Ford to recall over 140,000 US vehicles over damaged wires

Ford is recalling 140,201 Ranger vehicles in ‌the U.S. as damaged ‌wires can create an electrical ​short and cause a fire in the A-pillar area, increasing the risk of ‌injury or ⁠a crash, the U.S. National Highway Traffic ⁠Safety Administration said on Wednesday.

Reuters

The sun visor ​or headliner wiring ​harnesses ​may be ‌improperly positioned or have excessive tape thickness, which can result in damaged wires, the regulator said.

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Dealers will ‌inspect the wiring ​for damage and ​update ​the body control ‌module software, NHTSA ​said, adding ​that the damaged wiring harnesses will be replaced ​as ‌necessary.

(Reporting by Disha Mishra ​in Bengaluru; Editing by ​Nivedita Bhattacharjee)

Ford to recall over 140,000 US vehicles over damaged wires

Ford is recalling 140,201 Ranger vehicles in ‌the U.S. as damaged ‌wires can create an electrical ​short and cause a fire in the A-pill...
At least 25 dead in powerful explosion at fireworks factory in southern India

At least 25 workers, most of them women, were killed in anexplosion at a fireworks factoryin southern India’sTamil Nadu stateon Sunday, authorities said.

The Independent US

The blast tore through the factory near Kattanarpatti village in Virudhunagar at around 3.20pm. There were nearly 100 people on site at the Vanaja Fireworks unit when the explosion occurred. The workers were reportedly mixing chemicals, police said.

The force of the blast and the ensuing fire flattened at least four sheds, sending plumes of smoke 50ft into the air.

“The explosion was so powerful that three rooms were reduced to rubble and several adjacent structures were also damaged,” a police officer said.

District collector N O Sukhapatra said rescue crews had recovered 23 bodies from the rubble and that six injured workers were being treated at a local government hospital, four of them in critical condition.

A second explosion later in the evening, triggered as rescue workers were clearing the rubble with an earthmover, injured 17 people, including six policemen and four firemen.

Officials said the factory appeared to be operating in violation of multiple safety norms despite holding a licence.

“The factory was not supposed to function on a Sunday. We will initiate stern action after a detailed inquiry,” Mr Sukhapatra said, adding that the licence would be cancelled.

The owner, the wife of a former village council head, is reportedly absconding.

Police said they filed a complaint against the factory owner and foreman and launched a manhunt for them.

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Further violations were alleged by the Firecrackers and Matchbox Manufacturers Association district president PN Deva, who said the unit was permitted to employ only 25 workers but many more were present at the time of the blast.

He said regulations restricted chemical mixing to between 8am and 10am, yet the explosion occurred hours later, suggesting operations continued throughout the day.

Many bodies were charred beyond recognition and some remained to be unidentified.

A family member of a victim told the news agency ANI that she lost both her father and mother in the accident. “We have nothing else to do except deal with this loss,” she said.

Tamil Nadu chief minister MK Stalin described the deaths as “tragic” and expressed “immense sorrow” in a post on X.

Prime ministerNarendra Modi, in a social media post, extended his “condolences to those who have lost their loved ones” and called it a “deeply distressing” incident.

"The loss of lives in a tragic accident at a firecracker factory in Virudhunagar district, TN, is deeply distressing. I extend my heartfelt condolences to the bereaved families. I wish the injured a speedy recovery,” president Droupadi Murmu said.

Tamil Nadu’s Virudhunagar–Sivakasi belt is widely regarded as India’s fireworks hub, supplying a large share of the country’s crackers and employing thousands in small, often family-run units.

The industry has long been plagued by safety concerns, with accidents occurring regularly due to lapses in handling volatile chemicals and overcrowded workplaces.

One of the deadliest incidents, the Sivakasi fireworks factory explosion in 2012, killed more than 40 people and injured dozens, highlighting persistent failures in enforcing safety regulations.

