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Shashi Tharoor joins 'vote chori' protest, asks poll body to dispel voters' doubts

Shashi Tharoor joins 'vote chori' protest, asks poll body to dispel voters' doubts

India Today2 days ago
At a heated protest by the INDIA bloc MPs over what has been widely termed as 'vote chori' — accusations of vote manipulation and flaws in voter lists — Congress MP Shashi Tharoor called out the Election Commission's evasiveness.In a pointed post on X, he wrote: 'We are all asking why the Election Commission of India could not give serious answers to the serious questions raised by Rahul Gandhi, rather than insisting on formalities like an oath and an affidavit (when the data cited is all the EC's own data anyway). It is very much in the interest of the Election Commission to dispel the doubts that have arisen in voters' minds about the integrity and the credibility of the electoral process. The flaws pointed out could easily be addressed and answers given that could set rest any fears of voting-list manipulation. The nation is truly entitled to a response.'advertisement"The Election Commission's own interest lies in addressing these questions," he said while speaking to media at the protest site.
The MPs from INDIA bloc were marching towards the Election Commission in a protest against voter list discrepancies in the 2024 Lok Sabha Elections, recently alleged by Rahul Gandhi in a data-backed presentation.The Opposition members, following the Congress leader's revelations, have repeatedly insisted that the Election Commission's own data contained inconsistencies that needed to be publicly explained to preserve faith in India's democratic process. However, the poll body defended their institution's impartiality and asked Gandhi to file an oath and an affidavit regarding the allegations, stating that due process must be observed to verify claims before public disclosure.The protest, which unfolded over several hours, saw dramatic developments with all the participating MPs, including Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Gandhi, AKhilesh Yadav, being detained by the Delhi Police. Some female MPs including Trinamool's Mahua Moitra and Mitali Baug, fell unconscious during the protest.- EndsMust Watch
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Bihar SIR requires 11 documents, exercise deemed voter-friendly: SC
Bihar SIR requires 11 documents, exercise deemed voter-friendly: SC

Business Standard

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  • Business Standard

Bihar SIR requires 11 documents, exercise deemed voter-friendly: SC

The Supreme Court on Wednesday said the 11 documents required to be submitted by an elector for Bihar's special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral roll as opposed to seven documents in summary revision conducted previously showed the exercise was "voter friendly". A bench of Justices Surya Kant and Joymalya Bagchi, which resumed hearing on a batch of pleas challenging the June 24 decision of Election Commission to conduct SIR in poll bound Bihar, said despite petitioners' arguments that non-acceptance of Aadhaar was exclusionary, it appeared the large number of documents was "actually inclusionary". "The number of documents in summary revision conducted earlier in the state was seven and in SIR it is 11, which shows it is voter friendly. We understand your arguments that non-acceptance of Aadhaar is exclusionary but a high number of documents is actually inclusionary," the bench said. The top court noted electors were required to submit any one of the 11 documents in the list. Senior advocate Abhishek Singhvi, appearing for the petitioners, disagreed and submitted the number of documents may be high but they had the least coverage. Giving an example of passport availability with the electors, Singhvi said it was only one to two per cent in Bihar and they have no provision for permanent resident certificates given in the state. "If we see the availability of documents with the population in Bihar it can be seen the coverage is very low," he said. The bench said the coverage of 3.6 million of passport holders in the state appears to be good. "The list of documents is prepared normally after taking feedback from various government departments to ensure maximum coverage," Justice Bagchi pointed out. On August 12, the top court said inclusion and exclusion of citizens or non-citizens from the electoral rolls was within the remit of the Election Commission and backed its stand to not accept Aadhaar and voter cards as conclusive proof of citizenship in the SIR of voters' list in Bihar. As the row over the ongoing SIR escalated inside and outside Parliament, the top court also observed that the dispute was "largely a trust deficit issue since the Election Commission(EC) has claimed that roughly 6.5 crore people of the total 7.9 crore voting population in poll-bound Bihar didn't have to file any documents for them or their parents featured in the 2003 electoral rolls.

