The Union Government’s notification bringing into force the Constitution (One Hundred and Sixth Amendment) Act, 2023 popularly known as the Women’s Reservation Law from April 16, 2026, marks a significant moment in India’s constitutional and political landscape. After decades of debate and legislative effort, the formal operationalisation of a law mandating 33% reservation for women in the Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies appears, at first glance, to be a transformative step towards correcting gender imbalance in political representation. Yet, beneath this milestone lies a more complex constitutional reality the law’s implementation remains contingent, deferred, and structurally tied to future political processes.
The amendment seeks to reserve one-third of all seats for women, including within the existing quotas for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. In principle, this reflects a shift towards substantive equality, recognising that formal equality alone is insufficient to address entrenched barriers to women’s participation in governance. India’s legislatures have historically witnessed low female representation, and the amendment attempts to structurally correct this imbalance by ensuring guaranteed participation at the highest levels of law-making.
However, the practical impact of the law is not immediate. The constitutional framework makes its implementation conditional upon the completion of the next Census and a subsequent delimitation exercise. This means that despite the law being formally in force, its benefits will not be realised until constituency boundaries are redrawn based on updated population data. Until then, the existing composition of Parliament and State Assemblies remains unchanged, effectively postponing the operationalisation of reservation.
This linkage between reservation and delimitation introduces a layer of constitutional complexity. Delimitation, by its very nature, is a politically sensitive exercise that determines the distribution of seats across states based on population. It has historically been deferred to maintain a balance between regions that have experienced differing population growth rates. By tying women’s reservation to this process, the amendment effectively embeds a progressive reform within a contentious and uncertain procedural framework.
The government has defended this sequencing as necessary to ensure that reservation is implemented in a manner that is both equitable and reflective of current demographic realities. From this perspective, the law is part of a broader restructuring of India’s electoral system, potentially linked to proposals for expanding the size of the Lok Sabha and recalibrating representation across states. However, critics argue that such linkage is not constitutionally inevitable. They contend that reservation could have been implemented within the existing framework, without waiting for delimitation, thereby ensuring immediate and tangible benefits.
This divergence of views reflects a deeper constitutional question: whether a right recognised in principle but postponed in practice can be considered effectively realised. The Supreme Court has, in various contexts, emphasised that equality must be meaningful and not merely symbolic. In this light, the Women’s Reservation Law risks being perceived as a form of deferred constitutionalism, where the promise of representation exists, but its fulfilment remains uncertain and potentially delayed.
The amendment also intersects with broader debates on federalism. Delimitation based on population is likely to alter the distribution of seats in favour of states with higher population growth, potentially reducing the relative representation of others. This has led to concerns, particularly from southern states, that the process may disturb the delicate balance of federal representation. As a result, the implementation of women’s reservation is no longer a standalone issue it is now intertwined with larger questions of political power and regional equity.
At a structural level, the law represents both progress and paradox. It acknowledges the need for greater gender inclusion in governance and provides a constitutional framework to achieve it. At the same time, by making its operation dependent on future processes, it introduces uncertainty into what is otherwise a clear normative commitment. The effectiveness of the reform will therefore depend not merely on its existence in the statute book, but on the timely and efficient completion of the processes that trigger its implementation.
The broader implication of this development is a shift in India’s constitutional approach to representation. The amendment moves beyond formal equality and attempts to engineer institutional inclusion through affirmative measures. Yet, its success will depend on whether the system can translate constitutional intent into political reality without undue delay.
In conclusion, the notification of the Women’s Reservation Law is undoubtedly a historic step, but it is not the culmination of the reform process. It is, rather, the beginning of a new phase one that will test the capacity of India’s constitutional and political institutions to deliver on the promise of gender equality in representation.
The central question that remains is whether this reform will emerge as a transformative milestone in democratic inclusion, or remain a deferred promise awaiting the uncertainties of future political and procedural development

