Parties must get advertisements pre-certified
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UPSC Study Note: Pre-Certification of Political Advertisements by the Election Commission of India
1. At a Glance
- Pre-certification of political advertisements is a mandatory requirement under which political parties must get all poll-related advertisements approved by the Media Certification and Monitoring Committee (MCMC) before broadcast/publication. [S1]
- The directive is issued by the Election Commission of India (ECI) ahead of elections under its plenary powers derived from Article 324 of the Constitution.
- Critical for UPSC because it cuts across GS-II (polity, election laws, constitutional bodies) and tests knowledge of ECI's quasi-judicial powers, MCC, paid news, and campaign finance regulation.
- The mechanism is the ECI's primary tool to curb paid news, partisan misinformation, and illegal campaign expenditure during election periods.
2. Why in the News
- March 21, 2026 (Saturday): The Election Commission directed political parties to pre-certify all advertisements through MCMCs ahead of Assembly elections in four States and one Union Territory. [S1]
- ECI simultaneously directed individual candidates to disclose authentic social media accounts in nomination affidavits. [S1]
- MCMCs were instructed to maintain strict vigil on paid news and take action. [S1]
- Political parties must submit a statement of internet campaign expenditure to ECI within 75 days of completion of Assembly elections. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
- 1951–52: First General Elections held; no formal advertisement regulation existed.
- 2004: ECI formally constituted MCMCs at district and State levels as part of its Model Code of Conduct (MCC) enforcement machinery.
- 2008–09: Paid news phenomenon escalated significantly; ECI flagged it as a major electoral malpractice.
- 2012: ECI issued comprehensive guidelines making pre-certification of TV and radio advertisements mandatory for political parties; later extended to print and digital media.
- 2013: The Press Council of India (PCI) and ECI jointly released a report on paid news; ECI guidelines tightened.
- 2014 General Elections: First large-scale enforcement of MCMC pre-certification for broadcast media advertisements.
- 2019 onwards: Digital/social media advertisements brought under scrutiny; ECI issued guidelines on Voluntary Code of Ethics with social media platforms (Facebook, Google, Twitter/X, etc.) under Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI).
- 2024–2026: ECI expanded requirements to include social media account disclosure in nomination affidavits and internet expenditure reporting. [S1]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Mechanism | Pre-certification of political advertisements |
| Implementing Body | Election Commission of India (ECI) |
| Operational Committee | Media Certification and Monitoring Committee (MCMC) |
| Constitutional Authority | Article 324 (superintendence, direction, control of elections) |
| Statutory Basis | Representation of the People Act, 1951 (Sections 77, 123); MCC |
| MCMC Levels | District-level MCMC; State-level MCMC |
| Composition (MCMC) | District Collector / Election Observer + representatives from I&B Ministry, Doordarshan, AIR |
| Coverage | TV, radio, print, cable, digital/social media advertisements |
| Internet Expenditure Report deadline | Within 75 days of election completion [S1] |
| Paid News definition | Any news item or analysis appearing in print/electronic media for a price in cash or kind as a favour to a candidate |
| Social media disclosure | Candidates must declare authentic social media accounts in nomination affidavits [S1] |
| Key provision | Expenditure on advertisements (including internet) included in candidate's election expenditure account under Section 77, RPA 1951 |
| Penalty for paid news | Can be classified as corrupt practice under Section 123(4), RPA 1951 |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- ECI derives authority from Article 324 — a plenary power upheld by the Supreme Court in Mohinder Singh Gill v. CEC (1978) as wide and residual in nature.
- Pre-certification operates through the Model Code of Conduct (MCC) — a non-statutory but judicially recognized instrument; also enforced via Section 77 RPA 1951 (election expenditure accounts). [S1]
- Paid news, if established, constitutes a corrupt practice under Section 123(4) (undue influence) or can trigger disqualification proceedings.
- Supreme Court in PUCL v. Union of India (2003) reinforced the right of voters to know — underpins disclosure obligations including social media accounts. [S1]
Ethical / Governance
- Pre-certification prevents misinformation, hate speech, and communally sensitive content from entering mass media during sensitive election periods. [S1]
- Paid news is fundamentally a transparency and accountability failure — it disguises political advertising as editorial content, misleading voters.
- Social media account disclosure in affidavits enhances traceability of campaign content and limits anonymous political targeting. [S1]
- The 75-day internet expenditure reporting requirement closes a loophole where digital spends were excluded from expenditure limits. [S1]
Administrative
- MCMCs must process certification requests swiftly — delay in certification can itself become a tool to suppress opposition advertising (raises concerns of ECI neutrality and capacity).
- District-level MCMCs are the primary point of certification; they face capacity constraints in large, multi-phase elections.
- ECI relies heavily on Expenditure Monitoring Observers alongside MCMCs to triangulate actual spends against declared accounts.
- Compliance by candidates on social media disclosure requires coordination with the Returning Officer during the nomination process. [S1]
Social
- Pre-certification helps protect marginalised communities from targeted hate-speech advertisements during elections.
- Women candidates and first-time candidates may face asymmetric access to MCMC processes if not adequately supported.
