Women in Indian Politics: Breaking Barriers and Building Legacies

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Indian politics has long been male-dominated, yet women over the decades have gradually carved space for themselves—challenging patriarchy, reforming institutions, and building legacies of leadership. “Breaking barriers and building legacies” captures two inter-linked strands:

(a) the obstacles women have faced and continue to face in political participation, and

(b) the ways in which women’s leadership has reshaped Indian governance, policy and representation.
In this essay I will examine:

  1. The historical context of women’s political participation in India;

  2. Barriers and structural constraints inhibiting women’s representation;

  3. The rise of women leaders and their contributions to governance and policy;

  4. The current status of women in Indian politics and emerging trends;

  5. Opportunities ahead and the way forward.

Historical Context: Women’s Entry into Indian Politics

Pre-Independence and Early Republic

Women in India have participated in public and political life for a long period—through reform movements, the independence struggle and the early years of the Republic. The role of women in the freedom movement helped establish a legitimacy for public‐political engagement.

After independence, the Indian Constitution provided for equality of opportunity (Article 14), non-discrimination (Article 15) and active participation of women in public life. However, actual political representation of women in legislative assemblies and Parliament remained low. Scholars note that though women had been active in politics in the 1950s and 60s, many remained sidelined in terms of power structures.

Local Governance and the Reservation Era

One key institutional breakthrough was via local governance. The enactment of the 73rd and 74th Amendments to the Constitution in 1992 mandated reservation of one-third of seats in all rural and urban local bodies (panchayats and municipalities) for women (including SC/ST women).

This policy opened up large numbers of public-office opportunities for women at the grassroots level—an important stepping stone. Many women utilised panchayat leadership to build credibility, governance experience and political networks.

Early Women Leaders and Legacy Builders

Some individual women in Indian politics created lasting legacies. For example:

  • Indira Gandhi (Prime Minister 1966-77 & 1980-84) remains an iconic figure of women’s leadership in India, though her legacy is complex.

  • Jayalalithaa in Tamil Nadu forged a strong regional legacy, combining populist welfare policies with robust political leadership.

  • Mamata Banerjee in West Bengal built a grassroots movement and took state-level executive power, demonstrating one route for women to break through conventional barriers.

These examples show that women have not only entered politics but in some cases commanded major portfolios, built mass followings and had lasting impact.

Barriers and Structural Constraints

Despite positive precedents, women’s political participation in India continues to face significant challenges across multiple fronts.

Under‐Representation and Gender Bias

Women make up nearly half of the Indian population, yet their presence in legislative bodies is far below parity. For example, in the 18th Lok Sabha (the lower house of Parliament) women comprised only around 13.6 % of MPs.

Political parties often hesitate to grant tickets to women candidates, or field them in unwinnable constituencies. The deeply entrenched gender biases in candidate selection and party leadership hamper meaningful representation.

Social and Cultural Constraints

Societal expectations around women’s roles—family, home, caregiving—often limit their ability to pursue full-time political careers. The “double burden” of public and domestic life weighs heavily.

In many parts of India, patriarchal mindsets continue to view politics as a male domain, discouraging women from contesting elections or taking leadership roles. These cultural constraints are a significant barrier especially in rural areas.

Financial, Institutional and Safety Challenges

Campaigning for elections in India requires significant financial resources. Women candidates often struggle with access to funds, party backing, and donor networks.

Furthermore, women politicians face harassment, threats, online abuse and physical intimidation. A report found Indian women politicians faced on average 113 problematic tweets per day during the 2019 elections.

Institutionally, even when women are elected to local bodies, their roles are sometimes nominal—male relatives (so-called “sarpanch pati” phenomenon) making decisions behind the scenes. Some women lack training or support to fully exert their mandate.

Institutional Bottlenecks in Higher Assemblies

While reservations exist at the panchayat level, there is still no implemented nationwide reservation for women in Parliament or state assemblies (though a bill has been passed in the Lower House). That gap means women’s representation remains limited in higher decision-making bodies.

Women Leaders and Legacy-Building: Examples & Impact

Despite the barriers, many women have broken the glass ceiling, built political legacies and influenced governance, policy and public life. Here are a few illustrative cases.

Mamata Banerjee – Grassroots to Chief Minister

Mamata Banerjee’s journey in West Bengal exemplifies breaking long-standing political dynasties and forging a mass movement. She led key struggles (Singur, Nandigram) and built the All India Trinamool Congress (AITC) into a formidable regional force. Her government introduced the Kanyashree scheme (for empowerment of adolescent girls) and other pro-women welfare initiatives.

Her personal style—direct engagement with voters, activism combined with administration—shows how women leaders can craft their own pathway rather than relying solely on legacy or symbolic roles.

Jayalalithaa – Consolidated Power and Welfare State

In Tamil Nadu, Jayalalithaa rose from a film star to Chief Minister, dominating state politics for years. Her welfare schemes (free lap­tops to students, subsidised mixers & grinders for women, free sarees) targeted women and poor households directly.

She thereby demonstrated that women in high executive office can translate gender-inclusive leadership into concrete service delivery, not just symbolism.

Influential Women at the Parliamentary/Legislative Level

While high executive roles are fewer, many women parliamentarians and MLAs have made substantial impact. They have introduced women-sensitive legislation, advocated for gender equality, safety of women, and improved constituency development.

