EC deploys more observers in Bengal; CM tells counting agents to remain vigilant


EC Deploys More Observers in Bengal; CM Tells Counting Agents to Remain Vigilant

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1950 Election Commission of India constituted under Article 324 (came into force Jan 26, 1950)
1951 Representation of the People Act, 1951 enacted — governs conduct of elections, counting, EVMs, postal ballots
1989 EVMs first introduced experimentally; widespread deployment from 2004
2013 Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail (VVPAT) introduced for enhanced transparency
2019 VVPAT cross-verification mandated at 1 EVM per assembly segment per constituency (SC order)
2021 West Bengal Assembly elections saw extensive central observer deployment amid law-and-order concerns
2024 ECI further streamlined Postal Ballot counting process; Electronically Transmitted Postal Ballot System (ETPBS) expanded [S2]
2026 West Bengal Assembly General Election (294 seats); ECI deploys 165 + 77 observers for counting day [S1]

4. Core Static Facts

Election Commission of India - Constitutional basis: Article 324 (Part XV — Elections) - Composition: Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) + Election Commissioners (currently 2) appointed by the President - Tenure: 6 years or 65 years of age, whichever is earlier - Appointment law: Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment, Conditions of Service and Term of Office) Act, 2023 [S4] - Removal of CEC: Same procedure as a Supreme Court Judge (impeachment by Parliament)

Observer System - Observers appointed under Section 20B, Representation of the People Act, 1951 (General Observers); Section 20C (Police/Expenditure Observers) - Types: General Observer, Police Observer, Expenditure Observer, Counting Observer, Micro-Observer - For West Bengal 2026: 165 Additional Counting Observers + 77 Police Observers deployed [S1] - Micro-Observers stationed at each counting table, independently record results from CU display and hand to Counting Observer after each round [S2]

Counting Process Rules - Postal ballot counting begins: 8:00 AM - EVM counting begins: 8:30 AM - The penultimate (second-last) round of EVM/VVPAT counting can only begin after postal ballot counting is fully completed at that centre [S2] - Entry to counting centres: QR-code-based Photo ID via ECINET issued by Returning Officers [S1] - No mobile phones allowed inside the Counting Hall except for Counting Observer and Returning Officer [S2]

West Bengal Assembly - Total seats: 294 (single-stage or multi-phase election) - Governing party (pre-election): Trinamool Congress (TMC) - CM's constituency: Bhabanipur (Kolkata South district)


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Ethical / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Article 324 of the Constitution vests superintendence, direction, and control of elections in the Election Commission of India.
  2. The CEC is removed by Parliament through an address in the same manner as a Supreme Court judge (not by the President unilaterally).
  3. Representation of the People Act, 1951 is the primary statute governing conduct of elections to Parliament and State Legislatures.
  4. ECI deployed 165 Additional Counting Observers and 77 Police Observers in West Bengal for counting of votes on May 4, 2026. [S1]
  5. Postal ballot counting starts at 8:00 AM; EVM counting starts at 8:30 AM on counting day. [S2]
  6. The penultimate round of EVM counting cannot begin until postal ballot counting is fully complete at that centre. [S2]
  7. Entry to counting centres is controlled via QR-code-based Photo IDs issued through ECINET by Returning Officers. [S1]
  8. Micro-Observers are stationed at each counting table and independently record results from the Control Unit display. [S2]
  9. Only the Counting Observer and Returning Officer are permitted to carry mobile phones inside the Counting Hall. [S2]
  10. CM Mamata Banerjee's constituency is Bhabanipur (part of Kolkata South).
  11. The CEC and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment) Act, 2023 replaced the Supreme Court-directed selection committee and removed the CJI from the selection panel. [S4]
  12. VVPAT (Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail) was introduced in 2013 to enhance EVM transparency.
  13. West Bengal Legislative Assembly has 294 seats in total.
  14. ETPBS (Electronically Transmitted Postal Ballot System) is used for service voters to cast postal ballots electronically. [S2]
  15. The landmark case Mohinder Singh Gill v. Chief Election Commissioner (1978) established ECI's plenary powers under Article 324 beyond statutory text.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Indian Constitution — Functions and responsibilities of Constitutional Bodies; Election Commission
GS-II Federalism — Centre-State relations; Role of Governor/constitutional bodies in states
GS-IV Ethics in public service — Conflict of interest; Institutional integrity; Ethical conduct of elected representatives

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The Election Commission of India derives its power from both constitutional provisions and judicial interpretation. Critically examine its operational independence in the context of state government interference during elections." 2. "Discuss the institutional safeguards built into India's vote-counting process. Do they adequately address concerns about EVM tampering and electoral transparency?" 3. "The Chief Election Commissioner and Other Election Commissioners (Appointment) Act, 2023 has been criticized for undermining the independence of the ECI. Analyze the controversy and its constitutional implications."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Article 324 & Election Commission powers Constitutional foundation of all EC actions discussed
Representation of the People Act, 1951 Statutory basis for observers, counting rules, postal ballots
EVM & VVPAT controversy Direct link to strongroom security and counting transparency debates
Model Code of Conduct (MCC) Governs CM's conduct at counting centre; enforced by ECI
CEC Appointment Act 2023 Recent legislative change affecting ECI independence — SC challenge pending
Federal relations in election administration Pattern of Centre-state conflict over election machinery in various states
Postal Ballot System & ETPBS Integral to counting process; expanding scope for service voters
2021 West Bengal post-poll violence Historical precedent for SC-monitored probe; context for 2026 heightened observer deployment

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong removal procedure: Aspirants often write that ECI commissioners are removed "by the President" — the CEC is removed only by a parliamentary address (like a SC judge); other Election Commissioners can be removed on CEC's recommendation or by the President (post-2023 Act — verify current position).
  2. Conflating Counting Observer with Micro-Observer: Counting Observer oversees an entire counting hall; Micro-Observer is stationed at individual counting tables — distinct roles.
  3. EVM counting timing: A common slip — postal ballot counting begins at 8:00 AM, EVM at 8:30 AM; not the other way around.
  4. Article 324 vs. RPA 1951: Article 324 is the constitutional source; RPA 1951 is the statutory instrument. ECI's powers under Article 324 are not limited to what RPA says (Mohinder Singh Gill ruling). Don't conflate the two as if RPA is the only source.
  5. CEC Appointment Act 2023 — panel composition: Post-Act, the selection committee is PM + Cabinet Minister nominated by PM + Leader of Opposition (CJI excluded) — aspirants confuse this with the earlier SC-mandated three-member panel that included the CJI.

11. Sources