Place in the electoral rolls is a ‘qualified right’, with essential conditions, poll body tells SC


Electoral Rolls as a 'Qualified Right': EC Before the Supreme Court

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1950 Representation of the People Act, 1950 (RPA 1950) enacted; Section 21 grants ECI power to revise electoral rolls [S3]
1960 Registration of Electors Rules, 1960 framed under RPA 1950; detail the procedure for preparation, revision, and correction of rolls [S3]
1989 Voting age reduced from 21 to 18 years by 61st Constitutional Amendment [S5]
June–Sept 2025 ECI conducts SIR in Bihar ahead of Bihar Legislative Assembly Elections; ~47 lakh names removed after verification [S1]
July 2025 onwards Batch of petitions filed in SC challenging constitutionality of SIR [S2]
Jan 28, 2026 EC advances "qualified right" argument before SC [S4]
Post-29 hearing days SC upholds SIR; judgment delivered by CJI Surya Kant [S1]

Earlier precedent: Intensive Revision (IR) exercises are conducted routinely before every election; SIR is a special, deeper verification triggered by specific concerns about roll accuracy.


4. Core Static Facts

Constitutional Provisions

Statutory Provisions

SIR Facts (Bihar 2025)

Parameter Detail
Duration June–September 2025
State Bihar
Electors removed ~47 lakh (~4.7 million)
% of electorate removed ~5–6%
Nature Verification, not citizenship adjudication
Legal basis Article 324 + Section 21(3), RPA 1950

Implementing body: Election Commission of India (independent constitutional authority)


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Political / Governance

Social / Rights-Based

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. Article 326 provides for adult suffrage; eligibility: Indian citizen, 18+ years, not disqualified by law. [S3]
  2. Article 325 prohibits separate electoral rolls and bars exclusion/inclusion on religion, race, caste, or sex. [S3]
  3. Article 324 vests superintendence of elections in the Election Commission of India. [S1]
  4. Section 21(3), Representation of the People Act, 1950 empowers ECI to conduct Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls. [S1]
  5. Section 62, RPA 1951: Entitlement to vote is contingent on one's name appearing in the electoral roll of the constituency. [S3]
  6. Registration of Electors Rules, 1960 govern procedural aspects of voter enrolment and roll revision. [S3]
  7. The Bihar SIR ran from June to September 2025 and removed approximately 47 lakh (~4.7 million) voters — roughly 5–6% of Bihar's electorate. [S1]
  8. The EC's SIR was challenged in the Supreme Court by the Association for Democratic Reforms (and other petitioners). [S2]
  9. The SC bench that adjudicated the SIR case comprised CJI Surya Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi. [S1]
  10. EC distinguished: SIR is a verification of citizenship, not a determination of citizenship — the latter falls under the Citizenship Act, 1955. [S4]
  11. The 61st Constitutional Amendment (1989) reduced voting age from 21 to 18 years, amending Article 326. [S5]
  12. The right to vote is a statutory right (not a Fundamental Right under Part III) per established SC jurisprudence. [S3]
  13. Booth Level Officers (BLOs) are the ground-level functionaries responsible for field verification during SIR. [S2]
  14. EC senior advocate: "Fulfillment of Article 326 conditions is a continuous requirement" — not a one-time check at registration. [S4]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Indian Constitution — significant provisions; Election Commission; Representative bodies; Statutory bodies
GS-II Government policies and interventions; Issues arising out of their design and implementation
GS-IV Ethics, accountability, and governance — transparency in electoral processes

Plausible Mains Question Stems

  1. "The Election Commission of India's Special Intensive Revision (SIR) in Bihar has reignited debate over the nature of voting rights in India. Critically examine the constitutional basis of the SIR and its implications for electoral democracy." (GS-II, 15 marks)

  2. "The Supreme Court's validation of the SIR exercise underlines the tension between roll accuracy and inclusive enfranchisement. Analyse this tension with reference to Articles 324, 325, and 326 of the Constitution." (GS-II, 15 marks)

  3. "Distinguish between 'verification of citizenship' and 'determination of citizenship' in the context of electoral roll management. What are the constitutional and legal limits of the Election Commission's power in this regard?" (GS-II, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Article 324 — Powers of Election Commission Foundational to understanding EC's authority for SIR; plenary vs. supervisory power debate
Representation of the People Acts, 1950 & 1951 Statutory backbone of voter registration and election conduct
Citizenship Act, 1955 Defines Indian citizenship — the underlying eligibility condition in Article 326
National Register of Citizens (NRC) & CAA Overlapping terrain of citizenship verification vs. determination
Model Code of Conduct ECI's quasi-legislative powers beyond roll management
Delimitation Commission & Process Paired with roll revision in pre-election sequencing
Right to Vote — Statutory vs. Fundamental Right debate SC has consistently held it statutory; compare with global constitutional positions

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing Articles 325 and 326: Article 325 = no separate roll / no exclusion by religion/race/caste/sex; Article 326 = adult suffrage conditions (age, citizenship, no disqualification). They are frequently swapped.

  2. Treating voting as a Fundamental Right: The right to vote is a statutory right under RPA 1951, not a Fundamental Right under Part III. Do not write it as such in Mains answers.

  3. Mixing SIR with ordinary Summary Revision: SIR (Special Intensive Revision) is a field-based, targeted exercise mandated under Section 21(3); Summary Revision is the routine annual desktop exercise — they are not the same.

  4. Confusing RPA 1950 and RPA 1951: RPA 1950 → electoral rolls and delimitation; RPA 1951 → conduct of elections, qualifications/disqualifications of candidates. The SIR power (Section 21) is in RPA 1950, not 1951.

  5. Assuming SIR determines citizenship: EC explicitly argued before SC that SIR only verifies citizenship status (a condition for enrolment); it does not adjudicate citizenship — which is the exclusive domain of the Citizenship Act, 1955 and FRRO/Foreigners Tribunals.


11. Sources