Supreme Court steps in; judicial officers will now join Bengal SIR process
Here is the complete UPSC study note:
Supreme Court Intervention in Bengal's Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of Electoral Rolls
1. At a Glance
- Special Intensive Revision (SIR) is a comprehensive, ground-up re-verification of electoral rolls, going beyond the routine annual revision; the EC ordered it in West Bengal with the qualifying date of 01.01.2026. [S1]
- A three-judge Supreme Court Bench (headed by CJI Surya Kant) took the extraordinary step of directing Calcutta HC to deploy serving and retired judicial officers to perform the quasi-judicial functions of Electoral Registration Officers (EROs) / Assistant EROs (AEROs) — a historically rare judicial override of an executive-electoral process. [S4]
- Directly relevant to: GS-II (Constitutional bodies — ECI; Judiciary; Centre-State relations; elections) and GS-III (Governance, federalism).
- Stakes: ~91 lakh voters dropped from the draft rolls; West Bengal Assembly elections scheduled for April 2026 kept the timeline acutely sensitive. [S2]
2. Why in the News
- February 20, 2026 (Friday): Supreme Court passed the order asking Calcutta HC Chief Justice to deploy a judicial officer corps for the SIR hearing process. [S4]
- Trigger: Persistent standoff between the Mamata Banerjee-led West Bengal government and the Election Commission of India (ECI) over the quality, rank, and affiliation of personnel the State deputed for SIR hearings. [S4]
- Deadline pressure: Claims and objections phase was set to close February 28, 2026, with lakhs of hearing notices pending. [S4]
- Underlying concern: "trust deficit" between two constitutional bodies — the State government and ECI — had created a "stalemate" per the Court's own characterisation. [S4]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year / Period | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1950 | Representation of the People Act (RPA), 1950 — statutory basis for electoral rolls; ERO system established. |
| Pre-2026 | Routine Summary Revision conducted annually; Special Summary Revision for specific needs. |
| 2024–25 | ECI launched SIR in 6 States/UTs, including West Bengal, with qualifying date 01.01.2026; enumeration in WB concluded 11.12.2025. [S1] |
| 16.12.2025 | Draft Electoral Rolls published for West Bengal. [S1] |
| Jan–Feb 2026 | SC directed SIR to "continue without hindrance" (Feb 9, 2026); EC issued directions to implement SC's order; EC took firm stance on transfer of officials engaged in SIR. [S3] |
| 20.02.2026 | SC deployed judicial officers to conduct ERO/AERO hearings. [S4] |
| 28.02.2026 | Claims/objections phase deadline; final voter list released. [S2] |
| Mar 28, 2026 | ECI released second list under SIR in West Bengal. [S3] |
| Apr 23 & 29, 2026 | West Bengal Assembly Elections — the overarching deadline driving urgency. [S2] |
- Predecessor exercises: Intensive Revision (older form); National Electoral Roll Purification and Authentication (NERPA); EPIC-based verification drives.
- 6 States/UTs covered under the current SIR cycle beyond West Bengal. [S1]
4. Core Static Facts
What is SIR? - Special Intensive Revision: A house-to-house enumeration to build fresh electoral rolls from scratch in areas with suspected large-scale errors, ghost entries, or omissions; distinct from the annual Summary Revision which only adds/deletes on application.
Legal & Constitutional Framework - Representation of the People Act, 1950 — Sections 13A–22: governs preparation and revision of electoral rolls; defines ERO/AERO roles. - Article 324 of the Constitution: Superintendence, direction, and control of elections vested in the Election Commission of India. - Article 326: Elections to the Lok Sabha and State Assemblies on the basis of adult suffrage. - ERO = Electoral Registration Officer (quasi-judicial function); AERO = Assistant ERO.