At the local level, women in panchayats and municipalities (especially in states that have reserved seats) have improved schooling, public health, water and sanitation outcomes in their jurisdictions—showing policy and development gains tied to women’s leadership.

Building Legacies

Legacy-building by women in politics can be seen in the shift of political norms: growing expectations of women’s representation, women as central figures (not just in youth wings or adjunct roles), and governance defined by women’s issues rather than treating women as a niche agenda. These legacies help open the door for future generations.

Recent studies highlight both progress and stagnation. For instance, in India’s 2024 general elections, women comprised only 9.5 % of candidates (799 of 8,360) and about 13.62 % of MPs.

At the state assembly level, some states perform better than others, but overall the average remains low. Women’s success rate in elections also dropped: in 2019 only 10.7 % of women contesting in Lok Sabha polls won.

These figures show: despite the numerical presence of women voters and the formal equality enshrined in law, the translation into political representation and power remains incomplete.

Women’s Issues and Policy Focus

The growing presence of women in political offices has had policy implications: greater emphasis on education of girls, maternal and child health, women’s safety, social welfare, water & sanitation projects, etc. The gender lens in governance is gaining traction.

Many younger women politicians utilise digital platforms for outreach and to mobilise, thereby bridging new generational and communication divides.

Institutional Reforms and the Reservation Debate

A major development is the passage (in the lower house) of the Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, a law reserving one-third of seats for women in Parliament and state assemblies (though implementation is to follow delimitation and may take time).

If implemented fully, this would be a structural game‐changer in women’s representation. The debate around the reservation bill underscores both hope and caution: structural reform does not automatically translate into substantive change unless backed by party reforms, financial support and cultural shifts.

Diversity and Intersectionality

An emerging trend is the recognition that “women in politics” is not a monolithic category. Women from marginalized castes, tribal communities, religious minorities, rural areas, and differently-abled women bring additional layers of challenge and opportunity. Addressing intersectionality is a key frontier. Many women’s organizations and scholars emphasise this gap.

Digital Era and Youth Linkage

Younger women are engaging with politics through new channels – social media, digital campaigns, grassroots activism. In many cases, their activism precedes electoral politics, and some are translating that into candidature or policy roles. The linkage between campus activism, women’s leadership and formal politics is strengthening.

Opportunities and the Way Forward

Strengthening Pathways for Women’s Leadership

  • Political Party Reform: Parties must proactively promote women in leadership roles, allocate winnable seats to women, invest in their training, and ensure mentorship and networking.

  • Financial and Institutional Support: Access to campaign finance, candidate training, media support and women-friendly institutional arrangements (childcare support, flexible scheduling) can lower barriers.

  • Pipeline Development: Encourage women’s leadership from panchayats up to state and national level, building experience and networks.

  • Policy and Legislative Empowerment: Ensure that elected women hold portfolios with real executive power (not only token seats) so that they can influence institutional change.

  • Supporting Under-represented Women: Focus on women from rural, tribal, Dalit, Adivasi, minority religious backgrounds—ensuring that representation is inclusive and not limited to elite women.

  • Harnessing Digital Platforms: Utilise digital tools and social media to amplify women’s voices, mobilise support, and engage younger voters.

Cultural Change and Public Perception

  • Changing Norms: Societal attitudes must shift to view politics as a domain where women can lead equally. Campaigns on women’s rights, leadership, visibility of women politicians help reshape public perception.

  • Safety and Respect: Address online harassment, physical threats and institutionalised sexism that discourage women’s participation. Strengthening legal protections, regulation of social media and internal party norms is crucial.

  • Mentorship and Role-Models: Visible role-models (women leaders who have made an impact) matter. Their journeys inspire younger women and create a cultural shift that leadership is not gender-locked.

Institutionalizing Reforms

  • Effective Implementation of Reservation Law: The one-third reservation law must be implemented in letter and spirit: delimitation must proceed, election machinery must prepare, parties must field women in meaningful numbers, not just token reserves.

  • Monitoring and Accountability: Track women’s representation in true leadership roles, measure their policy influence, and hold parties accountable for gender parity in candidature and office-holding.

  • Strengthening Local Governance: Since local bodies are often women’s entry point, ensure that panchayat and municipal seats reserved for women are backed by capacity-building, training, and autonomy—not just a tick-box.

  • Research and Data: Collect disaggregated data on women’s political participation—across caste, class, region, religion—to inform targeted interventions and reveal where the bottlenecks lie.

Conclusion

Women in Indian politics have come a long way—from the margins of political life to positions of leadership, from constrained representation to the cusp of structural reform. The journey of “breaking barriers and building legacies” is in progress. Women leaders have shown that when given space and support, they can deliver governance, introduce inclusive policies and reshape political culture.

Yet, the road ahead remains steep. Representation remains far below parity, structural barriers persist, and much depends on institutional reform, party commitment and societal change. If India succeeds in elevating women’s political participation—not only in numbers but in meaningful power—then the legacy will be profound: a more inclusive, equitable and representative democracy.

In sum, the future of women in Indian politics hinges on converting opportunity into power, representation into influence, and breaking barriers into building enduring legacies for generations to come.

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