At least 25 dead in powerful explosion at fireworks factory in southern India

At least 25 workers, most of them women, were killed in anexplosion at a fireworks factoryin southern India’sTamil Nadu stateon Sunday,...
What to Know About Allegations of Excessive Drinking by FBI Director Kash Patel

FBI Director Kash Patelhas vehemently denied—and threatened a lawsuit over—a new reportfromThe Atlanticthis week, which alleges excessive drinking and unexplained absences during his tenure as bureau chief.

Time Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Kash Patel testifies during a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on worldwide threats in the Hart Senate Office Building on March 18, 2026. —Win McNamee/Getty Images

In onepost on X, Patel told the outlet and author of the report: “See you and your entire entourage of false reporting in court,” calling the piece a “legal layup.”

“Memo to the fake news - the only time I’ll ever actually be concerned about the hit piece lies you write about me will be when you stop,” Patel added in another poston XSaturday morning. “Keep talking, it means I’m doing exactly what I should be doing. And no amount of BS you write will ever deter this FBI from making America safe again and taking down the criminals you love.”

Thearticle, published Friday evening, cites more than two dozen people, including unnamed current and former FBI officials, alleging several episodes described as “freak-outs” from the 46-year-old former public defender. These allegations of erratic behavior and excessive drinking are indicative of what they describe as poor and even absent leadership of the agency, which hasabout 38,000 employees.

Several officials cited in the piece say that Patel is known for "obvious intoxication" at private clubs in Washington and in Las Vegas, forcing his staff to move early morning meetings to later in the day as he recovered. Justice Department and White House officials also described instances in which aides or security personnel had difficulty waking him. In one case, members of his security detail were unable to reach him behind locked doors, prompting a request for “breaching equipment” typically used by tactical teams. If substantiated, such conduct would violate the Department of Justice’sethics standards, which prohibit habitual intoxication.

Officials also said it had raised concerns about public safety, with some wondering how Patel would handle a domestic terrorist attack. “That’s what keeps me up at night,” one official toldThe Atlantic, adding that concerns have grown in the weeks since the United States beganmilitary operations against Iran.

The article also alleges that many staffers are just “waiting” for the notice that Patel will be fired from his position, despite President Donald Trump havingpreviously defendedthe FBI director. Officials cited in the report pointed to his unreachability and impulsivity in response to high-stakes situations.

In response to the allegations, White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt told the magazine that “crime across the country has plummeted to the lowest level in more than 100 years and many high profile criminals have been put behind bars. Director Patel remains a critical player on the Administration’s law and order team.”

The report comes weeks after Iran-linked hackers calling themselves Handala claimed to have breached Patel’s personal email andpublished photographsand documents online, according to Reuters.

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Past controversies

The report adds to the mounting questions over Patel’s leadership of the U.S.’s principal federal law enforcement agency and is the latest in a series of controversies surrounding him.

In September 2025, Pateldrew criticismamong lawmakers across the political aisle over his handling of the manhunt for right-wing commentator Charlie Kirk’s killer, especially after heprematurely announcedthat the authorities had detained a suspect.

At the time, Patel said in an interview that he had “no regrets” about the social media post, claiming that he was acting in the interest of transparency.

“Mr. Patel was so anxious to take credit for finding Mr. Kirk’s assassin that he violated one of the basics of effective law enforcement: At critical stages of investigation, shut up and let the professionals do their job,” Sen. Dick Durbin, a Democrat from Illinois,saidin an FBI oversight hearing at the time.

Read more:After Missteps, Kash Patel Faces Questions Over His Leadership of Charlie Kirk Investigation

In December last year, Democrats on the House Judiciary Committeereleased a letterdemanding answers after reports emerged that Patel used a government aircraft on a “date night” with his country singer girlfriend, to go see her perform in Pennsylvania, and for trips to places like Texas and Scotland. Patelcalledthe accusations “baseless rumors” at the time.

Then, this February, he once againcame under firefor traveling to the Milan-Cortina Olympics to watch the U.S. men’s hockey team win the gold medal. Videos shared on social media after the game showed Patel chugging a beer, wearing a gold medal, and dancing and singing with the team.

