'Martyred' Mandate: Why Modi Govt Pushed A Constitution Amendment Bill In Lok Sabha That Was Destined To Lose

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Last Updated:April 17, 2026, 22:13 IST

The move was less about immediate legislation and more about framing the narrative for upcoming state polls and the 2029 general elections

 PTI File)

From a policy perspective, the decision to push through with a losing vote signals that the government is prepared to bypass the consensus model for the remainder of the term. (File image: PTI File)

The decision by the Narendra Modi government to force a high-stakes vote on the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill on Friday despite knowing it lacked the mandatory two-thirds majority is being seen by many analysts as a calculated masterstroke of political optics. While the bill fell short of the 326-vote threshold by about 50, the move was less about immediate legislation and more about framing the narrative for upcoming state polls and the 2029 general elections.

Why did the government push for a vote it knew it would lose?

The primary rationale behind forcing a division of votes was to create a permanent “legislative record". By compelling every Member of Parliament to cast a vote, the government has successfully tagged each Opposition member with a “No" vote on a piece of legislation designed to operationalise women’s reservation. In the eyes of the Prime Minister’s strategists, a defeat in the House is a powerful weapon in the public square.

Home Minister Amit Shah wasted no time in framing the result as a “historic betrayal" by the Congress-led bloc. By pushing for the vote, the government has archived a list of names that will undoubtedly be used in future campaign rallies to claim that the Opposition actively blocked the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam. The defeat allows the BJP to pivot from being a party of power to being a party “persecuted" by a united Opposition that prioritises “mathematical gerrymandering" over gender justice.

Was the move a strategic attempt to ‘unmask’ the Opposition?

Beyond the optics of the women’s quota, the government used the 131st Amendment as a “wedge issue" to test the durability of Opposition unity. The Bill’s proposal to expand the Lok Sabha to 816 (or up to 850) seats was intended to appeal to regional parties from states that would see a net gain in representation. The government anticipated that some allies within the INDIA bloc might break rank to support an expanded House.

While the Opposition held firm—led by Rahul Gandhi’s “anti-national act" rhetoric—the government successfully forced them to publicly defend the 1971 seat baseline. By making the debate about the “poison pill" of delimitation, the government has painted the Opposition as a group protecting its own electoral turf at the cost of national expansion. The defeat ensures that the “Day 17" narrative is not about the government’s lack of numbers but about the Opposition’s alleged lack of vision.

What is the long-term goal of this ‘symbolic defeat’?

From a policy perspective, the decision to push through with a losing vote signals that the government is prepared to bypass the consensus model for the remainder of the term. By notifying the 106th Amendment of 2023 just hours before the vote, the government has set the stage for a prolonged constitutional showdown. The message to the electorate is clear: “We have the intent, but the Opposition holds the veto."

This “martyred" legislation will now serve as a primary campaign pillar. Instead of the bill languishing in a committee, it has become a central point of friction. For the Modi administration, the April 17 defeat is the launch of a new era of “confrontational reform," where the stalled progress of women’s representation will be blamed squarely on the doors of the Opposition benches as the nation moves towards 2029.

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First Published:

April 17, 2026, 22:13 IST

News politics 'Martyred' Mandate: Why Modi Govt Pushed A Constitution Amendment Bill In Lok Sabha That Was Destined To Lose

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