logo
Election Commission is simply doing its job in Bihar. Why is the Opposition scared of electoral roll revision?

Election Commission is simply doing its job in Bihar. Why is the Opposition scared of electoral roll revision?

Indian Express2 days ago
Written by Pratyush Kanth
Once again, the Indi Alliance led by the Congress party has been exposed before the country for targeting the Election Commission of India (ECI), which is performing its constitutional duty. The Indi Alliance parties are attacking the Commission over its Special Intensive Revision (SIR) process of the electoral rolls in Bihar. The people of India have seen the Congress-led alliance frequently change its stand, spread misinformation, and deliberately create confusion whenever it suits their political agenda. Their actions surrounding this revision process only reinforce that pattern.
The same alliance that once vehemently opposed Aadhaar linkage with voter ID by raising the issue of privacy and constitutional rights is now doing an about-turn by demanding Aadhaar as a valid verification document. Their legal representatives in court even pushed for Aadhaar inclusion, conveniently forgetting their earlier opposition. This contradictory behaviour exposes the alliance's lack of principles and confirms that their real concern is not about rights but about political survival. The Supreme Court did not grant any relief to the Opposition and upheld the constitutional responsibility of the Election Commission to conduct the revision.
The obvious question arises: What exactly is the Indi Alliance trying to protect? Are they worried about fake voters being removed? Are they concerned about illegal entries getting exposed? Is this why they are so aggressively attacking a constitutionally empowered body which is acting strictly under the law, including provisions of the Representation of the People Act of the year 1950?
On June 24, the Election Commission of India issued clear instructions for carrying out an SIR of the electoral roll in Bihar. This decision was taken to ensure inclusion of all eligible citizens and the removal of ineligible names such as those of the deceased, those who have migrated, and illegal foreign voters. The process is designed to be fully transparent and grounded in constitutional legality.
This exercise is not just necessary but overdue. The last such revision in Bihar took place in 2003. In the two decades since, the state has undergone significant demographic transformation due to rapid urbanisation, large-scale migration, and a rising youth population. These changes make it imperative that the electoral rolls be revised to reflect the true and current voter base of the state.
The Election Commission of India is conducting this exercise under the mandate of Article 326 of the Constitution of India, which guarantees free and fair elections. Sections 16 and 23 of the Representation of the People Act of 1950 empower the Commission to revise and verify electoral rolls. Section 24 of the same Act provides for appeals if any elector or political party wishes to raise objections.
To ensure transparency and data protection, the Commission has mandated the uploading of necessary documents on the ECINET platform. These documents are accessible only to authorised officials, ensuring privacy is maintained while verification is carried out in a systematic and reliable manner.
The revision process has been designed to be inclusive, transparent, and people-centric. On the ground, more than 72,000 Booth Level Officers (BLOs), supported by over 20,000 newly appointed officers and four lakh volunteers, are actively working to reach every section of society. Their focus includes the elderly, persons with disabilities, the economically disadvantaged, and voters in remote locations.
The process is further strengthened by the presence of 1,56,000 Booth Level Agents, appointed by all recognised political parties, including the Congress itself. Their role is to observe and verify the work, thus increasing public confidence and institutional credibility. Every party has equal opportunity to be part of the process, which leaves no room for complaints about exclusion or bias.
The results so far speak for themselves. As of 6 pm on July 10, the Election Commission had successfully collected over 5,22,00,000 enumeration forms, covering more than 66 per cent of Bihar's nearly eight crore electors within just 16 days. With 98 per cent of forms already distributed, the drive is progressing efficiently and is fully on track to meet its deadline of July 25.
This achievement reflects the seriousness, scale, and capability with which the ECI is handling a task of such magnitude. It is being executed smoothly, without causing public inconvenience, and with a level of dedication that deserves recognition and support from all political stakeholders.
Instead of cooperating with this constitutionally legitimate and transparent exercise, the Indi Alliance is attempting to derail it. The question every citizen must ask is simple. Why is a process aimed at ensuring clean and fair elections being opposed so vehemently? What is it that the alliance is so afraid of? Whose interests are they protecting by standing against an honest electoral clean-up?
This behaviour is not just irresponsible. It is a deliberate attempt to undermine the credibility of the ECI and cast doubt on the integrity of our institutions. When a political alliance chooses to weaken democracy to secure its vote bank, it stops serving the people and starts serving only its own power-hungry agenda.
Let the truth be known to every citizen of Bihar and to the entire country. The Congress-led alliance is using every trick in the book to obstruct SIR. They are not fighting for genuine voters. They are fighting to protect illegal and ineligible entries that they have long relied on for electoral gains.
They have failed to earn the trust of the people. Now, in desperation, they are trying to manufacture confusion and mistrust. Their actions reflect the fear that a clean electoral roll will finally expose decades of vote-bank politics and manipulation.
Bihar has always led revolutions and rejected jungle raj. It will not be misled by the lies of the opposition. Bihar deserves truth, not chaos. The people stand with honesty, transparency, and the Constitution, not with obstruction and deceit.
The writer is national spokesperson, the BJP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Karnataka govt's Shakti scheme registers 500 cr free bus rides
Karnataka govt's Shakti scheme registers 500 cr free bus rides

