Another 6 lakh names may go from Bengal voter list
Bengal Voter List: Special Intensive Revision (SIR) — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls is a large-scale, house-to-house verification exercise ordered by the Election Commission of India (ECI) to purge ineligible entries and include eligible voters. [S1]
- West Bengal became the most high-profile SIR case in 2025–26, with 58 lakh names already deleted in Phase 1, and ~6 lakh more facing deletion. [S4]
- This topic intersects constitutional powers of ECI (Article 324), the Representation of the People Act, 1950, federalism, and minority/migrant voter rights — all core UPSC themes. [S2]
- The process has been monitored by the Supreme Court of India, which directed district judges to assist the ECI — a rare judicial-administrative convergence. [S3]
2. Why in the News
- February 14, 2026: SIR hearings in West Bengal concluded; ~6.25 lakh electors who had been issued notices for "logical discrepancies" failed to appear for verification hearings. [S4]
- Phase 1 of SIR had already removed 58 lakh names, reducing West Bengal's total electorate from a higher figure to 7.08 crore. [S4]
- West Bengal Chief Secretary Nandani Chakravarty was summoned to Delhi by ECI over the State government's non-compliance: failure to file FIRs against four officials and suspend another involved in the SIR process. [S4]
- Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar personally held meetings with district magistrates over implementation lapses. [S4]
- March 28, 2026: ECI released the second list under SIR in West Bengal, continuing the adjudication process. [S5]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1950 | Representation of the People Act, 1950 enacted; Section 21(3) enables "special revision" of electoral rolls. [S2] |
| Post-2019 | Concerns raised about "ghost voters," duplicates, and non-resident entries inflating rolls. |
| Oct 2025 | ECI announced pan-India SIR across 12 States/UTs. [S6] |
| Nov 2025 | West Bengal CEO began review of SIR process. [S5] |
| Dec 11, 2025 | Enumeration period for West Bengal ended; draft electoral rolls published on December 16, 2025. Qualifying date: January 1, 2026. [S1] |
| Jan 22, 2026 | ECI issued directions to implement Supreme Court's order on SIR in West Bengal. [S5] |
| Feb 9, 2026 | Supreme Court directed SIR in West Bengal to continue without hindrance. [S5] |
| Feb 14, 2026 | SIR hearings concluded; ~6 lakh voters absent; decision on further deletions imminent. [S4] |
| Feb 20, 2026 | SC directed serving and former district judges to assist ECI in West Bengal's SIR. [S3] |
| Mar 28, 2026 | ECI released second SIR list in West Bengal. [S5] |
4. Core Static Facts
Definitions & Terminology
- SIR (Special Intensive Revision): A 100% physical verification-based revision of electoral rolls; Booth Level Officers (BLOs) personally distribute/collect enumeration forms.
- Logical Discrepancies: Inconsistencies in enumeration forms (age, address, duplicates, etc.) that trigger notices.
- Speaking Order: A reasoned, documented order from the Electoral Registration Officer (ERO/AERO) — mandatory before any name deletion. [S2]
- BLO (Booth Level Officer): Ground-level functionary managing form distribution and verification.
- ERO (Electoral Registration Officer): Authority that scrutinises submissions and issues orders for inclusion/deletion.
Enabling Legal Framework
| Provision | Relevance |
|---|---|
| Article 324, Constitution | Superintendence, direction and control of elections vested in ECI. [S2] |
| Section 21(3), RP Act 1950 | Empowers ECI to conduct "special revision" of electoral rolls. [S2] |
| Section 22, RP Act 1950 | Deletion of entries — requires due process and notice. |
| Registration of Electors Rules, 1960 | Procedural rules for revision. |
Key Numbers — West Bengal SIR
| Metric | Figure |
|---|---|
| Notices issued for "logical discrepancies" | ~1.36 crore voters [S4] |
| Details verified of those | ~1.23 crore [S4] |
| Phase 1 deletions | 58 lakh [S4] |
| Electorate post-Phase 1 | 7.08 crore [S4] |
| Absentees (potential Phase 2 deletions) | ~6.25 lakh [S4] |
| Pan-India net deletions (12 States, SIR 2025–26) | 5.2 crore (~10% of total electorate) [S2] |
Implementing Authority
- Election Commission of India (ECI) — constitutional body.