An FBI spokesperson later defended Patel in aposton X. “No, it’s not a personal trip. Director Patel is on a trip that was planned months ago.”

The White House did not immediately respond to TIME's request for comment.

What to Know About Allegations of Excessive Drinking by FBI Director Kash Patel

FBI Director Kash Patelhas vehemently denied—and threatened a lawsuit over—a new reportfromThe Atlanticthis week, which alleges excessi...
Trump pushes back ceasefire and launches furious tirade at accusations he is ‘sucker’ for Iran

President Donald Trump on Tuesday said the U.S. wouldextend its ceasefire with Iranthat was due to expire tomorrow, at the request of Pakistani authorities, despite havingthreatened hours earlierthat “I expect to be bombing” when asked if he'd agree to such an extension.

The Independent US

Writing on Truth Social, Trump said Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Field Marshal Asim Munir had asked him to put a hold on his bombing plans while further attributing the decision to “the fact that the Government of Iran is seriously fractured.”

“We have been asked to hold our Attack on the Country of Iran until such time as their leaders and representatives can come up with a unified proposal,” Trump said.

He added that the American naval blockade on Iran’s ports would remain in place while the ceasefire continues “until such time as their proposal is submitted, and discussions are concluded, one way or the other.”

The president’s latest walk-back of his threats to resume the U.S. air campaign against Tehran comeshours after he told CNBChe was not inclined to agree to any extension of the ceasefire.

Trump had told Reuters an extension was ‘highly unlikely’ before reversing himself on Tuesday (Getty)

After he was asked by anchor Joe Kernen if he’d consider an extension during a telephone interview on the cable news programSquawk Box,Trump replied: “I don't want to do that. We don't have that much time.”

“I expect to be bombing because I think that's a better attitude to go in with. But we're ready to go. I mean, the military is raring to go,” he said.

Trump had also told Bloomberg News it was “highly unlikely” that he’d agree to extend the ceasefire after its Wednesday expiration without a full agreement to end the nearly two-month-old war he started on February 28.

Although negotiations between the parties had been set to commence in Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital, the U.S. team that was slated to be led by Vice President JD Vance never left the U.S., and Vance remained at the White House all day on Tuesday in what officials described as a series of policy meetings.

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For their part, Tehran’s negotiators had refused to participate in the sessions unless Trump had lifted the blockade of Iran’s ports.

In a post on X, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi called the blockade an “act of war” and therefore a violation of the ceasefire.

"Iran knows how to ‌neutralize restrictions, ‌how to defend its ⁠interests, and how to resist bullying," he said.

Tuesday’s announcement is just the most recent in a series of reversals, which critics have come to givethe derisive acronym TACO(”Trump Always Chickens Out”) that have characterized Trump’s second bite at the apple of presidential power.

The pattern was established last April after his shambolic “liberation day” tariff rollout — he makes an outrageous threat on trade or another policy matter that is likely to cause the market to tumble before he inevitably walks back on that policy, leading to a market rebound.

For example, his so-called “Liberation Day” tariffs caused the markets to hithistoric lowsbefore he ordered a 90-day pause one week later, leading torecord highs.

Traders even started using the TACO acronym to describe the rapid policy shifts, borrowing the term first coined byFinancial Timescolumnist Robert Armstronglast year.

The ceasefire extension echoes his decision to announce the ceasefire agreement on April 7, hours ahead of a self-imposed deadline before he ordered U.S. forces to bomb Iranian civilian infrastructure.

Days earlier, he’d declared the day “Power Plant Day” and “Bridge Day” for U.S. armed forces unless Iran would “Open the F***in’ Strait, you crazy b*****ds,” lest they be “living in Hell.”

He later threatened that Iran’s “entire civilization” would “die tonight, never to be brought back again,” implying that the U.S. would commit genocide against the Iranian people unless their government capitulated to his terms.

