All the 215 members present voted for the measure brought by Modi’s government.
“A defining moment in our nation’s democratic journey!” Modi said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, soon after.
India’s upper house of parliament has passed a bill that reserves a third of seats in the national and state legislatures for women, a move hailed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi as a “defining moment”.
The measure, which may not take effect for years yet, nevertheless has been decades in the making and comes as India seeks to rectify a broad underrepresentation of women in public life.
The vote on Thursday came one day after the country’s directly-elected lower house also passed the bill.
“The motion is adopted by a majority of total membership of the house,” Vice-President Jagdeep Dhankhar, who is also the chair of the upper house, said in the parliament chambers late Thursday during an extraordinary session.
Women now comprise nearly half of India's 950 million registered voters but only 15% of lawmakers in parliament and 10% in state assemblies, leaving the world's largest democracy at the bottom of global rankings on gender parity in legislatures.
The bill, introduced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government on Tuesday in the new parliament building's special session, secured the support of all opposition party leaders.
"The proposal has been passed with more than a two-thirds majority of the members present in the house," Speaker Om Birla said after the voting.
More than 450 MPs from across party lines voted in favour of the bill, two MPs voted against and about 80 were not present.
"It has been a long and tiring journey for women to secure equal political rights and finally history has been created today," said Najma Heptulla, a former federal lawmaker who for decades had advocated the legislation.
Six attempts to pass the bill had fallen short since it was first introduced in 1996, at times due to vehement resistance from lawmakers in conservative Hindi heartland states.
The 33% reservation for women will not apply to the upper houses of parliament and state legislatures.
Seeking support from the growing number of Indian women who vote, Modi's party had planned to nominate women for a third of seats contested in the 2024 general election even before this bill was introduced.
"The Women's Reservation Bill is a mark of respect and the beginning of a new era," Home Minister Amit Shah told parliament.
The bill's implementation depends on the completion of India's once-in-a-decade census, which was delayed by the coronavirus pandemic. Technical and logistical hurdles have set the survey back further.









