Union Home Minister Amit Shah addressed concerns about the representation of southern states in the Lok Sabha following delimitation, assuring an increase in their number of seats and overall influence.

Key Points
- Amit Shah dismisses claims that southern states will lose representation in the Lok Sabha after delimitation.
- The number of Lok Sabha seats in the five southern states is projected to increase from 129 to 195.
- Shah assures that the percentage of power for southern states will rise from 23.76% to nearly 24%.
- The Home Minister clarified that the delimitation bill is identical to the previous law, refuting opposition concerns about potential manipulation.
- The total number of seats in the new Lok Sabha will be 816, which is 50% more than the current total.
Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Thursday said a "completely false" narrative is being spread that the representation of southern states will go down in the Lok Sabha after its strength is increased to 816 seats following the implementation of women's reservation and delimitation of constituencies.
Intervening in the debate in Lok Sabha on the three bills introduced for amendment of the women's quota law and to set up a delimitation commission, Shah said the fact is that the number of seats will go up and power will grow.
He said the number of Lok Sabha seats in the five southern states will go up from the present 129 to 195 seats while the percentage of power will increase from 23.76 per cent to 23.87 or almost 24 per cent.
Projected Seat Increases in Southern States
"Lok Sabha seats in Karnataka will increase to 42 from the present 28; in Andhra Pradesh, the number of Lok Sabha sets will increase to 38 from 25; in Telangana, it will be 26 from present 17; in Tamil Nadu, the number of Lok Sabha seats will go up to 59 from the present 39; and in Kerala, it will be 30 seats from the present 20," he said.
Rejection of Opposition Concerns
Shah strongly rejected the opposition suggestion that the government will indulge in some kind of "mischief" during the delimitation exercise, saying the NDA government has not made any changes in the existing law.
"The delimitation bill is exactly like the previous law brought by your government. There is no change, not even a comma or a full stop," he said.
Explaining how the total number of seats in the new Lok Sabha is fixed at 816, the home minister said it is exactly 50 per cent more than the current total seats.