Trump pushes back ceasefire and launches furious tirade at accusations he is ‘sucker’ for Iran

President Donald Trump on Tuesday said the U.S. wouldextend its ceasefire with Iranthat was due to expire tomorrow, at the request of P...
Ace Zack Wheeler set to return to struggling Phillies rotation on Saturday at Atlanta

CHICAGO (AP) — Philadelphia ace right-hander Zack Wheeler, out since last August because of a blood clot found near his right shoulder and thoracic outlet surgery, will return to the struggling Phillies rotation on Saturday in Atlanta, manager Rob Thomson said Tuesday.

Associated Press

A three-time All-Star, the 35-year-old Wheeler last pitched on Aug. 15, 2025, at Washington, exiting after five innings.

Wheeler finished his sixth season with the Phillies at 10-5 with a 2.71 ERA through 149 2/3 innings and 24 starts. He's 113-75 with a 3.28 ERA for his career over 11 seasons with Philadelphia and the New York Mets.

Wheeler completed a five-game minor league rehab stint on Sunday when he threw 77 pitches for Double-A Reading. The righty also pitched for Triple-A Lehigh Valley during the assignment.

Thomson didn't think Wheeler, who rejoined the Phillies in Chicago, would face significant restrictions against the Braves.

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“I see him as kind of a six (inning), 90 (pitch) guy,” Thomson said before the Phillies faced the Cubs. “I think he's basically at the end of spring training.”

Wheeler's return could provide a much-needed boost to the Phillies, who entered Tuesday on a six-game slide that dropped them to 8-14.

“I think having Zack Wheeler on your 26-man roster makes you a better roster no matter what,” Thomson said. “So when he's healthy and pitching, well he's one of, if not the best pitcher in the National League.”

AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Ace Zack Wheeler set to return to struggling Phillies rotation on Saturday at Atlanta

CHICAGO (AP) — Philadelphia ace right-hander Zack Wheeler, out since last August because of a blood clot found near his right shoulder ...
Chornobyl first responder says few survive 40 years on

By Daria Smetanko

Reuters Petro Hurin, 76, one of hundreds of thousands of ‘liquidators’ brought to clean up the aftermath of the explosion that tore apart reactor Four of the Chornobyl nuclear plant in Ukraine on April 26, 1986, visits a monument dedicated to his grandson Andrii, a Ukrainian serviceman killed at the age of 26 while fighting near Bakhmut in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region in 2023, at a memorial in Cherkasy region, Ukraine April 7, 2026. REUTERS/Anna Voitenko Petro Hurin, 76, one of hundreds of thousands of ‘liquidators’ brought to clean up the aftermath of the explosion that tore apart reactor Four of the Chornobyl nuclear plant in Ukraine on April 26, 1986, plays the accordion as his wife Olha listens in their house in the village of Khutory, Cherkasy region, Ukraine April 7, 2026. REUTERS/Anna Voitenko Petro Hurin, 76, one of hundreds of thousands of ‘liquidators’ brought to clean up the aftermath of the explosion that tore apart reactor Four of the Chornobyl nuclear plant in Ukraine on April 26, 1986, reflected in a mirror as he stands in his house in the village of Khutory, Cherkasy region, Ukraine April 7, 2026. REUTERS/Anna Voitenko

Petro Hurin visits the monuments dedicated to his grandson Andrii, a Ukrainian serviceman in Cherkasy region

KHUTORY, Ukraine, April 21 (Reuters) - Petro Hurin says his health has never been the same since he was sent 40 years ago to clear the Chornobyl site in the wake of the world's worst nuclear accident.

He was among hundreds of thousands of 'liquidators' brought in to ‌clean up after the explosion at reactor four of the Chornobyl nuclear plant in Ukraine on April 26, 1986. The disaster sent clouds of ‌radioactive material across much of Europe.

Thirty-one plant workers and firemen died in the immediate aftermath, mostly from acute radiation sickness. Thousands more have since succumbed to radiation-related illnesses such as cancer, although the total death ​toll and long-term health effects remain a subject of intense debate.

