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Delimitation
Stalin burning a copy of delimitation bill. Photo: MK Stalin/X

'Black law': Stalin burns copy of 'delimitation' bill, slams Modi govt

| @indiablooms | Apr 16, 2026, at 01:51 pm

Chennai/IBNS: The controversy over the Centre’s proposed delimitation exercise escalated on Thursday as Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. K. Stalin staged a symbolic protest, burning a copy of the bill and calling it a “black law”.

Dressed in black attire, Stalin also hoisted a black flag before setting the document on fire, opposing the proposed move which could significantly increase parliamentary seats nationwide.

‘Black law’

In a post on X, Stalin alleged the move would turn Tamilians into “refugees in their own land”.

“Let the flames of resistance spread across Tamil Nadu! Let the arrogance of the fascist BJP be brought down!” he wrote.

"Today, I have reignited that fire by burning the copy of this black law and hoisting the black flag against this black law that seeks to turn Tamils into refugees in our own land."

Referring to past protests, he added: “The fire of resistance against #HindiImposition that rose from Tamil Nadu scorched Delhi… This fire will now spread across the Dravidian land. It will rise, it will rage, and it will bring the BJP’s arrogance to its knees.”

What is the delimitation move?

Delimitation is the process of redrawing the boundaries of Lok Sabha and Assembly constituencies to reflect changes in population.

The exercise is carried out by a Delimitation Commission, whose orders have the force of law and cannot be challenged in court.

Why is it in focus now?

The freeze on delimitation—based on the 1971 Census—is set to end after 2026. This means the Centre may initiate a fresh exercise using updated population data, likely after the next Census.

What could change?

  • Increase in the number of parliamentary seats
  • Redistribution of seats among states based on population
  • Greater representation for states with higher population growth

North-South divide concerns

Southern states like Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Karnataka have raised concerns over the move.

They argue that despite successfully controlling population growth, they may lose relative representation in Parliament, while northern states such as Uttar Pradesh and Bihar could gain more seats.

Why was delimitation frozen?

The earlier freeze was aimed at encouraging population control, ensuring states were not penalised for reducing population growth.

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