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Society
Verdict 2009: Does it Make a Difference to Women?
by Kalpana Sharma
One could not escape them
before, during, or after these elections. Four women dominated the cut
and thrust of Election 2009 to the 15th Lok Sabha. Sonia Gandhi, Mamata
Banerjee, Mayawati and Jayalalithaa. In a country where women still
suffer discrimination from birth, this in itself is remarkable - that
women now run four major political parties, the Congress Party, the
Trinamool Congress, the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) and the All India Anna
Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), respectively.
Apart from these four, women were everywhere - as voters, campaigners
and candidates. Only 462 women contested as compared to 6,538 men. But
59 of them won, which is a much higher percentage of success than for
men. And for the first time ever, the number of women in the Lok Sabha
accounted for 10.70 per cent of the total. The 14th Lok Sabha had only
45 women Members of Parliament (MPs), a mere 8.7 per cent of the total
house strength. But 10.7 per cent is still lower than many other
parliaments around the world. And it is less than a third of what women
have been demanding for the last 11 years.
While increasing numbers and a few prominent women do suggest an
increase in political participation, this will not automatically
translate into women-friendly policies or a government sensitive to
gender concerns. Yet, the results of this election do bring with them a
sliver of hope that women's participation in electoral politics could
increase and be qualitatively different from the past.
For example, this time, apart from widows, wives, daughters,
daughters-in-law, sisters and mothers of male politicians standing from
safe seats nurtured by the men, several women who normally would not
have considered entering the fray have done so. Career women who do not
belong to "political" families have chosen to either join existing
political parties, or stand as independents. This represents a notable
break from the past.
Take the case of one of Rahul Gandhi's young prot�g�s, Meenakshi
Natarajan, who stood from Mandsaur in Madhya Pradesh and won. Annu
Tandon of the Observer Research Group, who has a corporate background,
won from Unnao, Uttar Pradesh (UP), again, on a Congress Party ticket.
And even though she lost, well-known dancer and activist Mallika
Sarabhai made her presence felt as an independent challenging the might
of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its leader L.K. Advani in
Gandhinagar, Gujarat.
The victories of women like Natarajan and Tandon do seem to suggest that
women have a greater chance of success if they are supported by or are
candidates of a political party, than if they stand as independents.
Unfortunately, political parties continue to pitch women against one
another. So in Lucknow, for instance, the Congress fielded their state
party president, Rita Bahuguna Joshi, against the Samajwadi Party's
Nafisa Ali. Both lost and the BJP candidate, Lalji Tandon won. In one of
the most high profile contests, Telugu actress and sitting MP, Jaya
Prada of the Samajwadi Party narrowly beat Congress's Noor Begum in
Rampur, UP.
On the positive side, although many female relatives of male politicians
won from safe constituencies, not everyone succeeded. When the Supreme
Court ruled that people convicted of crimes could not stand for
elections, several powerful MPs in Bihar fielded women from their
families. Rakesh Ranjan, or Pappu Yadav, sentenced to life in 1998 for
murder, fielded his wife Ranjit Ranjan and his mother, Shanti Priya.
Both lost. The notorious Mohammed Shahabuddin, convicted for four
murders, had his wife Hina stand from Siwan. She too lost. Vina Devi,
the wife of Surajbhan, also convicted for murder, lost in Nawada. And in
Sheohar, Lovely Anand, wife of Anand Mohan convicted for murder, failed
miserably.
With an increasingly discerning electorate, it is evident that being
related to a powerful man will not guarantee the success of women
candidates. Such a change will work in favour of women who want to
contest but fear confronting criminal elements in politics.
While women getting elected from political families and safe seats
undercuts the demand for a level playing field for women in politics,
increasingly many such women are beginning to carve a distinctive place
for themselves. The most obvious person in this category is Congress
President, Sonia Gandhi. When she took office, no one believed her
capable of managing India's oldest political party. Today, no one
questions it.
Even amongst the younger women, we see signs of such capability. Supriya
Sule, Nationalist Congress Party leader Sharad Pawar's daughter, has had
an easy time entering politics first through the Rajya Sabha and now
into the Lok Sabha by contesting from Baramati, a family fiefdom. Yet,
Sule has already been noticed for articulating concerns such as the
persistent malnutrition amongst children. She was part of a campaign by
young MPs to draw attention to this problem.
Similarly, Congress's Priya Dutt, daughter of the late Sunil Dutt, got
elected from his seat when he died mid-term. Today, she has proved that
she can win on her own steam, in a constituency with many new segments.
In fact, she is the only one of the five Congress MPs from Mumbai who
has won in all her six Assembly segments and the reason is her
reputation for being accessible and involved with her constituents.
These elections have shown again that more women now want to be in
politics. And not just in national politics. Thousands of women are
already politically engaged at the 'panchayat' (village) and 'nagarpalika'
(municipal) levels. And even if not all of them are members of political
parties, it is only a matter of time before they begin demanding space.
In states like Bihar, the reservation for women in 'panchayats' and 'nagarpalikas'
is now 50 per cent. Political parties will not be able to resist this
thrust from the grassroots and would inevitably have to field more women
candidates for the assemblies and the Lok Sabha.
Even if the number of women elected has increased only marginally, their
influence through the major parties has increased. Every party now
routinely includes gender concerns in its manifesto. The last government
instituted several policies specifically addressing women's concerns,
such as the Domestic Violence Bill and programmes curbing sex-selective
abortions and encouraging female literacy. The two non-Congress Chief
Ministers who have done well in their respective states, Shivraj Singh
Chouhan in Madhya Pradesh and Nitish Kumar in Bihar, have actively
pursued policies that benefit women. Thus, it is clear that addressing
women's concerns does translate into votes.
With a higher percentage of elected women in the Lok Sabha and with many
newcomers who might be less prejudiced and more open to the idea of
reservation of seats for women, perhaps the Women's Reservation Bill
will finally see the light of day. More women need to be in politics not
because they make better politicians, which they very well could, but
because women have the right to be represented in policy-making when
they make up half the population.
(The writer is an independent journalist and columnist.)
May 24, 2009
By arrangement with
WFS
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