Fighter488
FULL MEMBER
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2009
- Messages
- 1,050
- Reaction score
- 0
Women’s Day: 33% quota set to become reality after 14-yr labour
On Eve Of Parliament Making Gender History, CJI Strikes A Controversial Note
Himanshi Dhawan | TNN
New Delhi: History is set to be created in the Rajya Sabha on Monday. By the time the House votes on the women’s reservation bill, the sense of anticipation would have reached fever pitch. A revolution 14 years in the making is now waiting to burst through the hallowed portals of Parliament.
The bill will be introduced around noon and the debate will begin minutes later. As is now being anticipated, despite likely disruptions, the House is expected to discuss the bill. In that case, Rajya Sabha will cast a historic vote around 5pm and set in motion the process of women’s quota being turned into law.
The vote is the first step in making the 33% quota for women in Parliament and assemblies a reality. The battle in Lok Sabha remains, but the scales will tilt irretrievably. A “yes” vote means West Bengal and Tamil Nadu assemblies, where elections are due in 2011, could have no less than 98 and 78 women MLAs. The next LS will have at least 181 women, up from 59 in the present House.
Parliamentary affairs minister Pawan Bansal pointed out that the bill’s outright opponents numbered less than 30. “We have to see how the House looks in the morning. But we might have a debate though some situations cannot be fully anticipated,” he said. The government has time to bring the bill to Lok Sabha till early next week.
In the final countdown, numbers are solidly stacked up for the Constitution (108th) amendment, better known as “Women’s Bill”. Congress managers are talking of 180 votes with 155 needed for a twothirds majority. They see JD(U) chief and Bihar CM Nitish Kumar’s sudden support for the bill as having hit the OBC-led opposition squarely in the midriff.
It is not a bitter debate that concerns the government. As a minister put it, the question is “how aggressive” the bill’s opponents would be. But with absenteeism ruled out, it may not be possible for the SP-RJDBSP combine to derail proceedings. The treasury benches are even ready for a division.
The bill now enjoys overwhelming support of not just the ruling coalition but has the backing of both BJP and the Left as well as a number of smaller parties. Parties like TDP, DMK, AIADMK, SAD and National Conference lend critical mass. JD(U) has not issued a whip, but most of its MPs will support the bill.
In Lok Sabha, it may be cakewalk for bill
With 33 crore registered women voters in India, a party can ill-afford to be “antiwomen”, in the centenary year of International Women’s Day. In a House with 233 MPs at present, the match is looking one-sided. Till Congress chief Sonia Gandhi gave it a hard push, the situation seemed different. Ever since the H D Deve Gowda government first introduced it in September 1996, the Bill has been frozen with innumerable “formulae” failing to break the jinx.
In Rajya Sabha, Congress has 71 members, BJP 45, CPM 15, AIADMK 7, NCP 6, CPI 5, DMK 4, BJD 4, Telugu Desam, Trinamool Congress and AGP 2 each and Forward Bloc and RSP 1 each. These parties support the Bill and account for 165. SAD has 3 MPs and at least five of JD(U)’s seven will back the Bill. The Women’s Reservation Bill has seen several twists and turns but usually ended in a blind alley. In case of Deve Gowda and then I K Gujral, the governments fell. In 1998, the same story repeated itself. In 1999, there were furious scenes in Lok Sabha with SP’s S P Singh snatching the papers from the hands of then law minister Ram Jethmalani.
The Bill was introduced in RS in 2008. The panel, reconstituted in May 2009 under Congress MP Jayanthi Natarajan, submitted its report in Dec 2009. The Bill was cleared by the Union Cabinet on Feb 25 this year. The legislation has Sonia’s backing with the Congress chief seeing it as part of her late husband Rajiv Gandhi’s unfulfilled dream.
SP is not against reservation for women, but we are against the present format of the bill, which is a big conspiracy by Congress and BJP to prevent Muslims, backwards and Dalits from getting elected to the Lok Sabha and Vidhan Sabhas
Mulayam Singh | SP
RJD will oppose the women's reservation bill tooth and nail and its MPs are even prepared to be marshalled out
Lalu Prasad | RJD