Nari Shakti Vandan

The Women’s Reservation Bill has been projected as a historic step toward empowerment, but from my perspective, it raises deeper questions about the meaning of true equality and justice in a democracy.

I strongly believe that women must rise in politics through capability, leadership, and equal opportunity, not merely through a quota-based framework. Reservation may increase numerical representation, but numbers alone do not guarantee empowerment. The real concern is whether this bill will create genuine leaders or merely institutionalize proxy politics, where elected women representatives are controlled by family members or political handlers behind the scenes.

We have already seen this pattern at the grassroots level, where in several local bodies the elected woman representative often becomes a symbolic face while real decision-making remains in the hands of others. If the same model is replicated in Parliament and state assemblies, then the purpose of democratic representation stands defeated.

Another serious concern is the selective nature of the equality discourse. If we are speaking of gender justice, then the conversation cannot remain one-sided.

Today, issues affecting men  rising suicides, mental health challenges, false legal accusations, and lack of institutional support remain largely ignored in public policy debates. A healthy democracy must ensure balanced representation of concerns across society, rather than advancing one narrative at the cost of another.

The linkage of the bill with census and delimitation also raises questions about intent and timing. If the commitment is genuine, why is immediate implementation not possible? Delaying the bill behind procedural steps risks turning a constitutional promise into a political slogan.

Women deserve dignity, leadership space, and equal rights. However, empowerment must come from creating fair systems, stronger institutions, safety, education, and economic opportunities not merely through symbolic legislative gestures. Democracy must reward merit, accountability, and independent leadership, not tokenism.

True empowerment is not about reserved seats; it is about ensuring that every capable individual, irrespective of gender, can rise on the strength of merit and vision.



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Disclaimer

Views expressed above are the author’s own.



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