At the time, Hurin worked for a business that supplied diggers and construction vehicles, which sent him to the Chornobyl exclusion zone in June 1986. Of the 40 people sent by his company, only five are alive today, he said.

"Not a single Chornobyl person is in good health," the 76-year-old said. "It's death by a thousand cuts."

Soviet authorities strove to conceal the extent of the Chornobyl disaster, refusing to cancel the May 1 parade in Kyiv, around 100 km (60 miles) ‌to the south. Ukraine's current government has highlighted the ⁠Soviet authorities' bungled handling of the accident and attempts to cover up the disaster.

Hurin said some colleagues produced medical certificates to excuse themselves from serving in Chornobyl, but he was willing to help.

"I realised that, however small my contribution might be, I was doing ⁠my bit to help tame this atomic beast," he said.

HEADACHES, CHEST PAIN, BLEEDING

Working 12-hour shifts, Hurin used an excavator to load dry concrete mixed with lead – shipped to the site by river barge – onto trucks for transport to the reactor, where it was mixed to build a massive sarcophagus to contain the radiation.

"The dust was terrible," Hurin recalled. "You'd work for half an ​hour ​in a respirator, and it would end up looking (brown) like an onion."

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After four days, Hurin said ​he began experiencing severe symptoms such as headaches, chest pain, bleeding ‌and a metallic taste in his throat. Doctors treated him but after another shift, he could barely walk. He feared he had "a day or two" to live.

"I was brought to the hospital, and the doctors did a blood test first," Hurin said. "They pricked all my fingers and a pale liquid came out, but no blood."

Soviet doctors refused to diagnose radiation sickness, a finding he said was not permitted at the time. Instead, he was told he had vegetative-vascular dystonia, a nervous disorder often linked to stress.

Before the disaster, Hurin had never taken sick leave, but afterwards he spent around seven months going from one hospital to another to receive treatment, including a blood ‌transfusion.

He says he has been diagnosed with anaemia - often linked to radiation sickness - angina, pancreatitis ​and a series of other conditions.

By the standards of his countrymen, Hurin has lived a long life. ​According to the World Health Organization, average life expectancy for men in ​Ukraine stood at 66 in 2021, having declined during COVID.

Now retired, Hurin lives with his wife Olha in central Ukraine's Cherkasy region. ‌Although he suffers from health problems, he still plays the bayan – ​a type of accordion - and writes songs and ​poems.

He says he is fighting to access a special disability pension for 'liquidators' of the nuclear disaster.

Another catastrophe - Russia's 2022 invasion of his homeland - has come to dominate his life. He and his wife Olha regularly visit a memorial in nearby Kholodnyi Yar dedicated to their grandson, Andrii Vorobkalo, a Ukrainian soldier, ​who was killed three years ago in the war, aged ‌26.

After his daughter had left to work in Europe, Hurin and his wife raised Andrii from the age of four. When Russia invaded Ukraine ​in 2022, Andrii quit his job in Greece.

"He left everything behind and came to defend Ukraine," Hurin told Reuters, standing near the memorial ​stone dedicated to his grandson. "We think of Andrii all the time."

(Editing by Andrew Heavens)

Chornobyl first responder says few survive 40 years on

By Daria Smetanko Petro Hurin visits the monuments dedicated to his grandson Andrii, a Ukrainian serviceman in Cherkasy region ...
Modi’s push to redraw India’s electoral map ‘could decide who controls power for decades’

The flames leapt quickly in the dry April heat of southern India, where Tamil Nadu’s chief minister MK Stalin stood before a crowd dressed in black, holding a copy of a government bill and a lighter. The so-called “black law”, which would expand the size of India’s lower house of parliament from 543 seats to as many as 850, curled into ash as party workers chanted slogans against the federal government.

The Independent US

The protest wasn’t just political theatre. It marked the opening salvo in what could become one of the most consequential political battles inIndiain decades – a fight over representation, power and the very architecture of the world’s largest democracy.

