SIR order was legislative, aims to ‘purify’ rolls, has a liberal approach, EC tells SC


UPSC Study Note: Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of Electoral Rolls — EC's Defence Before the Supreme Court


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Exercise Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of Electoral Rolls
Conducting Authority Election Commission of India (ECI)
Constitutional Base Article 324 (superintendence, direction, control of elections)
Statutory Base Section 21, Representation of the People Act, 1950; Registration of Electors Rules, 1960
Qualifying Date (Bihar Phase I) 01 July 2025
Last Bihar Intensive Revision 2003 (qualifying date 01.01.2003)
Bihar Electorate ~7.89 crore electors (existing rolls)
Electors from 2003 rolls (Bihar) ~4.96 crore — only needed to verify and submit Enumeration Form
BLOs deployed (Bihar) 77,895 regular + 20,603 additional for new polling stations
Volunteers deployed Over 1 lakh (assisting elderly, PwD, poor)
Phase-II scope 9 States + 3 Union Territories; ~51 crore electors
Phase-II exclusions (draft rolls) ~6.5 crore names removed
ECI counsel in SC Senior Advocate Rakesh Dwivedi
SC Bench Headed by CJI Surya Kant
ECI's characterisation of SIR order "Legislative in character"
National Voters' Day 25 January (2026 edition held)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Social / Equity

Historical

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Article 324 of the Constitution vests the ECI with superintendence, direction, and control over preparation of electoral rolls and conduct of elections. [S4]
  2. Electoral rolls are governed by Section 21 of the Representation of the People Act, 1950 and the Registration of Electors Rules, 1960. [S1]
  3. The last Intensive Revision in Bihar before SIR 2025 was conducted in 2003 (qualifying date: 01.01.2003). [S1]
  4. The qualifying date for SIR Phase-I (Bihar) was 01 July 2025. [S1]
  5. Bihar had approximately 7.89 crore registered electors on existing rolls at the time of SIR. [S1]
  6. The ECI deployed 77,895 Booth Level Officers (BLOs) + 20,603 additional BLOs for new polling stations in Bihar alone. [S1]
  7. Approximately 6.5 crore elector names were excluded from draft rolls in 9 States and 3 UTs during SIR Phase-II. [S4]
  8. The ECI's counsel before the Supreme Court in January 2026 was Senior Advocate Rakesh Dwivedi. [S4]
  9. The SC Bench hearing the SIR challenge was headed by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant. [S4]
  10. The ECI characterised its SIR order as "legislative in character" — not merely administrative. [S4]
  11. The Election Symbols Order was cited by ECI as an example of its adjudicatory (not administrative) function. [S4]
  12. ECI deployed Special Roll Observers specifically for Phase-II of SIR in major States. [S5]
  13. Over 1 lakh volunteers were deployed during Bihar SIR to assist elderly, PwD, poor, and vulnerable electors. [S1]
  14. The landmark SC case Mohinder Singh Gill v. Chief Election Commissioner (1978) established Article 324 as a "reservoir of residual power" for the ECI.
  15. National Voters' Day is observed on 25 January every year.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper(s): Primarily GS-II (Polity & Governance); secondary GS-IV (Ethics in governance)

Specific Syllabus Headings: - Structure, organisation and functioning of the Executive and Judiciary — role and powers of ECI - Functions and responsibilities of the Union and the States, issues and challenges pertaining to the federal structure - Representation of People's Act — electoral reforms - Statutory, regulatory and various quasi-judicial bodies

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Election Commission of India's claim that the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) order is 'legislative in character' raises fundamental questions about the scope of Article 324. Critically examine the constitutional basis and implications of this assertion." 2. "Cleaning electoral rolls is a democratic imperative, but mass exclusion risks disenfranchisement of marginalised citizens. Analyse the tension between voter-roll integrity and the right to vote in the context of SIR 2025–26." 3. "Discuss the three-fold (administrative, adjudicatory, and legislative) characterisation of ECI's powers. How does this classification bear on electoral reform debates in India?"


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Connected
Article 324 and ECI powers Direct constitutional foundation of SIR; all debates flow from this Article
Representation of the People Act, 1950 & 1951 Statutory framework for electoral rolls and conduct of elections
Voter ID / EPIC and Aadhaar linkage Ongoing debate on proof-of-identity for elector registration; related to SIR documentation requirements
Delimitation Commission and its orders Boundary revision directly affects roll preparation; shares federal tensions with SIR
Model Code of Conduct (MCC) Another ECI instrument claimed under Article 324's residual power — same constitutional debate
Mohinder Singh Gill v. CEC (1978) & other EC cases Key SC precedents defining ECI's plenary powers
Right to Vote — statutory vs. fundamental right Central to the harm-argument against mass deletions from rolls
Electoral Reforms — Law Commission Reports Background on how roll revision, photo rolls, NOTA, etc. were recommended and implemented

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing Summary Revision with Intensive Revision: Summary Revision (annual, part-corrections) ≠ Intensive Revision (comprehensive, house-to-house). SIR is a Special Intensive Revision — even more comprehensive than routine intensive.
  2. Wrong statutory provision: The electoral rolls are governed by RPA 1950 (not 1951). RPA 1951 governs conduct of elections. Mixing these is a classic Prelims trap.
  3. Assuming ECI powers are purely administrative: The ECI explicitly argues its powers are administrative + adjudicatory + legislative — the tri-partite classification is examinable.
  4. Misattributing Article 326 as the source of ECI's power: Article 326 guarantees universal adult suffrage; Article 324 is the ECI's power-source. These are distinct.
  5. Qualifying date confusion: Bihar SIR qualifying date is 01.07.2025 (not 01.01.2025 or 01.01.2026) — aspirants often default to January 1 since routine annual revision uses that date.

11. Sources