Union Minister Hardeep Singh Puri on Sunday alleged that opposition parties led by Congress “hatched a conspiracy” to derail the Women’s Reservation Bill, warning they have “played with fire” and will face serious consequences.
Addressing a press conference alongside Rajya Sabha MP and former National Commission for Women (NCW) chairperson Rekha Sharma in Jammu, Puri said even at the last minute, the government made efforts to accommodate the opposition’s concerns to ensure passage of the bill. NCW ex-chief termed it as ‘foeticide’ of women’s rights.
The leaders asserted that the bill is not merely a political issue but a social cause aiming to ensure equitable representation, and maintained that opposition will face the consequences of public backlash. Puri said Home Minister Amit Shah had appealed in the House for an hour to incorporate suggestions, but the offer was rejected.
“They were not interested in constructive engagement. This was a deliberate attempt to derail the discussion and stall a historic reform,” Puri said.He said all of this was part of a conspiracy by Congress and its alliance parties, including DMK, TMC and Samajwadi Party, and they do not want this to be implemented before the 2029 elections.
“However, after listening carefully to the address to the nation by the Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday, it is clear that the national mood is still in favour of implementing this before 2029,” the minister added.Calling the bill a “transformative step” in India’s democratic journey, the minister said the move seeks to transition from women-centric welfare to women-led development.
On the contentious issue of delimitation, Puri said it is a necessary precondition for implementing reservation.Dismissing opposition claims that southern states would be disadvantaged, he cited data presented in the Parliament showing proportional seat increases across states such as Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Tamil Nadu and Kerala.
He said the government remains determined to push for implementation before the 2029 general elections, reflecting what he described as the “national mood.”
The former NCW chairperson, echoing similar sentiments, termed the defeat of the bill “shameless” and likened it to a “foeticide of women’s rights.”Sharma accused opposition parties, particularly the Congress, of consistently blocking the legislation over the past three decades through shifting positions and procedural hurdles.
“They kept changing their stand, first demanding reservation within reservation, then opposing delimitation. The intention was never to pass the bill,” Sharma said. She noted that women’s representation in Parliament has increased only marginally — from around three per cent to about 14 per cent — over several decades, arguing that without legislative intervention, meaningful participation of women in policymaking would remain limited.
On Manipur, Sharma said the violence in the state was “ethnic in nature” with a historical background, adding that the Centre had engaged with all stakeholders to restore stability.Geographic Reference