At the centre lies prime ministerNarendra Modi’spush to redraw parliamentary constituencies and expand the lower house, a move that his BJP party says is necessary to implement a 2023 law mandating that 33 per cent of all seats in federal and state legislatures must be filled by women.

Critics say the two issues don’t need to be linked – that minimum quotas for women MPs could simply be applied to the existing structure of parliament. They argue the proposal’s true aim is something much more strategic: a recalibration of power ahead of the next general election in 2029.

India hasn’t significantly reallocated parliamentary seats since the 1970s. The exercise, carried out by the Delimitation Commission, a statutory body, was last undertaken after the 1971 census.

In 1976, when India’s population stood at about 550 million, the number of Lok Sabha seats was frozen at 543. The move was meant to ensure that states which reduced birth rates were not punished with diminished representation as the size of constituencies was pegged to population. That freeze was due to end after the 2001 census, but was extended until at least 2026 by the previous BJP government of Atal Bihari Vajpayee.

The Modi government was moving to end the long-standing status quo.

Its delimitation bill seeks to expand the Lok Sabha (lower house) to as many as 850 seats and redraw constituencies based on the last census done in 2011. It also ties the rollout of the women’s reservation law, passed in 2023 but not yet implemented, to this exercise. A three-day special session of the parliament from 16 to 18 April was called to debate the amendments needed to put the changes in place ahead of the 2029 election.

However, the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026, failed to secure the two-thirds majority required for the constitutional change. A total of 298 MPs voted in favour and 230 against the bill.

"The amendment bill has fallen. ​They ⁠used an unconstitutional trick in the name of women to break the Constitution," opposition leader Rahul Gandhi said in a ⁠post on X, minutes after the bill failed to get through.

The government ​dismissed ⁠that accusation and said ‌it would continue to campaign for women's quotas. "The women of this country will not forgive you," Interior minister Amit Shah said in parliament, before ‌the bill was put to a vote.

Modi launched a scathing attack on the opposition on Saturday in an address to the nation. “Every citizen of India is watching how dreams of our women have been crushed,” the prime minister said during his address. “Fight for empowering India’s women has been stalled due to selfish politics of opposition parties,” he added.

Modi likened the opposition’s stance to“bhrun hatya”(female foeticide), accusing parties such as the Congress, DMK, Samajwadi Party and Trinamool Congress of having “killed” the proposal for women’s reservation when it was first introduced, according to reports. “A woman may forget many things, but she never forgets her insult,” he said.

Opposition parties maintained that they backed women’s reservation, but opposed tying its rollout to a nationwide delimitation process using older population data while the 2026–27 census is in progress. They also said dependence on 2011 figures could weaken the relative representation of southern and north-eastern states, where population growth has slowed more quickly than in several northern states.

“India has functioned on 1971 data, effectively silencing the voices of millions,” BJP spokesperson Radhika Khera tellsThe Independent. “The 2026 delimitation is not just about numbers, it’s about democratic equilibrium.”

She describes the expansion of the Lok Sabha as a “buffer”, ensuring that while more populous states gain representation, others don’t lose their existing strength. “By increasing the total pool, we ensure that high-population states get their due representation.”

“Fairness,” she says, “means ensuring that no citizen’s vote is worth less than another’s, regardless of geography.”

As for its decision to use the 2011 census, the government claims that waiting for the next population count – supposed to be completed in 2021, but now expected only by 2027 – would delay implementing women’s reservation to at least 2034.

“We are choosing immediate empowerment over indefinite delays,” Khera says.

But the proposal triggered deep unease in southern states, where the ruling BJP generally has a less strong presence. At the heart of their concern is a simple equation: if parliamentary seats are allocated purely on the basis of population, states with higher population growth – mainly in northern India – will get more MPs while southern states will see their relative influence shrink.

P Wilson, a parliamentarian from Tamil Nadu’s ruling Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam party, sees it as a direct breach of a decades-old political compact.

