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With one eye trained on the 2019 Lok Sabha polls, a group of citizens came together to launch Shakti – a civil society initiative that aims to enhance the political participation of women – in December 2018. The team’s long-term goal is to get more women elected as MLAs and MPs in India, and to ease the path for all women to find their power in politics.
Shakti has since been working at the national level with several awareness and outreach programmes to empower more women. They also want to make Indian citizens realise that the lack of political representation of women is not just a woman’s issue but something that all of humanity should be concerned about.
Tara Krishnaswamy said, “Every party says that they have crores and crores of party workers. The Communist party said they have 1 crore women party workers, the BJP says they have 3 crore women party workers, but when it comes to tickets, they are denied that. So it’s like you have no career opportunity, come join us and slave for us. So I think citizens must also do their bit to make sure that the constitutional democracy is actually translated to reality.”
She also said that in the home stretch, leading up to the elections due to be held in April-May, it was still not too late for concerned citizens to do their bit to empower more women to pursue a political future.
Gowri, along with hundreds of volunteers across the country, reached out to local MPs to petition them to pass the long-delayed Women’s Reservation Bill in the Parliament.
She said that this was the first time that many citizens had a brush with parliamentary democracy, outside of newspapers and news reports.
Srinivas Alavilli, member of Shakti, said, “The representation of women in the political spectrum is an issue that all of us have, it's not that women have an issue that there are not enough women in Parliament. You would think that wouldn’t the world be better off if we had more diversity, more gender balance in the way the world is run? The Indian Parliament certainly can have a lot more women than it has today. The Women’s Reservation Bill seems to be a really good way of doing it because the political parties are really not keen on giving tickets to women.
Aparna Kumar, another member of Shakti, said, “One of the other resolutions we took was to promote women candidates in 2019 in the 17th Lok Sabha elections. Shakti’s plans are basically to create an online platform and promote women candidates from across the country, irrespective of party and any kind of constraints. That’s our current plan for the elections. So, we are moving full swing, generating databases of women candidates thus far, who’ve put in their forms and we will continue to work on the back-end.”
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