
Lok Sabha election | Parties need to walk the women talk
The Hindu
Women's Reservation Bill implementation challenges in Kerala Lok Sabha elections, highlighting lack of female representation in politics.
When the Women’s Reservation Bill was passed in the Lok Sabha on September 21, 2023 it was dubbed as a milestone in the history of the women’s rights movement in the country. The Bharatiya Janata Party-led government earned quite a few brownie points and even international acclaim for doing the impossible.
But as the country braces for the Lok Sabha polls, there have been allegations from various quarters that the Bill still remains on paper as it could not be implemented before the next general census followed by a delimitation of the constituencies.
“It was just a gimmick to sway female voters. It was never meant to be implemented,” says Jebi Mather, Rajya Sabha MP and State president of the Mahila Congress.
Political parties that supported the Bill in Parliament are under scrutiny for not fielding enough women at least to uphold the essence of the Bill, especially in Kerala where 50% seats are reserved for women in local bodies. Hitherto, the number of seats any coalition has offered to women in the previous Lok Sabha polls over the past 20 years is a maximum of three.
“We are living in a male dominated society. They will not give up what they think is theirs so easily,” says C.S. Sujatha, State Secretary of All India Democratic Women’s Association and former Communist Party of India (Marxist) MP.
Of the 20 seats in Kerala, the CPI(M)- led Left Democratic Front has fielded three women while the Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) renominated its sitting MP Ramya Haridas from Alathur . The BJP has nominated five women across the State. Thus there are nine women nominated as candidates among the three fronts in the State. This is a record considering the history of women’s representation in the Lok Sabha from Kerala, which incidentally is also nine in total from all the Lok Sabhas since 1952.
However, Ms.Mather argues that the BJP fielded five women candidates knowing fully well that the party has no scope in Kerala. “To field the sitting MPs was a strategic move of the Congress, as our priority is to bring down the Modi government at any cost,” she says.

At least five killed, seven injured as car rams into stationary vehicle near Tamil Nadu’s Keelakarai
A tragic road accident on ECR near Keelakarai leaves five dead and seven injured, involving a DMK functionary’s vehicle.












