This is recent news – the central government will take
steps to amend the Constitution to increase reservation of seats for women in
elections to panchayat bodies from the present 33% to 50%. Who benefits if that happens? Not anyone.
Compulsory reservation for women among elected members
and Chairpersons of panchayat bodies has been followed in several states of
India – for twenty years in some, and less in others.
The Indian Constitution mandates it, since 1993, at a minimum of 33% of
contested seats. A proposal to hike it to
50% was approved by the Union cabinet of an earlier government in 2009, but the
Constitution is yet to be amended for the purpose. A different ruling party now running the
central government cannot drop that idea and invite political peril.
But we should ask : Can we believe that the existing 33%
reservation has toned up governance at village levels and enhanced women’s
prestige in village areas, and so making it 50% will brighten such results even
more? Or have we found that a mere 33% is not enough to get expected benefits
and that a minimum 50% reservation is needed? “No.
None of it” should be our answer to both questions.
More than women, men desire, grab and enjoy power in
politics. Males are one half of our
population, and more than half among elected representatives in our legislatures. Without their approval the present 33%
reservation would not have happened, nor can it go up. That is not because our male politicians are
generous and sacrificing. It simply
points to a ground reality – this reservation serves as a cloak for clever men
to project their obedient wives, mothers or daughters as contestants for
reserved seats in panchayat polls, secure their election and rule by proxy. Those women know this and are happy to help
their men folk by just being name-lenders.
And all – including government officials supervising local
administration - who deal with or pay purposeful respect to those controlling
men behind the mute elected women in panchayats know this. This is a great farce in our politics and
government.
Yes, there is a question to be answered. What is wrong
in husbands, fathers or sons helping out women in their families when the law
requires that women alone can contest some panchayat seats? Two counter questions get us the answer. When women in panchayat areas are not so elected,
in what ways and for how long are they helped by men in their homes? Will a straight-thinking man who respects his
wife, daughter or mother, consent to proxy for her illegally in government
work, and do the things done by a good number of 33% or 50% male proxies?
Let me not leave out this question. Why should anyone – here a woman – agree to hold
an elected office but let her official power and add-ons lie in the hands of
another person – here a man? Man or
woman, if one is dependent on another in many ways or if one is indebted to
another for reasons they know best, this fronting or proxying in varying extent
could happen anywhere. If the names of
Lalu Prasad Yadav and Rabri Devi, or Sonia Gandhi and Manmohan Singh, suddenly
cross your mind now you will have some good reason.
Compulsory reservation for women in panchayat bodies,
and the way it is worked, do not really help women among the public. Women everywhere look for their physical
safety and security foremost, and if their elected representatives can ensure
that while they govern, women would be glad and relieved even if all or a vast
majority of those representatives are men.
But if they have to live amidst an unsure sense of safety and security,
holding and concealing their fright, it makes no difference to them that 33% or
50% of their elected representatives are also women. Horror stories in newspapers every other day about
unfortunate female victims tell us how insecure Indian women feel on our soil.
Women voters are not really yearning for reservation
in panchayat positions. If they really
do, they can act in unison and elect a female candidate pitted against male
candidates from an unreserved constituency. That would surely happen if they
wish it since they make up about 50% of voters.
Just as, in a free-for-all election, a candidate of the same caste as a
good chunk of the voters in his constituency wins. Then why do our dominant male politicians
play out this farce? Perhaps they think
they are placating women voters by this false concession. And perhaps women voters feel that if it
pleases men on their pet political pranks let it be – why raise questions,
dissatisfy ambitious political men and possibly have a dent in women’s overall sense
of safety and security, whatever it be?
Indian men who pioneered and backed this reservation have failed our
women by making puppets out of the latter and degrading their dignity in a
public sphere.
Want
some more proof that our male politicians are cooking up this farce of
espousing women’s cause? Well, if men truly believe that more of women should
be elected to political offices – as high as 33% or 50% - and make decisions to
run governments, men would have first asked women to take up top posts within
their political parties at village level or district level everywhere.
Men don’t do it because they wish to be widely in charge of party affairs (rightly,
as they fit those roles better), but when it comes to elected political offices
in government they make it appear they would let women fill up those offices –
33% or 50% of them – while they still run those offices from behind.
We have also powerful examples to prove that men and
women do not bother much if their elected rulers are men or women. We had Indira Gandhi as prime minister, she
and her party were defeated massively throughout the country in elections held
after she lifted her Emergency, but later she was also voted back to power –
without reservation of any kind for women.
Now Jayalalithaa of Tamil Nadu in the South, Mamata Banerjee of West
Bengal in the East, Anandiben Patel of Gujarat in the West rule their states as
chief ministers. And in the North,
Mehbooba Mufti Sayeed of Jammu and Kashmir could get sworn in as chief minister
if she just wants it. This is the
spectacle in the four corners of India with no reservation helping these four women
– and men voters in huge numbers in the four states wanting them at the
helm. Likewise, male chief ministers
presently ruling in other states enjoy the support of women voters in large
numbers and those voters are not longing for woman chief ministers. It is again
clear that 33% reservation is a plain farce, and any increase of it will
heighten its effect. Sadly, it has been
elevated as a Constitutional compulsion – not only for panchayats but for
municipalities too, and the farce gets enacted in more theatres than one.
If women are inclined to politics and have
the guts for it they would come out on their own,
lead and shine, like they do now in the four corner states of India. On
that some may take inspiration from their fathers or spouses, which is
understandable as it happens with all, man or woman. At national
levels too, apart from India's Indira Gandhi, Srimavo Bandaranaike in Sri
Lanka, Golda Meir in Israel, Margaret Thatcher in the UK and recently Angela
Merkel in Germany rose to head governments on their own strength and leadership
qualities – that is natural and welcome in a democracy. But to stipulate that some electoral
constituencies across India at village or municipal levels - or in the Lok Sabha
and state legislatures - shall only have women candidates
(or only men, if law says it), that too at high percentages of 33 or 50 is no
good, and in any case an overdose that maims or kills. This enforced
reservation leads to several ills and
it would be difficult to remove them as they get entrenched. And it will
have a sinister side effect too – of creating a needless men-versus-women issue
and all the acrimony that comes with it.
So, as an Indian, if you
object to a good slice of our elected political offices being reserved for
women, it doesn’t mean you have malice toward the reservees. It means you love your homeland.
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We clamour for reservation without knowing what we want. Reservation in any form has done more harm than help in the cause it was introduced for. All that is required is to provide a level playing field where one can compete with another standing on his/her own legs and merit. The protagonists of reservation miss the point that the reservee always feels humbled as he/she got the cake at the cost of another who is more deserving.
ReplyDeleteReservation is a way of expediting social change. Unless reservation for women is introduced, it will take decades before women begin to occupy an equal number of positions of power with men. Initially, of course, women act as proxies for use of power by their menfolk, but gradually, this change does result in their stepping out of their households and acquiring a role equal to men.
ReplyDeleteA true account of male proxy presence in areas where we have women's reservation.Hopefully it will never go throuh in parliament.
ReplyDeleteS.D.Sankaralingam
Maybe all women constituencies may work better!
ReplyDeleteSad to read that what could have been an opportunity to increase women's participation in local politics is becoming a cover for opportunistic men's claims to power - unfortunate
ReplyDeleteMERIT please
ReplyDeleteI tend to agree with Satish Kumar Dogra.
ReplyDelete