“States were told: control population and delimitation will follow later. Now that has been thrown to the winds,” he says.

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“You are rewarding states which violated population control and punishing those which followed it scrupulously,” Wilson says. “Where is equality now?”

States like Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Karnataka boast lower fertility rates and stronger socioeconomic indices. They also contribute more significantly to the Indian economy than the northern states with higher populations. Their leaders argue a headcount-based redistribution ignores these achievements.

Saral Patel, a spokesperson for the opposition Congress party, echoes their concern, calling it “a structural shift in India’s federal balance of power”.

“If only population is used as the sole metric then you are punishing states for good governance.”

For the opposition, the timing of this move raises further questions. “The urgency is the election. They are always election-oriented,” Wilson alleges, referring to the BJP.

“In terms of elections, they will do anything.”

He argues that theBJP’srelatively weaker presence in southern states is shaping the government’s policy. “Southern states have rejected them,” he says. “So, they don’t want the voice of the southern states to be heard.”

Congress leaderRahul Gandhihas gone further, describing the proposal as an “attempted power grab” through the manipulation of electoral boundaries.

Opposition leaders also point to the sequencing: delays in conducting the decadal census, the passage of the women’s reservation bill and the linking of that reform to delimitation. “When you see this entire exercise chronologically,” Patel says, “it looks like the process is being fast-tracked for political timelines rather than genuine policy requirements.”

The government rejects this criticism. “To suggest that representation should be suppressed because it might favour a party is fundamentally anti-democratic,” Khera argues. “We aren’t engineering polls, we are re-engineering a stagnant system.”

Few disagree on the need for greater female representation. Women make up just 14 per cent of the lower house, less than half of the proposed quota. But tying this reform to delimitation is one of the most contentious aspects of the bill.

“Any reasonable person knows that they are hiding behind women’s reservation,” Wilson says. “Who prevents you from implementing it within 543 seats?”

Patel says that there are workable alternatives. “There is no structural barrier,” he says. “It could have been done through rotation or internal allocation. Linking it to delimitation creates a situation where opposing one appears like opposing the other.”

The BJP, however, insists that delimitation is necessary to implement the quota fairly. “Representation must be based on clearly defined territorial constituencies. You cannot simply appoint women to seats. We are embedding the quota into the very fabric of new constituencies,” Khera says.

Congress party leader Rahul Gandhi speaks at a rally in Delhi on 14 December 2025 (Getty)

Beyond the political clash, unresolved technical questions remain. Critics of the proposed legislation are concerned about the cap of 850 seats, the absence of a clear methodology for distributing seats among states, and how constituencies will be chosen for the women’s quota – particularly given quotas already exist for people from Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, traditionally downtrodden groups.

“There is no methodology,” Wilson says of the proposed cap, as he questions the “arbitrary” ratio of MPs to constituents. “You fix a number, and then accommodate more seats where it suits you.”

Khera defends the proposed expansion as a measured compromise between representation and practicality.

“While a strict one-to-one ratio based on current population might suggest around 1,200 seats,” she says, “we must balance representation with functionality.”

“A parliament of that size would be administratively unwieldy and could dilute the quality of debate.”

She describes the proposal as “a calibrated expansion, not an uncontrolled explosion”. While it is too early to comment on final numbers, she says, the government is committed to ensuring that no state loses representation.

The delimitation commission – expected to be led by a retired Supreme Court judge – is set to wield sweeping powers to redraw boundaries, raising further concerns about transparency and oversight.

The whole exercise, Patel argues, “is about who holds power in India for the next few decades”.

Back in Namakkal, Tamil Nadu, the ashes of the burned bill lay scattered on the ground as protesters vowed to stand up against the changes. While parliament sits to debate the bill, similar demonstrations are expected to take place across the country in the coming days.

Modi’s push to redraw India’s electoral map ‘could decide who controls power for decades’

The flames leapt quickly in the dry April heat of southern India, where Tamil Nadu’s chief minister MK Stalin stood before a crowd dres...

 

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