Page 6 - The Indian Eye 071825
P. 6

EYE ON INDIA                                                             JULY 18, 2025     |  The Indian Eye                    6


                                          Battle for Bihar:




         Election Commission Under Fire



          Amid Electoral Roll Controversy






                 With Bihar heading for assembly polls in November, a furious political storm has erupted

         over the decision to revise electoral rolls, triggering allegations of “election theft” and raising concerns
                                         over voter disenfranchisement and institutional bias


        OUR BUREAU
        Patna/New Delhi
              s Bihar inches closer to its high-stakes as-
              sembly election, a controversy surrounding
        Athe revision of the electoral rolls has snow-
        balled into a national political issue. At the heart
        of the storm is the Election Commission of India’s
        (ECI) Special Intensive Revision (SIR) drive—an
        exercise meant to update the voter list but now
        mired in allegations of bias, suppression, and polit-
        ical manipulation.
            Congress  MP  Rahul  Gandhi  has  led  the
        charge, accusing the ECI of “hatching a conspira-
        cy for chunav chori (election theft)” and acting as
        “a BJP wing.” Drawing a parallel with Maharash-
        tra, where he claims over one crore dubious voters
        were added between the Lok Sabha and assembly
        elections, Gandhi warned that a similar “theft” is
        underway in Bihar. “We told the EC to share voter
        lists and videography. They didn’t. Now they are
        doing the same thing in Bihar,” he alleged during a
        rally in Bhubaneswar.                         District Election Officer and District Magistrate Aman Sameer carries out a house-to-house visit to review the ongoing activities
            The allegations, though dismissed by the ECI,   related to the special intensive revision campaign of the voter list in Saran (Bihar) on Thursday (@Saran_dm X/ANI Photo)
        have found support among opposition leaders and
        civil society organisations. A batch of petitions  Booth Level Agents (BLAs) from all major parties,  just another poll-bound state—it is a crucial bat-
        challenging the ECI’s move has reached the Su-  are on the ground verifying voter data. The digiti-  tleground in the run-up to the 2026 general elec-
        preme Court, with petitioners including RJD MP  sation of these forms through the ECINet platform  tions. A skewed voter list could affect hundreds of
        Manoj Jha, Trinamool MP Mahua Moitra, and ac-  is reportedly progressing smoothly.         seats and influence the national narrative around
        tivist Yogendra Yadav. They argue that the sudden   Still, the scale and timing of the revision raise  electoral integrity. For the opposition-led INDIA
        documentation requirements—particularly proof  important questions. Why is such a massive update  bloc, any perceived manipulation of the voter rolls
        of  citizenship—are  excessive  and  may  disenfran-  being undertaken just months before the election?  strikes at the core of democratic legitimacy.
        chise marginalised communities.              Critics argue that past experiences point to a pat-  Even as the ECI maintains that the process is
            At the heart of the opposition’s concern is the  tern of errors and selective inclusion or deletion of  routine and within its constitutional mandate, the
        ECI’s decision to not accept widely held documents  voters. For instance, in Maharashtra, opposition  perception of partiality continues to grow. The Su-
        like Aadhaar and ration cards as valid proof during  parties had alleged that unverified voters mysteri-  preme Court’s upcoming hearing on July 28 could
        the SIR process. Although the Supreme Court  ously appeared on rolls, swinging the outcome in  be pivotal. If the court finds the ECI’s procedures
        stopped short of staying the revision, it urged the  key seats. Though never conclusively proven, those  wanting, it could mandate changes or even delay
        ECI to reconsider its stance and provide reasons if  allegations still haunt the credibility of the elector-  the implementation of the revised rolls—an out-
        it refuses to accept commonly used IDs. The court  al process.                             come that may significantly alter the electoral cal-
        observed that Aadhaar is already used widely for   In Bihar, the risks are even higher. The state’s  endar.
        identity verification and called the timeline “very  electorate is not only vast but also socio-economi-  For now, the ECI is racing against time to
        short” for such a critical exercise.         cally vulnerable. ADR and PUCL, in their petition,  complete the exercise by July 25. But the larger
            Despite mounting criticism, the ECI insists  warned  that the  new  requirements  could  dispro-  question remains: can an electoral process be con-
        that the revision is a constitutional necessity and  portionately affect the poor, Dalits, Adivasis, and  sidered free and fair when the very list of voters is
        is being conducted transparently. According to its  women—many of whom may lack access to land  under such intense scrutiny and suspicion?
        latest data, more than 74% of Bihar’s 7.9 crore vot-  or birth documents demanded by the ECI. “This is   As political temperatures rise and legal bat-
        ers have already submitted Enumeration Forms.  not revision; this is exclusion by design,” one peti-  tles  intensify,  Bihar’s  voters  may  find  themselves
        Over 77,000 Booth Level Officers (BLOs), assist-  tioner argued in court.                  caught in the crossfire of a larger war—one over
        ed by more than 4 lakh volunteers and 1.56 lakh   The implications are significant. Bihar is not  the very soul of India’s democratic process.


                                                               www.TheIndianEYE.com
   1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11