Delimitation bill: Since 1951, Hindi belt’s Lok Sabha share has fallen more than South’s | India News

Delimitation bill: Since 1951, Hindi belt’s Lok Sabha share has fallen more than South's

Amid the recurring debate over whether northern states could gain at the expense of the South in any future Lok Sabha expansion, the historical record tells a more complicated story. Between 1951 and 1977, when parliamentary seats were periodically reallocated after Census exercises, both the Hindi belt and the southern states saw their share of Lok Sabha seats decline. But the Hindi belt’s share fell by far more — 3.1 percentage points, against a 1.2-point decline for the South.The main reason was not a gain for the South over the North, or vice versa, but the growing representation of Union Territories and the rising share of western and eastern states. The comparison also needs to be read with caution: India’s map looked very different in 1951, before the linguistic reorganisation of states. By 1956, states were more or less in their present form, but several UTs either had little or no Lok Sabha representation at the time.

-

Taken together, the data shows that changes in parliamentary representation were shaped not just by the North-South balance, but also by state reorganisation, UT representation, and the evolving federal map of India.► The 1951 election was held before the linguistic reorganisation of states, so state boundaries were very different from today’s ► After the 1956 reorganisation, states were broadly in their present form, but several Union Territories still had little or no Lok Sabha representation ► The fall in share was driven partly by the growing representation of UTs and by gains by western and eastern states ► Even in 1977, the last election in this analysis since Lok Sabha seats have not been reallocated after that, Daman & Diu did not exist as a separate UT ► This comparison tracks share of total Lok Sabha seats, not voter population per Member of Parliament or constituency size ►For 1951 and 1957, the figures refer to seats, not constituencies, because some constituencies then elected two members

  • Related Posts

    Tamil Nadu polls: DMK bets on Senthilbalaji to breach ADMK’s western bastion | India News

    In the early hours of June 14, 2023, Enforcement Directorate arrested Tamil Nadu electricity minister V Senthilbalaji in a money laundering case, a fallout of a cash-for-jobs scam during an…

    Bengal polls: Why SIR is validation for Kalimpong residents | India News

    In Bengal, the special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral rolls has triggered sharp political controversy, with allegations that large numbers of people risk being struck off voter lists. But in…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    D4vd arrested: Lawyers claim singer is innocent; say ‘he did not murder Celeste Rivas Hernandez’ |

    D4vd arrested: Lawyers claim singer is innocent; say ‘he did not murder Celeste Rivas Hernandez’ |

    How to fix sour idli batter instantly with simple kitchen hacks |

    How to fix sour idli batter instantly with simple kitchen hacks |

    ‘Urge MPs to understand nation’s collective will’

    ‘Urge MPs to understand nation’s collective will’

    Tamil Nadu polls: DMK bets on Senthilbalaji to breach ADMK’s western bastion | India News

    Tamil Nadu polls: DMK bets on Senthilbalaji to breach ADMK’s western bastion | India News

    Tcs Nashik: ‘Not a major scandal’: Uncle of accused in TCS Nashik case says ‘scripted conspiracy by Bajrang Dal’ | Nashik News

    Tcs Nashik: ‘Not a major scandal’: Uncle of accused in TCS Nashik case says ‘scripted conspiracy by Bajrang Dal’ | Nashik News

    Namit Malhotra calls Ranbir Kapoor the ‘finest actor of our generation’; says, ‘No one better to portray Lord Rama’ | Hindi Movie News

    Namit Malhotra calls Ranbir Kapoor the ‘finest actor of our generation’; says, ‘No one better to portray Lord Rama’ | Hindi Movie News