Key Numbers (Bengal SIR 2026) - ~91 lakh voters dropped from draft rolls — 27.16 lakh found ineligible; ~63 lakh deleted earlier (logical discrepancies / unmapped). [S2] - Qualifying date: 01.01.2026. [S1] - Enumeration period end: 11.12.2025. [S1] - Draft roll publication: 16.12.2025. [S1] - Claims/objections close: 28.02.2026. [S4]
Institutional Actors | Actor | Role | |---|---| | Election Commission of India (ECI) | Ordering authority; Article 324 body | | State government (WB) | Obliged to provide personnel; contested the EC's directives | | ERO / AERO | Quasi-judicial officers hearing voter claims & objections | | Supreme Court (3-judge Bench, CJI Surya Kant) | Supervisory; deployed judicial officers | | Calcutta High Court | Executing SC's order; deploying serving/retired judges |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- SC's intervention sets a precedent: judiciary stepping into an election-administration function ordinarily reserved for the executive-electoral axis. [S4]
- The ERO's function is quasi-judicial under RPA, 1950 — which made judicial substitution legally tenable; the SC anchored its order in this statutory character.
- Tension between Article 324 (ECI's plenary power over elections) and Article 162 (State executive power) forms the constitutional battleground.
- SC's previous order (Feb 9, 2026) directing SIR to continue "without hindrance" shows the court treating obstruction as a contempt-adjacent matter. [S3]
Ethical / Governance
- Trust deficit between two constitutional bodies — State & ECI — is itself a governance failure; SC's characterisation of this as a "stalemate" is unusually candid. [S4]
- EC's stance on transfer of officials engaged in SIR (Jan 28, 2026) highlights how State machinery can be used to slow federally-mandated electoral processes. [S3]
- Deploying retired judges as EROs injects neutrality but raises accountability questions (no service-conduct rules apply to retired officers).
Administrative
- Scale: Lakhs of hearing notices issued; deadline of Feb 28 created acute time pressure with under-one-week window at the time of the SC order. [S4]
- Bottleneck: State's alleged deputation of inadequate-rank/quality officials to ECI — a recurring federal friction point in election administration.
- Second list released Mar 28, 2026 signals continued administrative complexity even post-deadline. [S3]
Social
- ~91 lakh voters at risk of disenfranchisement if hearings not completed — disproportionate impact on migrant workers, slum dwellers, and those with incomplete documentation (categories most likely to appear "unmapped" or show "logical discrepancies"). [S2]
- West Bengal's minority-heavy constituencies made the voter-deletion exercise politically charged and socially sensitive.
Historical
- Precedent search: The Jharkhand and Bihar SIR exercises have seen EC-State friction but never SC-mandated judicial substitution of EROs — making the Feb 2026 Bengal order historically novel.
- Comparable historical moment: SC's intervention in delimitation disputes and its oversight of Model Code of Conduct enforcement have previously expanded judicial footprint in electoral governance.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Nov–Dec 2025: ECI conducts house-to-house enumeration in West Bengal; enumeration ends 11.12.2025. [S1]
- 16.12.2025: Draft Electoral Rolls published; ~91 lakh voter entries flagged. [S1][S2]
- Jan 22, 2026: EC issues directions implementing SC's order on SIR. [S3]
- Jan 28, 2026: EC takes firm stance on State's attempt to transfer officials engaged in SIR. [S3]
- Feb 9, 2026: SC directs SIR to continue "without any hindrance." [S3]
- Feb 20, 2026: SC (CJI Surya Kant Bench) orders Calcutta HC to deploy judicial officers as ERO/AEROs — the headline intervention. [S4]
- Feb 28, 2026: Claims/objections phase closes; final voter list released. [S2]
- Mar 28, 2026: ECI releases second list under SIR in West Bengal. [S3]
- Apr 23 & 29, 2026: West Bengal Assembly Elections held. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- SIR stands for Special Intensive Revision — a house-to-house re-enumeration of voters, ordered by ECI; distinct from the annual Summary Revision.
- The statutory basis for electoral roll preparation is the Representation of the People Act, 1950 (not 1951 — that governs conduct of elections).
- Electoral Registration Officer (ERO) is a quasi-judicial officer; the SIR hearing function legally belongs to the ERO/AERO.
- Article 324 vests superintendence, direction and control of elections in the Election Commission of India.
- The qualifying date for the Bengal SIR 2026 was 01.01.2026.