Congress highlights 'vote chori' with video; Mallikarjun Kharge asks people to raise voice
Congress highlights 'vote chori' with video; Mallikarjun Kharge asks people to raise voice

The Hindu

time10 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

Congress highlights 'vote chori' with video; Mallikarjun Kharge asks people to raise voice

The Congress on Wednesday (August 13, 2025) stepped up its campaign against alleged 'vote chori' by releasing a new video depicting how fake votes were being cast and party chief Mallikarjun Kharge asking people to raise their voice and save constitutional institutions from the "clutches of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)." Former Congress president Rahul Gandhi also shared the minute-long video and said, "Aapke vote ki chori aapke adhikar ki chori, aapki pehchaan ki chori hai." Tagging the advertisement titled 'booth par vote chori", Congress president Kharge said, "Do not let your rights to vote be snatched away. Ask questions, demand answers this time! Raise your voice against vote chori." "Free constitutional institutions from the clutches of the BJP," he said in his message to the people on X. Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra also shared the video on X, and said, "the theft of your vote is theft of your rights, theft of your identity." "Save your right to vote, Raise your voice against vote theft," she said. The video made by the Congress depicts a family entering a polling booth with two people telling them that their votes have already been cast by them and it ends with the two persons casting fake votes showing a thumbs up to an officer sitting at the table with 'election chori aayog' display plate on his table. The Congress on Tuesday (August 12, 2025) had claimed that "vote chori" was a "do-or-die" issue for it, and announced a roadmap to take its allegations to the people through various activities, including taking out 'Loktantra bachao mashaal marches' on August 14 evening. SIR exercise institutionalised vote theft: Rahul Gandhi The Opposition party also claimed that as more "evidence" of "vote chori" was coming to the fore, it seemed that it was not mere theft but "dacoity". The assertion was made after Mr. Kharge held a meeting with party general secretaries, in-charges and heads of its frontal organisations. The meeting was attended by the likes of former party chief Rahul Gandhi and general secretaries Priyanka Gandhi, Jairam Ramesh, K.C. Venugopal, Sachin Pilot, Bhanwar Jitendra Singh, Ghulam Ahmad Mir, as well as treasurer Ajay Maken. Briefing reporters after the meeting, Congress leader and AICC in-charge of National Students' Union of India (NSUI) Kanhaiya Kumar had said a "big issue" of "vote chori" has come to the fore. "Rahul Gandhi ji has put forward the truth with evidence on how democracy is being throttled," he had said. Mr. Kumar had said that going forward, the Congress will take this to the people with three important programmes. On August 14, the eve of Independence Day, there will be a 'Loktantra bachao mashaal march' at all district headquarters, Mr. Kumar said, adding that between August 22 and September 7, the Congress will hold "vote chor, gaddi chhorh (vote thieves, relinquish power)" rallies in all State headquarters. "Between September 15 and October 15, a signature campaign will be run to save the right to vote and ensure people's participation," he had said, while asserting that the whole INDIA bloc is together on this. The Congress has also launched a web portal for people to register and demand accountability from the poll panel against what it called "vote chori", and express support for the demand for digital voter rolls. Mr. Gandhi had urged people to support this demand by registering on Anyone can click on the portal link and download "vote chori proof, demand Election Commission accountability and report vote chori." It also carries Mr. Gandhi's video in which he reiterated his explosive claims of a "huge criminal fraud" in the polls through "collusion" between the BJP and the EC. He had cited an analysis in a constituency in Karnataka to support his claim, and said it was "a crime against the Constitution." On Monday (August 11, 2025), Opposition MPs, including Rahul Gandhi, Mallikarjun Kharge and Mr. Pawar, took out a protest march from the Parliament House to the Election Commission office against the revision of electoral rolls in Bihar and alleged "vote chori", but were stopped midway by the police and briefly detained amid high drama.

