Contents
Introduction
True democratic representation and responsiveness cannot be achieved merely by increasing the number of MPs. A holistic solution requires shifting the focus from the top-heavy parliamentary model to the grassroots power of the Third Tier of Governance (Panchayati Raj Institutions and Urban Local Bodies).
Historical–Constitutional Context
- India’s parliamentary design under Articles 81 and 82 was calibrated for a population of ~36 crore. The freeze on seats (1976–2026) ensured federal balance while incentivising population control.
- Today, despite population tripling, representation cannot be reduced to “people per MP” arithmetic alone:
- Representation has evolved from physical proximity → digital accessibility.
- The MP’s role has shifted from local grievance handler → national policymaker.
- Thus, institutional expansion must be assessed against functional necessity, not demographic inertia.
Why More MPs Is Not a Panacea?
- Constitutional Balance, Not Arithmetic: The freeze (1976–2026) preserved federal equity and incentivised population control. Representation cannot be reduced to a simple population-per-MP formula. Example: seat freeze logic.
- Changing Nature of Representation: The MP’s role has evolved from a local grievance handler to a national lawmaker, making functional efficiency more important than numerical expansion. Example: policy over patronage.
- Technology Expands Access: Mobile connectivity, social media, and e-governance have increased an MP’s reach, weakening the argument that more MPs are needed for accessibility. Example: digital outreach.
- Legislative Efficiency Risks: A significantly larger House risks reduced debate quality, rushed lawmaking, and over-reliance on committees, potentially weakening parliamentary scrutiny. Example: guillotine passage.
- Structural, Not Numerical, Constraints: Low women’s representation and limited responsiveness stem from party nomination practices and political will—not the number of seats. Example: ticket allocation bias.
The Third Tier: India’s Real Democratic Backbone
- Unmatched Scale & Proximity: With ~3.2 million elected representatives across 250,000+ Panchayats and ~3,700 ULBs, the third tier offers dense, localised representation far beyond Parliament’s reach. Example: grassroots density.
- Strong Constitutional Foundation: The 73rd & 74th Amendments institutionalised decentralisation, regular elections, and participatory governance, though devolution remains uneven. Example: decentralisation mandate.
- Gender & Social Transformation: Around 45–46% women representation (~1.45 million leaders) and inclusion of SC/ST communities have reshaped priorities toward welfare-oriented governance. Example: women leadership.
- Subsidiarity in Practice: Local bodies handle core functions like water, sanitation, agriculture, and housing, aligning governance with the principle of subsidiarity. Shift from centralised representation → distributed governance. Example: local governance.
- Everyday Accountability & Responsiveness: Sarpanchs and councillors are directly accessible, enabling faster grievance redressal and frontline disaster response, unlike distant parliamentary systems. Example: immediate feedback.
Key Challenges The 4F Deficit
- Funds: Local bodies remain dependent on state/central grants; they need greater power to generate their own tax revenue.
- Functions: Clear devolution of the 29 subjects (Panchayats) and 18 subjects (ULBs) is still pending in many states.
- Functionaries: A lack of dedicated technical and administrative staff at the local level leads to poor implementation.
- Freedom: Excessive state government interference often turns local bodies into extensions of the state machinery rather than autonomous units.
Way Forward
- Calibrated Expansion: Moderate Lok Sabha seat increase with stronger committees to protect deliberation quality. Example: committee scrutiny.
- Fiscal & Functional Devolution: Transfer 29+18 subjects with ~10% tax devolution and binding State Finance Commissions. Example: fiscal autonomy.
- Political Deepening: Mandatory women quotas, OBC framework, and capacity-building institutions for grassroots leaders. Example: inclusive politics.
- Administrative & Tech Reform: Leadership academies, local civil services, digital transparency, and AI governance dashboards. Example: digital governance.
- Institutional Synergy & Accountability: Clear role division (MP–MLA–local), empowered mayors, and Gram Sabha-based participatory planning. Example: subsidiarity model.
Conclusion
True democracy empowers citizens at grassroot; expanding Parliament without strengthening grassroots risks numerical growth without meaningful representation or participatory governance.