- Draft Electoral Rolls for West Bengal were published on 16.12.2025 after enumeration ended 11.12.2025. [S1]
- Approximately 91 lakh voters were dropped from Bengal's draft rolls — 27.16 lakh ineligible + ~63 lakh with logical discrepancies/unmapped. [S2]
- The Supreme Court Bench that ordered judicial officers into the SIR process was headed by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant (3-judge Bench). [S4]
- The SC directed the Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court (not the HC directly) to deploy serving and retired judicial officers. [S4]
- Claims and objections phase deadline under Bengal SIR 2026: February 28, 2026. [S4]
- ECI conducted SIR in 6 States/UTs simultaneously in the 2025–26 cycle. [S1]
- The categories that triggered hearing notices: "unmapped" voters and those with "logical discrepancies" in personal details. [S4]
- EC issued a firm order against State's attempt to transfer officials engaged in SIR (Jan 28, 2026) — illustrating EC's Article 324 power over election personnel. [S3]
- West Bengal Assembly Elections 2026 were held in two phases: April 23 and April 29, 2026. [S2]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | Salient features of the Representation of the People's Act; Election Commission — powers, functions, independence; Appointment to various Constitutional posts |
| GS-II | Separation of powers between various organs; Centre-State relations (federalism in election administration) |
| GS-II | Statutory, regulatory and various quasi-judicial bodies |
Plausible Mains Question Stems
-
"The Supreme Court's decision to deploy judicial officers as Electoral Registration Officers in West Bengal's SIR exercise raises fundamental questions about the separation of powers and the independence of election administration. Critically examine." (GS-II)
-
"Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls is both a tool of electoral integrity and a potential instrument of voter suppression. Analyse with reference to the West Bengal experience of 2025–26." (GS-II)
-
"Examine the constitutional tension between the Election Commission's plenary powers under Article 324 and the State executive's obligation to cooperate in election administration. What institutional reforms can resolve such stand-offs?" (GS-II)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Article 324 & Election Commission of India | Direct constitutional basis for ECI's SIR authority |
| Representation of the People Act, 1950 & 1951 | Statutory framework for electoral rolls (1950) and conduct of elections (1951) — frequently confused |
| Model Code of Conduct | Another ECI-State friction area; precedents of SC oversight |
| Delimitation Commission & Process | Related electoral boundary exercise; SC and judiciary's historical role |
| Centre-State Relations (Articles 256–263) | State obligation to give effect to Union/constitutional body directions |
| Voter ID / EPIC & AADHAAR linkage controversy | Technical dimension of voter list purification; ongoing legal battles |
| National Electoral Roll Purification & Authentication (NERPA) | Historical predecessor to SIR-type exercises; comparable methodology |
| Judicial independence & separation of powers | Constitutional doctrine tested by SC's quasi-executive role in SIR |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- RPA 1950 vs RPA 1951: Electoral rolls = 1950; Conduct of elections (candidates, offences, corrupt practices) = 1951. Aspirants routinely swap these.
- SIR vs Summary Revision: Summary Revision is the routine annual exercise (application-based additions/deletions); SIR is a from-scratch, house-to-house census of voters — a far more intensive process. Do not use them interchangeably.
- Who holds ERO power: ERO is a State government officer designated by ECI; the SC did not give power to the HC — it asked the HC Chief Justice to source/deploy officers to perform ERO functions. The legal authority still flows from ECI under RPA 1950.
- Article 324 scope: Article 324 covers "superintendence, direction and control" — this does NOT mean ECI can unilaterally appoint its own staff everywhere; it depends on State machinery, which is the core friction point in Bengal.
- "Logical discrepancy" ≠ ineligibility: A voter flagged for logical discrepancy (mismatch in name, age, address details) is not automatically deleted; they receive a hearing notice and can produce documents. Conflating the two categories overstates the number of definitively ineligible voters.
11. Sources
- [S1] ECI Revises Schedule for Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of Electoral Rolls in 6 States/UT — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2202341®=3&lang=1 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] West Bengal Final Voter List 2026 SIR / ADR report on SIR — https://adrindia.org/content/next-voters-in-wb-to-face-ecis-electoral-roll-revision — (Tier 4 / ADR)
- [S3] News on Air (All India Radio / Prasar Bharati) — multiple reports: Jan 22, Jan 28, Feb 9, Mar 28, 2026 — https://www.newsonair.gov.in — (government broadcaster)
- [S4] The Hindu — "Supreme Court steps in; judicial officers will now join Bengal SIR process" by Krishnadas Rajagopal, 21 February 2026, Page 1, Print Edition — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-21/ — (Tier 4; article excerpt supplied as primary source)