Kerala BJP losing favour with Church. Sangh not on board with Christian outreach
Kerala BJP losing favour with Church. Sangh not on board with Christian outreach

The Print

time10 minutes ago

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Kerala BJP losing favour with Church. Sangh not on board with Christian outreach

Anoop Antony, the newly-minted general secretary of the BJP – hitherto unknown to most of Kerala – butting in to make the most of the occasion, brought a touch of comic relief to the sombre proceedings. The whole fiasco, however, cast a huge shadow on the saffron party's Christian outreach in Kerala. BJP's Kerala leaders, as well as the Congress and the Left politicians, vied with each other to make it to the frame of the live visuals aired to the living rooms of their home state. It may have been straight out of the climax scene of a Priyadarshan comedy, where typically all characters converge in a chaotic sequence. The event was anything but comical, though: Two Malayali nuns who were lodged for nine days in a Durg prison on trumped-up charges of human trafficking by the Bhartiya Janata Party-led Chhattisharh government were getting freed on bail. On 25 July, the two Kerala nuns – Preethi Mary and Vandana Francis – of the Assisi Sisters of Mary Immaculate congregation were arrested by the Government Railway Police in Chhattisgarh. They were accused of forcibly converting three girls they were accompanying, when Bajrang Dal workers led by Jyoti Sharma pressured the state officials to apprehend them. The FIR added a trafficking angle when it emerged that the girls were adherents of Christianity from a young age, albeit of the Protestant kind. How the case played out Naturally, there was a huge uproar over the development in Kerala, not least because of the BJP's attempts to make political inroads into the community lately. The Congress and the Left were quick off the blocks and dispatched political delegations to Chhattisgarh even as parliamentarians from Kerala protested with placards in front of the Sansad Bhavan in Delhi. Kerala BJP president Rajeev Chandrasekhar also leapt to the defense of the nuns. He sent Anoop Antony as his emissary to touch base with the Chhattisgarh administration. Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai, however, had already passed his judgment on the matter on social media, accusing the nuns of proselytisation and trafficking, leaving the Kerala unit in an awkward position. In the meantime, a Sessions Court in Durg refused to hear the matter and disposed of it, citing lack of jurisdiction – referring to the 2019 amendment that placed human trafficking cases under the National Investigation Agency (NIA). This sent a chill down the spines of the nuns' relatives and created a sense of panic among the community in Kerala. Chandrasekhar met Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah in Delhi to apprise them of the damage wrought by the Chhattisgarh government's action on the BJP's Christian outreach in Kerala. The prosecution finally relented after the political intervention from the Centre by letting the nuns walk out on bail after spending nine days behind bars. The court did not go into the merits of the case, and the charges – that can fetch up to ten years in jail – remain far from quashed. Blowback in Kerala In Kerala, Christians of all denominations took to the streets as dioceses mobilised laity across the cities and census towns. They gagged themselves with pieces of cloth and carried placards protesting the persecution of the nuns. Some marches were led by Archbishop Joseph Pamplany, who famously promised to help the BJP open its account in Kerala if rubber prices were jacked up to Rs 300; Pala Bishop Joseph Kallarangatt, who coined the infamous 'Narcotic Jihad' phrase; and Thrissur Archbishop Andrews Thazhath – all considered sympathetic to the BJP cause. In one instance, Archbishop Pamplany's speech at Angamaly, where he spoke polemically, harked back to the days of the 'Vimochana Samaram'—the church-led Liberation Struggle that dislodged the EMS Namboodiripad-led Communist government of Kerala in 1959. This set off alarm bells for Rajeev Chandrasekhar, who has been engaged in building bridges with the Church since becoming the state BJP president. Factionalism rears head in BJP However, Chandrasekhar not only found himself caught between the hardline position adopted by the Chhattisgarh BJP—represented by the likes of CM Sai and Bastar MP Mahesh Kashyap—he was also facing rebellion from within the Kerala unit for summarily issuing a clean chit to the nuns. No sooner had he issued a statement on social media, senior Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) ideologue K Govindan Kutty publicly commented below his post, counseling him to stick to the party affairs in the state and let the law take its course in Chhattisgarh. On cue, the Kerala BJP bloc led by V Muraleedharan and K Surendran aligned themselves with the RSS position, getting back at Chandrasekhar for cutting their faction to size while naming office