Deccan Herald

timean hour ago

  • Deccan Herald

Karnataka govt's Shakti scheme registers 500 cr free bus rides

'Sakthi' scheme, announced by the Congress government in Karnataka, providing free bus travel for women, crossed the 500 crore free rides mark on Monday, officials said. Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, his deputy D K Shivakumar, and Transport Minister Ramalinga Reddy celebrated the occasion by symbolically issuing the 500th crore free ticket to a woman passenger here. 'Shakti' scheme, which provides free bus travel for all women domiciled in the state, is among the five guarantee schemes implemented by the Congress government on coming to power. Launched on June 11, 2023, the scheme has so far cost the government Rs 12,669 crore, officials said. "As this is a special occasion I have symbolically issued the 500th crore free ticket to a woman passenger," Siddaramaiah later told reporters. The Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC) said, by offering free bus travel to women, the scheme has significantly contributed to the economic, social, educational, professional and health empowerment of women across the state. Before the launch of the Shakti Scheme, around 85.84 lakh passengers were travelling by bus daily, now this number has risen to 1.17 crore passengers per day, highlighting the scheme's massive impact, it said in a release. Pointing at the operational expansion post-Shakti scheme roll out, it said the number of scheduled services increased from 21,164 (pre-Shakti) to 23,635 (post-Shakti), and the total number of buses increased from 23,948 to 26,130, including the replacement of 2,828 old vehicles. According to KSRTC, to mark the milestone, the CM, the Deputy CM and the transport minister presented and felicitated 30 women passengers, including students, senior citizens, and transgender individuals, with Ilkal sarees, sweets and roses. The woman who received the 500th crore Shakti ticket was honoured by the chief minister with a shawl, floral garland, and a memento. Members of Vijayapura's 'Odala Dhwani Stree Sangha' (women's group), empowered by the Shakti Scheme, started producing and selling organic rotis and holiges (sweet) in Bengaluru, generating lakhs in revenue. As a gesture of gratitude, they presented rotis to the CM, Deputy Chief Minister, and the transport minister, the release said.

Monsoon Session likely to be ‘stormy' as Congress set to corner government
Monsoon Session likely to be ‘stormy' as Congress set to corner government

New Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • New Indian Express

Monsoon Session likely to be ‘stormy' as Congress set to corner government

'An unprecedented attack had taken place in Pahalgam. We have been seeking a special session to have a discussion on this. We and the people of this country want to know where those terrorists are. Why has no action been taken yet? Who was responsible for the killing of 26 people? Why was no single security personnel present there? Why was the quick response team missing?...Why is Prime Minister Narendra Modi maintaining a mysterious silence on the US president Donald Trump on brokering a ceasefire during Operation Sindoor? He hasn't responded yet to his claim,' said Tiwari. The month-long Monsoon session of Parliament is set to begin on July 21. He further stated that the Congress would also corner the Government on the issue of 'electoral manipulations' in elections in states such as Maharashtra, Haryana, and now in Bihar. The Congress will also raise the issue of rising incidents of crimes against women and Scheduled Castes across the country, particularly in states such as Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and Odisha. 'The Congress will raise the demand for the restoration of full statehood to Jammu and Kashmir, which has remained pending despite repeated assurances from the Government,' he said. On the question of the impeachment motion against Allahabad High Court justice Yashwant Verma, who is facing allegations of corruption charges after the discovery of burnt cash from his official residence in Delhi, the Congress leader didn't give any clear reply. He said that several other issues were also discussed in the meeting. Earlier in the day, the Congress president, Mallikarjun Kharge, met Vice President Jagdeep Dhankhar and said the opposition wants a productive session. 'The Opposition wants a productive Rajya Sabha session from July 21st. For that to happen a number of strategic, political, foreign policy and socio-economic issues that are of great public concern need to be debated and discussed. Today, I called on the Hon'ble Chairman of the Rajya Sabha and had a fruitful conversation,' Kharge wrote on 'X'.

US Senate to vote on Trump funding cuts, AIDS program funding preserved
US Senate to vote on Trump funding cuts, AIDS program funding preserved

Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • Indian Express

US Senate to vote on Trump funding cuts, AIDS program funding preserved

The US Senate is due to begin voting on Tuesday on President Donald Trump's request to slash billions in spending on foreign aid and public broadcasting previously approved by Congress, the latest test of Trump's control over his fellow Republicans. However, Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought told reporters it will no longer include a plan to cut funds designated for PEPFAR, a global fund to fight HIV/AIDS, bringing the size of the package of cuts to $9 billion from $9.4 billion. Senator John Thune of South Dakota, the chamber's Republican majority leader, said he expected the first procedural voting on Tuesday. He had said that some members of his party had wanted changes in the bill. The Senate has until Friday to act on the rescissions package, originally a request to claw back $8.3 billion in foreign aid funding and $1.1 billion for public broadcasting. Otherwise, the request will expire and the White House will be required to adhere to spending plans passed by Congress. Approving the Senate bill without the PEPFAR cuts means the measure must go back to the House of Representatives for a vote before it can be sent back to Trump to sign into law. Thune said he expected the House would act quickly to pass the measure. The amounts at stake are extremely small in the context of the sprawling federal budget, which totaled $6.8 trillion in the fiscal year ended September 30. Yet the proposed cuts have raised the hackles of Democrats and a handful of Republicans who saw an attempt to erode Congress's Constitutionally mandated authority over spending. The foreign aid initiatives in Trump's request for cuts included lifesaving support for women and children's health and the fight against HIV/AIDS that have long had strong bipartisan support. The package also cuts funds supporting public broadcasting, which can be the main source of news and emergency information in rural parts of the US. Critics of the cuts said the amounts of money involved were small but funded essential programs that should not be cut. 'What is going on here? Does anyone stand up to these horrible, horrible cuts that hurt the American people?' Senator Charles Schumer of New York, the chamber's Democratic leader, said on Monday. Trump has threatened to withhold his endorsement from any member of Congress who does not vote for the measure without changes. Standalone presidential rescissions packages have not passed in years, with lawmakers reluctant to cede their constitutionally mandated control of government spending. During Trump's first term in 2018, Congress members rejected Trump's request to revoke $15 billion in spending. Trump's Republicans hold narrow majorities in the Senate and House. So far, they have shown little appetite for opposing his policies. The rescissions legislation passed the House by 214-212 last month. Four Republicans joined 208 Democrats in voting against it. Some Republican senators had expressed concern about some of Trump's requests. Senator Susan Collins of Maine, who chairs the Appropriations Committee, had said she opposed Trump's request to cut funding for the global programs to fight HIV/AIDS. Democrats have warned that the foreign aid and broadcasting cuts, which overturn spending agreements between Republicans and Democrats, could make it more difficult to negotiate the package of spending bills that must pass by September 30 to fund the government next year and avoid a shutdown. 'How are we supposed to negotiate a bipartisan deal if Republicans will turn around and put it through the shredder in a partisan vote?' asked Senator Patty Murray from Washington, the top Democrat on the appropriations committee. Appropriations bills require 60 votes to move ahead in the Senate, but the rescissions package needs just 51, meaning Republicans can pass it without Democratic support.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store