Union Home Minister Amit Shah, speaking in Parliament during the debate on the women’s reservation bill, said southern states are being misled by a “false narrative” on delimitation.
He presented data claiming that all southern states will gain seats after the proposed exercise.
According to Shah, under the planned expansion of the Lok Sabha, Tamil Nadu would gain 20 seats, Kerala 10, Telangana 9 and Andhra Pradesh 13.
He also said Maharashtra would gain 24 seats. Overall, he stated, the five southern states together would see their seats rise from 129 to 195.
There will be no injustice to any southern states. Delimitation Bill, 2026 will benefit them.
— Amit Shah (@AmitShah) April 16, 2026
The numbers of MP's from Southern India will increase to 195 from 129. pic.twitter.com/3Uqnwri0P2
Opposition alleges political advantage, federal concerns
The Opposition, however, strongly opposed the Constitution amendment bills, arguing that linking women’s reservation with delimitation is an “opportunistic” move aimed at reshaping parliamentary representation ahead of the 2029 elections.
They accused the government of attempting to “gerrymander” constituencies to its advantage.
Opposition leaders also argued that a population-based delimitation using 2011 census data could reduce the relative political weight of southern states, undermining federal principles and shifting influence towards the Hindi heartland.
Govt defends formula, says women’s quota will be fully implemented
Shah also explained the arithmetic behind the proposed expansion, saying the Lok Sabha strength would increase by about 50 per cent to accommodate the women’s reservation.
PM Shri @narendramodi Ji speaking on the Women's Reservation Bill in the Lok Sabha. https://t.co/oY2IlNrp38
— Amit Shah (@AmitShah) April 16, 2026
He said this would ensure that women can contest across all seats even after the reservation is applied.
The government maintained that the delimitation process will follow existing constitutional provisions and will not affect ongoing elections.
However, the Opposition insisted it would support the women’s reservation bill only if it were delinked from delimitation.