Divya Delhi: Gautam Desiraju and Deekshit Bhattacharya argue in Delimitation and States Reorganization for a Better Democracy in Bharat that India's state boundaries must be redrawn to address the fundamental democratic tensions that endanger Bharat's political destiny. The authors propose a dramatic but constitutionally permissible restructure to achieve "Each Vote Same Value" and "Each State Same Heft," two concepts that support a balanced and equitable democracy. The primary assumption is startling and necessary: political expediency and historical accidents have made state boundaries unworkable in a quickly evolving democracy. The authors recommend dividing India into 75 states with two crores each to create administratively manageable and electorally equitable governmental units. The current delimitation freeze (since 1976) and state demographic discrepancies have generated shocking electoral inequity, as the book begins. Kerala votes are worth more in parliamentary representation than Uttar Pradesh votes. This massive inequality violates "One Person, One Vote" and threatens democracy. The suggested restructure would resolve this gap and bring every vote closer to parity in value by giving each state nearly equal demographics.