Economic
- Digital advertising spend in Indian elections has grown exponentially — ECI's 75-day internet expenditure reporting rule addresses grey-area campaign finance. [S1]
- The expenditure ceiling (₹28–40 lakh for Assembly, ₹75–95 lakh for Lok Sabha, revised periodically) is enforced through these certification and monitoring systems.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- March 2026: ECI directed pre-certification for four State Assembly elections + one UT ahead of polls; MCMC vigilance on paid news mandated simultaneously. [S1]
- March 2026: ECI mandated that candidates declare authentic social media accounts in nomination affidavits — first such formalisation in affidavit format. [S1]
- March 2026: Internet campaign expenditure to be submitted within 75 days of election completion, effectively covering all major platforms (Meta, Google, X/Twitter, YouTube, etc.). [S1]
- 2024 (General Elections): ECI activated MCMCs at national scale; Social media platforms bound by the Voluntary Code of Ethics (IAMAI MoU) to take down flagged content within 3 hours during election silence period.
- 2024–25: ECI enhanced C-VIGIL app integration for real-time reporting of MCC violations including advertisement violations; actionable within 100 minutes.
7. Prelims Hooks
- Article 324 of the Constitution is the constitutional basis for ECI's authority to issue directives including pre-certification of advertisements.
- MCMC stands for Media Certification and Monitoring Committee — constituted by ECI at district and State levels.
- Pre-certification is mandatory for all electronic and digital media political advertisements before broadcast.
- Paid news can constitute a corrupt practice under Section 123(4) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951.
- Candidate election expenditure accounts are governed by Section 77, RPA 1951; internet ad spends are included in this limit.
- ECI directed internet campaign expenditure statements to be submitted within 75 days of completion of Assembly elections. [S1]
- Candidates must disclose authentic social media accounts at the time of filing nominations in their affidavits. [S1]
- MCMCs are also tasked with monitoring paid news in media and taking action thereon. [S1]
- The Model Code of Conduct (MCC) is the primary non-statutory instrument under which MCMC operates; it comes into force on the date of election schedule announcement.
- C-VIGIL app is ECI's citizen-reporting tool for MCC violations, with a target action time of 100 minutes.
- The Voluntary Code of Ethics for social media during elections was signed under the aegis of IAMAI (Internet and Mobile Association of India) from 2019.
- ECI's Expenditure Monitoring uses a combination of MCMCs, Flying Squads (FS), Static Surveillance Teams (SST), and Video Surveillance Teams (VST).
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II (Polity and Governance)
Syllabus Headings: - "Functions and responsibilities of the Union and the States, issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure…" - "Role of Civil Services in a democracy" - More precisely: "Functioning of Constitutional Bodies — Election Commission of India; electoral reforms"
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The pre-certification of political advertisements by MCMCs is a necessary but insufficient safeguard against electoral malpractice. Critically analyse." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "Discuss the legal and constitutional framework governing paid news in India. What reforms has the Election Commission of India introduced to address the menace?" (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. "How does the Election Commission of India regulate campaign expenditure in the digital age? Examine the challenges and recent measures." (GS-II, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Model Code of Conduct (MCC) | Pre-certification is enforced through MCC; foundational context |
| Paid News — definition and legal framework | MCMC's primary mandate is paid news surveillance |
| Election Expenditure Limits (RPA 1951, Sec. 77) | Internet ad spending now included; directly tested |
| Social Media & Elections (IT Rules 2021, IAMAI Code) | Social media account disclosure is a new extension of ECI's digital regulation |
| Article 324 and ECI's Plenary Powers | Constitutional underpinning for all ECI directives |
| Electoral Bond Scheme (SC judgment 2024) | Connected to campaign finance transparency debate |
| C-VIGIL App and ECI Technology Initiatives | Real-time MCC violation reporting; complements MCMC |
| Representation of the People Act, 1951 | Statutory basis for corrupt practices, expenditure limits, disqualification |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- MCMC ≠ Press Council of India. MCMC is an ECI body; PCI is a statutory body under the Press Council Act, 1978. Both commented on paid news but MCMCs are ECI's internal enforcement committees.
- Pre-certification is NOT only for TV/Radio. It covers digital/internet advertisements and print — a frequent source of confusion since original 2012 rules focused on broadcast.
- MCC is non-statutory — it has no dedicated Act; it derives force from Article 324 and is judicially upheld. Do not confuse it with a statutory code.
- 75-day deadline is for internet expenditure statements, not for overall election expenditure accounts (those must be submitted within 30 days for Assembly, 45 days for Parliament elections under Section 78, RPA 1951).
- Social media account disclosure is in the nomination affidavit, not a separate post-election filing — a nuance that can be tested precisely. [S1]
11. Sources
- [S1] "Parties must get advertisements pre-certified" — The Hindu, March 21, 2026 (Print Edition, Page 4, International/Main Edition) — Article content provided in prompt — (Tier 4: thehindu.com)
Note: WebSearch queries to Tier 1/2 domains were inaccessible to the search agent during this session. All structural facts about MCMC, Article 324, RPA 1951, and ECI powers are grounded in established constitutional/statutory knowledge corroborated by the article [S1]. Aspirants should cross-verify with pib.gov.in and eci.gov.in for the latest ECI orders.