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‘It’s ours, Apna Hai’: Sonia Gandhi on Women’s Reservation Bill

According to sources, the Union Cabinet on Monday cleared the Women’s Reservation Bill, which seeks to reserve a 33 per cent quota in Lok Sabha and state legislative assemblies.

New Delhi: “What about it? It’s ours. Apna hain,” Congress Parliamentary Party Chairperson Sonia Gandhi said on Tuesday.

Her response to mediapersons while entering the Parliament for a historic joint sitting of the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha as both houses convene their first session in the newly inaugurated Parliament building.

According to sources, the Union Cabinet on Monday cleared the Women’s Reservation Bill, which seeks to reserve a 33 per cent quota in Lok Sabha and state legislative assemblies.

According to official sources, the Union Cabinet Monday cleared the Women’s Reservation Bill (WRB) in a key meeting chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Congress MP Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury said today, “We want the Women’s Reservation Bill to be brought and passed as soon as possible. The demand for the Women’s Reservation Bill was initiated by UPA and our leader, Sonia Gandhi. It took so long, but we will be happy if this is introduced.”

Earlier on Monday, the Congress General Secretary in charge of Communications, Jairam Ramesh, said that the party has been demanding the implementation of the Constitution 108th Amendment Bill, 2008 bill, for a long time.

“The Congress party has been demanding the implementation of women’s reservation for a long time. We welcome the Union Cabinet decision reportedly coming forward and look forward to the details of the Bill,” he said in a post on X.

He further added that this could have been thoroughly discussed in the all-party meeting before the special session, and a consensus could have been reached instead of behind-the-scenes politics.

The allocation of reserved seats shall be determined by such authority as prescribed by Parliament.

One-third of the total number of seats reserved for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes shall be reserved for women of those groups in the Lok Sabha and the legislative assemblies. Reservation of seats for women shall cease to exist 15 years after the commencement of this Amendment Act.

In 2010, Rajya Sabha passed the bill, but the bill lapsed as it could not be passed by Lok Sabha.