- Chief Electoral Officer (CEO), West Bengal — State-level nodal officer.
- District Magistrates — Returning/Electoral Registration Officers at district level.
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 324 gives ECI plenary powers over elections; SIR is an exercise of this inherent authority, not merely statutory. [S2]
- Supreme Court's directive to deploy district judges as observers is unprecedented — signals judicial concern about executive resistance. [S3]
- The principle of "no deletion without a speaking order" upholds natural justice (audi alteram partem); any deletion without notice is challengeable in High Court. [S2]
- SC's February 9, 2026 order to let SIR "continue without hindrance" implicitly rebuked the West Bengal State government's obstruction. [S5]
Administrative / Governance
- West Bengal government's non-compliance — failure to file FIRs, failure to suspend errant officials — represents a classic centre-state friction in election administration. [S4]
- Summoning of the Chief Secretary to Delhi by CEC Gyanesh Kumar is an extraordinary administrative escalation. [S4]
- BLO-level implementation is vulnerable to local political pressure — a structural weakness in SIR design.
- ECI revised the SIR schedule for 6 States/UT mid-process, indicating operational flexibility. [S1]
Political / Social
- ~58 lakh deletions from a single state's rolls is politically sensitive; allegations arose that genuine voters (especially minorities, migrants, underprivileged) were being disenfranchised.
- Notices to 1.36 crore voters (~19% of the 7+ crore electorate) raises equity concerns about disproportionate burden on marginalised communities.
- West Bengal's proximity to Bangladesh border makes Bangladeshi infiltration a recurring political argument for voter list purges.
- ECI asserted "no valid voter will be dropped" — commitment to non-disenfranchisement. [S7]
Historical
- Comparable exercises: Photo Electoral Roll (PER) drive of 1993; EPIC (Electoral Photo ID Card) rollout 1993–94; SVEEP (Systematic Voters' Education) campaigns.
- Pan-India SIR of 2025–26 is the largest electoral roll revision in recent decades by scale of deletions (5.2 crore net). [S2]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 months)
- October 2025: ECI announced pan-India SIR across 12 States/UTs. [S6]
- November 2025: West Bengal CEO reviewed SIR operational progress. [S5]
- December 16, 2025: Draft electoral rolls published; qualifying date January 1, 2026. [S1]
- January 2026: ECI directed CEO West Bengal to implement SC orders; Phase 1 deletion of 58 lakh names completed. [S4][S5]
- February 9, 2026: Supreme Court ordered SIR to continue without hindrance. [S5]
- February 14, 2026: Hearings concluded; ~6.25 lakh absentees flagged for potential deletion. [S4]
- February 20, 2026: SC directed deployment of district judges to assist ECI in West Bengal. [S3]
- March 28, 2026: ECI released second SIR list (names under adjudication) in West Bengal. [S5]
7. Prelims Hooks
- SIR stands for Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls — not Systematic Intensive Revision.
- Article 324 of the Constitution vests superintendence of elections in the Election Commission of India. [S2]
- The enabling statutory provision for special revision of electoral rolls is Section 21(3) of the Representation of the People Act, 1950. [S2]
- No name can be deleted from draft electoral rolls without a "speaking order" from the ERO/AERO. [S2]
- The qualifying date for voter eligibility in West Bengal's SIR 2025–26 was January 1, 2026. [S1]
- 58 lakh names were deleted in Phase 1 of West Bengal SIR, reducing the electorate to 7.08 crore. [S4]
- Notices for "logical discrepancies" were issued to approximately 1.36 crore voters in West Bengal. [S4]
- ~6.25 lakh voters failed to appear for SIR hearings despite notices — eligible for deletion in Phase 2. [S4]
- Pan-India net deletions across 12 States/UTs under SIR 2025–26: approximately 5.2 crore (~10% of electorate). [S2]
- West Bengal Chief Secretary Nandani Chakravarty was summoned to Delhi by CEC Gyanesh Kumar for non-compliance with ECI directions. [S4]
- Booth Level Officers (BLOs) are the frontline functionaries in the SIR process — responsible for distributing and collecting enumeration forms. [S1]
- Supreme Court directed serving and former district judges to assist ECI in West Bengal's SIR — order dated February 20, 2026. [S3]
- The Registration of Electors Rules, 1960 provide procedural framework for electoral roll revision.
