About Me
From Kadapa to London, I'm a data scientist built on the statistical rigor of the London School of Economics and the tech foundations of VIT. I mix heavy-duty statistics with modern technology—and yes, I make a lot of data-driven assumptions.
Call it a nerd if you want (my VIT Achiever's Award and LSE Academic Rep title might back you up), but I'm just a guy fueled by Diet Coke, tea, and a passion for proving my professors right. I've even authored two research papers using efficient algorithmic models just to show them I actually study.
This blog might make you mad. I dump my ideas in my most efficient possible way. If you have any doubt or interest feel free to connect—I have my diet cokes ready.
Articles
Flat 50% in the Centre. Proportional within the State.
Firstly, the federal identity of a state must be preserved, keeping census aside at national level seat distribution. The same census must then be used to ensure each state normalises its population growth across its newly allocated seats. Finally, the timeline of delimitation is just as important as the method, so every political party contests the 2029 general elections on a level playing field. Political parties, local leaders, and most importantly, the voters themselves, need adequate time to understand their new constituencies, shifting local demographics, and altered district lines.
The Turnout Trap
India's first delimitation in five decades will redraw the geometry of the republic itself. A widely cited EAC-PM working paper proposes allocating Andhra Pradesh's 13 new seats through a predictive turnout model — accidentally embedding a 3.25:1 voter-weight disparity into the map. This interactive audit compares it constituency-by-constituency against a simple Equal-Elector alternative where every vote carries equal weight.