bearers. This stance was also echoed by the likes of other Sangh Parivar organisations such as the Hindu Aikya Vedi in Kerala. K Surendran's Facebook post, and leaders of his faction venting their frustration at Chandrasekhar for dispatching Anoop Antony without internal consultation, was threatening to eclipse the delicate 'cake diplomacy'. The issue also exposed a bunch of online media portals allegedly linked to the BJP. While such 'yellow portals' generally thrived by channeling hatred against the Muslim community on the back of issues like Munambam, their true colours stood exposed when they started echoing the Sangh Parivar narrative on the nuns' issue. The BJP-affiliated Christian Association and Alliance for Social Action (CASA) also went on an overdrive for damage control. Christian vote trade-off The RSS position on the issue is hardly surprising, as the organisation has a deep-seated suspicion of the missionary work of the Church. Supremo Mohan Bhagwat cast aspersions on the motives of even Mother Teresa's service years ago. Vishnu Deo Sai is a product of the Loyola School in Jashpur, but being an RSS adherent, he cannot see missionary work through any other spectrum. A veteran leader aligned to the K Surendran faction told me how the BJP cannot afford to lose its core Hindutva vote bank by appearing to appease the Christian community. This development proved an unexpected windfall for the Congress, reeling under the proposition of a slice of its Christian base shifting to the BJP. The issue might also help the Left to prevent some of its 'Hindu vote' transferring to the saffron party on an incremental basis, as 'Christian appeasement' charges have been levelled against the Rajeev Chandrasekhar-led BJP. The split down the middle within the Kerala BJP unit, not to speak of the RSS position, has exposed the Right-wing tactic of targeting Christians in Chhattisgarh to foment Hindu consolidation, while pitting the same community against Muslims in Kerala. The Chhattisgarh police, failing to act against the Bajrang Dal on a case filed by the girls – initially suspected to be victims of trafficking – demonstrated how the Hindutva outfits enjoyed state patronage. Also read: Nilambur isn't Kerala. UDF must look beyond Muslim votes to win 2026 polls Prelates in the dock Another case of a Bajrang Dal gang attacking a couple of Malayali priests and nuns emerged from Odisha soon after—further enraging Kerala's Christian community. in the state. This, following the aftermath of the Chhattisgarh imbroglio, snowballed into an impromptu social media backlash against the Syro-Malabar Church prelates. When Archbishops Andrews Thazhath and Pamplany thanked the BJP for interceding in the release of the nuns, they had to field tough questions on who put the nuns behind bars in the first place. The Syrian Christian Church leaders in Kerala have long held a casteist attitude of supremacy on account of their legacy being traced back to the Common Era. The conspicuous silence or acquiescence on Manipur, as well as in Father Stan Swamy's case, bears heavily on the conscience of the Syro-Malabar Church leadership. They willingly played ball with the BJP on account of their common distrust of the Muslim community. The criticism on social media is mostly targeted at Archbishop Thazhath—whom Kerala's Leader of Opposition VD Satheesan called a 'slippery person' for his role in facilitating Suresh Gopi's win—and Archbishop Pamplany. It was noticeable how bishops outside the Syro-Malabar fold reacted. Cardinal Baselios Cleemis of the Malankara Catholic Church and Baselios Marthoma Mathews III of the Syrian Orthodox Church talked tough against the BJP. They said the party was running with the hares in Kerala and hunting with the hounds in Chhattisgarh. Case of missing MP The BJP representatives in the Union Cabinet from Kerala, George Kurian and Thrissur MP Suresh Gopi, found themselves caught in the crossfire. While there was widespread criticism against Kurian's lack of empathy and running away from the press, citing poor comprehension of Hindi, Suresh Gopi went missing ever since the nuns' arrest until after their release. This was particularly flabbergasting for the Christian community in Thrissur – mostly comprising the mercantile class – who shifted their voting preferences in favour of the actor in 2024. The transactional nature of that support might come back to bite the actor if he were to seek re-election in 2029. Suresh Gopi's vanishing act prompted Bishop Yuhanon Meletius, of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church in Thrissur, to quip that perhaps he should file a police complaint to establish the whereabouts of the actor. The state BJP will have to go back to the drawing board on its Christian outreach template and find unity within the party and the Sangh ecosystem before it can aspire to become a larger player in Kerala. Anand Kochukudy is a Kerala-based journalist and columnist. He tweets @AnandKochukudy. Views are personal. (Edited by Ratan Priya)

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