- ECI revised the SIR schedule for 6 States/UT during the process — indicating the Commission's operational authority under Article 324. [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | Indian Constitution — election-related provisions; Role of ECI; Centre-State relations |
| GS-II | Constitutional bodies — ECI: powers, functions, independence |
| GS-II | Federalism — friction between State government and constitutional authorities |
| GS-I | Social issues — political participation of marginalised communities |
Plausible Mains Questions
- "The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in West Bengal has exposed the tension between the Election Commission's constitutional mandate and the political imperatives of State governments. Critically examine." (GS-II)
- "Discuss the safeguards available under the Representation of the People Act, 1950 against arbitrary deletion of names from electoral rolls. Are they adequate in the context of large-scale SIR exercises?" (GS-II)
- "The involvement of the Supreme Court in overseeing the SIR process in West Bengal reflects the evolving role of the judiciary in election administration. Analyse." (GS-II)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Article 324 & Election Commission of India | Constitutional foundation of ECI's SIR powers |
| Representation of the People Act, 1950 & 1951 | Statutory basis for voter registration, revision, and deletion |
| Centre-State Relations (Articles 256–263) | West Bengal's non-compliance illustrates federal friction with constitutional bodies |
| Delimitation Commission & Delimitation Act | Complementary exercise to voter rolls — boundary redraws affect electoral geography |
| NOTA, EVM/VVPAT controversies | Broader debate on electoral integrity in India |
| Citizenship & NRC (National Register of Citizens) | The "Bangladeshi infiltrator" narrative underpins political debates around SIR in West Bengal |
| Model Code of Conduct & ECI enforcement powers | ECI's institutional autonomy and limits |
| Natural Justice Principles (Audi alteram partem) | Applies to due process in voter deletion notices |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- SIR vs. SSR (Summary Special Revision): SIR is a 100% physical verification exercise; SSR is a routine annual revision based on qualifying dates. Do not conflate them.
- Section 21(3) vs. Section 22 of RP Act 1950: Section 21(3) enables special revision; Section 22 governs deletion of entries — both are relevant but distinct.
- "No deletion without notice" ≠ court order: The "speaking order" requirement is from the ERO/AERO (administrative), not a judicial court order.
- CEC Gyanesh Kumar is not confused with the West Bengal CEO: The West Bengal Chief Electoral Officer (a state-level official) is distinct from the Chief Election Commissioner (a constitutional appointee).
- 58 lakh ≠ 6 lakh: Phase 1 deletions = 58 lakh; Phase 2 potential = ~6 lakh. Examiners may mix these numbers. Always anchor: total electorate post-Phase 1 = 7.08 crore.
- Article 324 is not the only provision: The RP Act 1950 and Registration of Electors Rules 1960 are equally operative — do not attribute all ECI powers solely to Article 324.
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 — (tier: 1)
- [S2] Special Intensive Revision (SIR) — Legal Basis and Process — https://vajiramandravi.com/current-affairs/special-intensive-revision-of-electoral-rolls/ — (tier: 4 reference)
- [S3] SC directs serving and former district judges to assist EC in West Bengal's SIR — https://www.newsonair.gov.in/sc-directs-serving-and-former-district-judges-to-assist-ec-in-west-bengals-sir-of-electoral-rolls — (tier: 1/government broadcaster)
- [S4] "Another 6 lakh names may go from Bengal voter list" — The Hindu, February 14, 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-14/th_international/articleGMVFJ8OEO-13500784.ece — (tier: 4)
- [S5] NewsonAir — Multiple SIR West Bengal timeline reports — https://www.newsonair.gov.in — (tier: 1/government broadcaster); specific articles: ECI second list (Mar 28, 2026), SC order (Feb 9, 2026), CEO review (Nov 2025), EC directions (Jan 22, 2026), CEO timeline (Jan 20, 2026)
- [S6] Election Commission to conduct pan-India Special Intensive Revision of voter rolls — https://www.newsonair.gov.in/election-commission-to-conduct-pan-india-special-intensive-revision-of-voter-rolls — (tier: 1/government broadcaster)
- [S7] "No valid voter will be dropped during SIR in Bengal, says Election Commission" — https://www.deccanherald.com/india/west-bengal/no-valid-voter-will-be-dropped-during-sir-in-bengal-says-election-commission-3758718 — (tier: 4)