SAFEGUARDING UNIVERSAL FRANCHISE IN BIHAR’S 2025 REVISION

THE CONTEXT: The Election Commission of India (ECI) ordered a Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of Bihar’s electoral rolls on 24 June 2025, citing large-scale migration and suspected duplication. The draft roll will be published on 1 August, barely eight weeks before the 2025 Assembly elections. Field verification has already marked about 35.69 lakh electors (≈4.5 percent of the 7.9 crore electorate) as “untraceable”.

CONSTITUTIONAL AND STATUTORY FRAME:

    • Article 324 vests “superintendence, direction and control” of elections in the ECI.
    • Article 325 bars discrimination in roll-making on grounds of religion, race or caste.
    • Article 326 guarantees universal adult suffrage.
    • Representation of the People Act 1950, Section 21 permits annual summary revisions and, “for reasons to be recorded”, special revisions.

DESIGN OF THE BIHAR SIR 2025:

STEPTIMELINESALIENT RULE
House-to-house verification25 June – 15 JulyBooth Level Officers visit each address thrice.
Draft roll publication1 AugustNames flagged “untraceable” are likely to be deleted.
Claims & objections window1 – 30 AugustVoter must file fresh Form-6 with documentary proof.
Eleven accepted documentsPassport, caste certificate, matriculation mark-sheet, pension order, etc.
Excluded IDsAadhaar, Ration Card, Driving Licence, even ECI-issued Electors Photo Identity Card (EPIC).

COMPARATIVE LENS AND PAST PRECEDENTS:

    • Bihar 2003 intensive revision accepted any government-issued photo ID and did not demand re-application from post-2003 voters.
    • Assam National Register of Citizens (NRC 2019) showed that mass documentary exercises risk wrongful exclusion of poor and migrant groups.
    • Most States rely on annual summary revision plus continuous updating instead of time-compressed special drives during election year.

STAKEHOLDER IMPACT AUDIT:

GROUP MOST AT RISKWHY THE CURRENT DESIGN HURTS
Seasonal migrant labour (15 percent of Bihar’s workforce)Usually away during July–August, miss claims window.
Mahadalit settlements and landless womenLack property papers or matriculation certificates.
Urban slum dwellers in Patna, GayaFrequent address change, no updated utility bills.
Elderly or illiterate citizensLimited digital literacy to upload forms on ECI Net App.

CORE ISSUES AND CONSTITUTIONAL CONCERNS:

    • Procedural fairness: Eight-week window is too short for door-to-door verification across 72,000 polling stations.
    • Equality test (Article 14): Distinction between pre-2003 and post-2003 voters is arbitrary; exclusion of EPIC defies logic.
    • Proportionality: The objective (roll purity) is legitimate, but the means (mass re-verification) impose a heavier burden than necessary, especially on marginal groups.
    • Right to be informed: Many flagged voters learn of deletion only after draft roll, undermining “right to notice” affirmed in Supreme Court rulings such as Resurgence India v ECI (2013).

EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE AND OFFICIAL DATA:

    • 69 lakh electors marked “untraceable”: 12.56 lakh presumed dead, 17.37 lakh shifted, 5.76 lakh duplicate.
    • 54 lakh households yet to return enumeration forms.
    • Supreme Court on 10 July urged ECI to “also consider” Aadhaar, EPIC and Ration Card while examining claims.
    • Court set 21 July for ECI counter-affidavit; next hearing 28 July, close to draft-roll date.

GOVERNMENT AND ECI RESPONSIBILITIES:

    • Presumption of inclusion: Administrative errors in earlier enrolments cannot be off-loaded onto voters.
    • Public notice duty: Gram Sabha loudspeaker announcements, SMS alerts and vernacular newspaper ads must precede deletions.
    • Grievance redress: Each Booth Level Officer must issue an acknowledgement for documents received, trackable on the ECI portal.

THE WAY FORWARD:

    • Accept EPIC as primary proof, cross-check later. The EPIC is photo-linked to the same database; immediate acceptance prevents wrongful deletion while upholding integrity.
    • Open weekend and late-evening camps in migrant hubs. Extends access for workers who return home only briefly, raising claims turnout without extra cost.
    • Deploy Gram Sabha social audit. Place tentative deletion lists on Panchayat notice boards for seven days, letting neighbours attest a voter’s presence or death.
    • Auto-generate SMS alerts. Any name flagged “untraceable” triggers a multilingual text to the linked mobile number, expanding notice reach.
    • Single-window e-form with assisted kiosks. Common Service Centres can scan and upload forms, reducing travel and photocopy costs for rural women and elderly.
    • Door-step verification for vulnerable groups. Direct BLOs to conduct a second verification in habitations where female literacy is below the State average of 62 percent.
    • Rostered political-party observers. Each major party may post an agent at verification camps, enhancing transparency and bipartisanship.
    • Real-time deletion dashboard. District-wise daily figures published on CEO Bihar website; civil society can flag anomalies early.
    • Link to Civil Registration System. Death certificates auto-update the roll monthly, allowing future deletions without mass drives.
    • Legislative clarity on document list. Amend the Registration of Electors Rules 1960 to specify a broad, technology-neutral set of IDs, insulating inclusion norms from frequent executive tweaks.

THE CONCLUSION:

Universal adult franchise was India’s founding leap of faith. Updating voter lists is necessary, but method matters. The Supreme Court now has a narrow window to ensure that administrative zeal does not eclipse constitutional egalitarianism. The guiding maxim should be simple: err on the side of inclusion, verify without victimising.

UPSC PAST YEAR QUESTION:

Q. Discuss the role of the Election Commission of India in the light of the evolution of the Model Code of Conduct. 2022

MAINS PRACTICE QUESTION: 

Q. Electoral roll purification must balance administrative accuracy with the constitutional promise of universal adult suffrage. Examine in context of 2025 Special Intensive Revision in Bihar.

SOURCE:

https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/fencing-out-the-voter-in-bihars-poll-roll-preparation/article69820024.ece

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