In his address to the nation, the PM expressed deep ‘pain’ at seeing Opposition leaders ‘clapping and thumping their desks’ at the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill’s defeat

The Prime Minister promised all ‘mothers and sisters’ of India that the government remains committed to its mission. (File Image)
Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed the nation at 8.30pm on Saturday, delivering a deeply personal and politically charged response to the legislative collapse of the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill. Speaking just 24 hours after the bill failed to secure a two-thirds majority in the Lok Sabha, the Prime Minister framed the defeat not as a procedural setback but as a “betrayal of Nari Shakti” (women’s power) by dynastic political interests.
In a rare public apology, the Prime Minister stated that despite the government’s “most sincere and clean intentions”, it was unable to secure the required mandate. He vowed, however, that while the government may have lacked the 66 per cent support in Parliament, it carries “100 per cent of the country’s women” with it, signalling that the battle for the 850-seat expansion and women’s quota is now moving to the people’s court.
The ‘Betrayal’ Narrative and Parliamentary Conduct
The Prime Minister’s address focused heavily on the optics of the Lok Sabha proceedings on Friday night. He expressed deep “pain” at seeing Opposition leaders from the Congress, DMK, TMC, and Samajwadi Party “clapping and thumping their desks” as the bill’s defeat was announced. By highlighting these celebrations, the Prime Minister effectively branded the Opposition as “betrayers of the Constitution and women’s empowerment”.
He argued that these parties were not voting against a technical delimitation exercise but were instead protecting their own “dynastic fiefdoms”. According to the Prime Minister, these groups are “afraid” that common women from panchayats and local bodies would eventually overshadow established leaders if the 33 per cent reservation were operationalised through the proposed seat expansion to 850.
Deconstructing the Opposition’s ‘Delimitation Trap’ Charge
Addressing the primary criticism from the INDIA bloc—that the bill was a “Trojan horse” designed to reduce the representation of Southern states—the Prime Minister offered a firm rebuttal. He claimed the legislation was aimed at “equal growth for every state” and accused the Congress of historically creating hurdles for women’s reservation.
He described the Opposition’s focus on the North-South divide as a “diversionary tactic” used to mask their “parasite-like politics”. For the Prime Minister, the 131st Amendment was the “need of the hour” to modernise India’s 55-year-old electoral map and ensure that the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, passed in 2023, does not remain a “paper law”.
The Roadmap to 2029 and ‘People’s Punishment’
While the speech lacked a new legislative announcement—such as a joint session—it served as an unmistakable campaign launch for upcoming state polls and the next general elections. The Prime Minister warned that those who “insulted the sentiments of the framers of the Constitution” would face “the people’s punishment”. This rhetoric suggests that the BJP intends to make the bill’s defeat a foundational theme for the West Bengal and Tamil Nadu assembly polls.
The address concluded on a defiant note, with the Prime Minister promising all “mothers and sisters” of India that the government remains committed to its mission. By framing the 298-to-230 vote as a victory for the “status quo” over “aspirational India”, observers say the Prime Minister has successfully ensured that the “8.30pm” window on Saturday night marks the beginning of a massive national outreach programme to reclaim the narrative.
April 18, 2026, 21:51 IST
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