In the new Lok Sabha, debutante Members of Parliament represent a wide range of backgrounds, experiences and inheritances
In the recently concluded Lok Sabha elections, India elected 74 women Members of Parliament (MPs). Although the total number of women elected to the Lok Sabha is four less than the 2019 elections, what sets this election apart is the number of first-time MPs: Of the 74 women MPs, 44 are debutantes. From sarpanches and councillors to Members of Legislative Assemblies and graduates from foreign universities, these women come from varied backgrounds.
Of the seven MPs under the age of 30, five are women. Sanjana Jatav (26) of the Congress won from Bharatpur, the hometown of Rajasthan’s Chief Minister Bhajan Lal Sharma, of BJP. Jatav, whose husband is a constable in the Rajasthan police, was defeated in the Rajasthan Legislative Assembly election last year by a mere 409 votes. This year, she won against BJP’s Ramswaroop Koli by 51,983 votes.
Sambhavi (25) is the daughter of Ashok Chaudhary, an MLA in Bihar and a close aide of Chief Minister Nitish Kumar. However, Sambhavi did not contest the Lok Sabha election as a candidate of Kumar’s Janta Dal United (JDU); instead, she joined the Lok Jansakti Party and won by a margin of 1,87,251 votes against Congress’s Sunny Hazari, from Samastipur in Bihar.
Both Priya Saroj (25) and Priyanka Jarkiholi (27), come from political backgrounds. Saroj, who completed her master's degree from Amity University in 2022, is the daughter of former MP Toofani Saroj, who lost the Lok Sabha election in 2019. Saroj won against Bholanath from Machhlishahar, in the Jaunpur district of Uttar Pradesh, with a margin of 35,850 votes on a Samajwadi Party (SP) ticket. Jarkiholi, the daughter of Congress leader and former MLA Satish Jarkiholi, became the youngest tribal woman to win from an unreserved seat in Chikkodi, Karnataka. She won on a Congress ticket, and defeated the incumbent BJP MP Annasaheb Shanker Jolle with a margin of 90,834 votes.
Iqra Hasan Choudhary (27) returned from London in 2022, where she was pursuing her master’s degree in law and politics at the University of London, to take over the reins from her mother, SP’s Tabassum Hasan, a former MP, while her brother Nahid Hasan was in jail, after being booked under the Gangsters Act (he is now out on bail). She campaigned for her brother, who was contesting the Uttar Pradesh assembly elections while in prison, and won. Chaudhary emerged as a strong successor to her mother, and contested the Lok Sabha election on an SP ticket from Kairana in Uttar Pradesh, where she won by more than 69,000 votes against Pradeep Kumar of BJP.