The ratcheting up of the pitch for a Uniform Civil Code (UCC), particularly during the time of elections, begets an extremely polarising form of political mobilisation. In television debates, frenzied panellists discussing the UCC are either for it or not. Common citizens, too, are seen articulating their positions in either/or propositions. Most of us miss out, while debating the UCC, the possibilities of a constructivist approach to gender justice and the social reforms embedded in it. We get entangled into its rhetoric of the codes of uniformity and conformity and less into its foundational signifiers of plurality, equality and civility. The whole debate of the UCC is played out on a single axis of uniformity leading to minority-majority communalism. The real issue of gender-just laws cutting across religious and caste lines, which is quintessentially a feminist movement issue, is ‘subalternated.’