New Delhi:The Chief Justice of India, DY Chandrachud, on Friday said that the Constitution of India is a 'feminist document and a product of true Indian imagination'. Speaking at the 8th Dr. LM Singhvi Memorial Lecture in New Delhi, the CJI said that the drafters of our Constitution were aware that political equality would not suffice for the removal of social inequalities.
CJI Chandrachud further said that voting rights were denied to women initially until social reformers demanded equal citing rights. "Dr Ambedkar believed that without exercising the right to vote, the Universal Adult Franchise (UAF) would not be useful. Preparation of the first electoral roll was a momentous task as people were still grappling with the horrors of partition. In the electoral roll, women's individual names were missing. They were named as X's daughter or X's mother. The ECI took the time to rectify this amid all adversities," said CJI.
Talking further about the UAF, CJI said that it played a key role as those who were denied rights and power now became a deciding force in selecting the composition of Parliament leading to social transformation, and providing rights to social communities. CJI said that Indian UAF contradicts the myth that only a few can vote as the most vulnerable can also vote in our society and the uneducated have also shown tremendous political acumen. "Electoral democracy has been an agent of change at social and village levels," he said.