fierce opposition, dramatic debates, and some deeply controversial remarks from across the political spectrum.






In 2010, during the tenure of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Sharad Yadav escalated his opposition, saying that passing the bill without OBC reservation was “akin to taking poison.” The remark became one of the most quoted lines in the bill’s contentious history.


Around the same time, Mulayam Singh Yadav stirred outrage by claiming that if the bill passed, Parliament would be filled with women who might “invite whistles.” 

His comments triggered a national debate on sexism in politics, but also underscored resistance from parties wary of losing traditional vote bases.

Even within parties, the bill sparked unease. Former Congress leader Ajit Jogi argued that such a quota might disrupt family structures, suggesting that women entering politics could weaken the “pivot” of Indian households.


Yet, the bill also found strong champions.






From sharp resistance and controversial remarks to renewed momentum, the long road to women’s quota reflects India’s shifting political and social landscape.  


Women’s Bill: From ‘Poison’ to Promise — A 30-Year Political Saga  


Senior BJP leader Sushma Swaraj, while engaging in lighter exchanges during parliamentary debates, consistently backed greater representation for women. 


Meanwhile, the Congress sought ownership of the legislation, with Sonia Gandhi asserting in 2023: “It is ours… woh hamara bill hai,” referring to the party’s role in passing it in the Rajya Sabha in 2010.





However, despite clearing the Upper House, the bill stalled in the Lok Sabha due to opposition from allies like the Samajwadi Party and Rashtriya Janata Dal, primarily over the absence of a sub-quota.


More recently, new critiques have emerged. NCP leader Supriya Sule described the bill as “a post-dated cheque drawn from a crashing bank,” questioning its implementation timeline and political intent.


Despite decades of friction, the narrative around women’s representation is shifting. On April 16, 2026, actor-turned-politician Kangana Ranaut endorsed the bill, calling it “the best time to be women,” reflecting a generational and ideological pivot in public discourse.  

Today, the Women’s Reservation Bill stands not just as legislation, but as a mirror to India’s evolving democracy — one that has grappled with caste, class, gender, and power for over 30 years.


Whether it transforms political representation or remains, as critics fear, a symbolic gesture, will depend on its execution.


But one thing is certain: few bills in India’s parliamentary history have had such a long, contentious, and revealing journey.







One of the most vocal critics was Sharad Yadav. In the early years, he famously argued that the bill would benefit only “par-kati women” — a reference to urban, elite women, implying that rural and traditional women would be left behind. 


His concern reflected a broader demand for sub-quotas for OBC women.



courtesy - The Raisina Hills 

PM Modi "needed to change the electoral map of India" ::::: Rahul slams Govt move :: "Magician of Balakot, magician of demonetisation, magician of Op. Sindoor is suddenly caught"

 Speaking in Lok Sabha, LoP Rahul Gandhi says, "...it is important that everyone understands. The BJP knew, they knew very clearly that this bill actually cannot be passed. They knew it. 



"They're not stupid. They knew every opposition person would oppose it. This bill cannot be passed. This was a panic reaction. This was a panic reaction because the Prime Minister, at any cost, needed to send two messages. Number one, he needed to change the electoral map of India. And number two, he needed to send a message again that he is pro-women. 






"Why he is doing that, I will leave to your imagination. I will leave it to your imagination...The truth is the magician has been caught. The magician of Balakot, the magician of demonetisation, the magician of Sindoor has suddenly got caught...".  


Meanwhile, on Pakistan reacting to the PoK provision in India's Delimitation Bill, MEA spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said:


“On the delimitation exercise, the internal matters of India are internal matters of India, and we reject any attempts to intrude into them or make any such remarks.”  


BJP leader Boora Narsaiah Goud on Friday said that one of the main highlights of the Delimitation Bill is the allocation of seats in the Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (PoK). 

This bill will enable PoK to access their right to vote, and their representatives will be able to attend the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha. 


"The most important part we are missing is the provision in the Delimitation Bill, which is the allocation of the seats in the PoK. It is the dream of every Indian irrespective of caste, creed or religion, to take back the PoK, which legally, constitutionally, and morally belongs to India. 


And someday, we will get back PoK, and people will have the right to access votes in the last 77 years, and their representatives will be able to attend the Rajya Sabha and Lok Sabha. That is the beauty of this bill," Narsaiah said.






No wife issues for me and Modi: Rahul


"Women are a central force, a driving force in our national imagination, in our national perspective," he said, as a calming peace prevailed in the House. "Every single one in this House has been influenced, taught... a lot [by] the women in their lives – mothers, sisters," he said, before pausing briefly to add "wives" to finish off the sentence.  


He pointed out that he and Prime Minister Narendra Modi "don't have the wife issue." The House erupted into laughter upon hearing the remark. 


Gandhi made another such remark just moments later, saying his sister, fellow Congress MP Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, had achieved on Thursday something that he himself had not been able to do in his career. 


"Yesterday, I was watching my sister achieve my sister achieve in five minutes that I have not been able to do, maybe, in 20 years of our political career, which was to make Mr Amit Shah ji smile," Rahul said.  


He also said: "Manuvad over Samvidhaan...Amit Shah ji says that the caste census has begun. He repeated twice, trying to be clever, saying that houses don't have caste. The point is whether or not the caste census is going to be used in representation in Parliament & State Assemblies. 


And now, what you are trying to do is that caste census has nothing to do with representation for the next 15 years..."



ends 


BJP is leveraging Women’s reservation push in West Bengal :::: One State, One Mamata: Can Modi’s Women Quota Crack Bengal?

What is BJP’s strategy for 2026 in Bengal? -- The BJP is leveraging the women’s reservation push and delimitation debate to counter TMC’s we...