SC expands judicial team to aid West Bengal SIR


SC Expands Judicial Team to Aid West Bengal SIR

UPSC Study Note | GS-II | Polity & Governance


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
State West Bengal
Purpose Remove deceased, ineligible, duplicate voters; resolve "logical discrepancies"
Governing Law Representation of the People Act, 1950; Registration of Electors Rules, 1960
Nodal Authority Election Commission of India (ECI)
State Machinery Electoral Registration Officers (EROs) / Assistant Electoral Registration Officers (AEROs)
SC Bench Special Bench headed by CJI Surya Kant
SC Power Invoked Article 142 of Constitution (extraordinary/complete justice)
Pending cases (as of Feb 25, 2026) ~50 lakh claims and objections
Initially deployed judges 294 district and additional district judges
Capacity (initial) 250 cases/judge/day → 80 days to clear backlog
Voter list publication date 28 February 2026 (permitted by SC)
Total names under scrutiny ~60+ lakh
Confirmed eligible ~32 lakh
Marked ineligible ~27 lakh
Neighbouring states alerted Odisha and Jharkhand
Appellate mechanism Tribunals headed by former HC Chief Justices/Judges

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Governance / Administrative

Political / Federal

Social / Rights-Based

Ethical / Transparency


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. SIR = Special Intensive Revision — a method of electoral roll revision under Registration of Electors Rules, 1960. [S2]
  2. The SC bench overseeing West Bengal SIR is headed by CJI Surya Kant. [S1]
  3. SC invoked Article 142 of the Constitution to deploy district judges to assist ECI in electoral roll revision. [S2]
  4. As of 25 February 2026, ~50 lakh claims and objections were pending before EROs/AEROs in West Bengal. [S1]
  5. 294 district and additional district judges were initially deployed — SC called this "a drop in the ocean." [S1]
  6. Neighbouring states alerted to spare judicial officers: Odisha and Jharkhand (not Bihar or Assam). [S1]
  7. SC also permitted use of civil judges (in addition to district judges) for the SIR verification exercise. [S1]
  8. EC was permitted to publish the initial voter list on 28 February 2026, followed by supplementary lists. [S1]
  9. Total names under SIR scrutiny: ~60 lakh+; confirmed eligible: ~32 lakh; marked ineligible: ~27 lakh. [S3]
  10. Appellate mechanism: former HC Chief Justices and judges head Appellate Tribunals for rejected voter claims. [S2]
  11. Implementing authority for SIR at district level: Electoral Registration Officers (EROs) / Assistant Electoral Registration Officers (AEROs) — not Returning Officers (who manage elections, not rolls). [S2]
  12. The Calcutta High Court Chief Justice's letter to SC triggered the February 25, 2026 emergency bench hearing. [S1]
  13. ECI conducted virtual training for deployed judicial officers on March 8, 2026. [S3]
  14. Governing legislation for electoral roll preparation: Representation of the People Act, 1950. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper(s): GS-II (Primary) | Limited overlap with GS-I (Society)

Syllabus headings: - Structure, organization and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary; Ministries and Departments of the Government - Salient features of the Representation of People's Act - Issues relating to elections and the Election Commission of India - Separation of powers between various organs, dispute redressal mechanisms and institutions - Federalism; devolution of powers and finances

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Supreme Court's deployment of judicial officers for West Bengal's SIR exercise raises fundamental questions about the boundary between judicial and electoral administration. Examine critically." 2. "Discuss the constitutional and legal framework governing Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls. What challenges does the West Bengal SIR (2025-26) expose in India's voter registration system?" 3. "In the context of the West Bengal SIR controversy, evaluate the role of the Election Commission of India as a constitutional body and its relationship with state governments under the federal structure."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Connected
Representation of the People Act, 1950 & 1951 Statutory backbone of voter registration and SIR process
Article 142 of the Constitution SC's extraordinary power, invoked in this case
Election Commission of India — Powers & Independence ECI as constitutional body vs. state govt friction
Delimitation Commission & Delimitation Act Runs parallel to SIR; both reshape electoral geography
Model Code of Conduct (MCC) Interaction with SIR timeline ahead of Assembly elections
Federalism — Centre-State Relations in Elections State obstruction of ECI directives; SC as arbiter
Right to Vote — Constitutional Status Whether voting is a fundamental right or a statutory right (SC jurisprudence)
NOTA & Electoral Reforms Broader electoral reform landscape of which roll accuracy is a part

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong power cited: Aspirants often attribute SC's intervention to Article 136 (SLP) or general supervisory jurisdiction — the operative power here is Article 142 (complete justice). Verify which article in any MCQ on this case.
  2. ERO vs. Returning Officer confusion: EROs handle electoral rolls (inclusions/deletions). Returning Officers manage conduct of elections. These are distinct officers; confusing them is a classic trap.
  3. SIR vs. SSR vs. BLO revision: There are multiple types of roll revision — Summary Revision, Special Summary Revision (SSR), and Special Intensive Revision (SIR). SIR is the most intensive, door-to-door verification method; SSR is the annual routine.
  4. States alerted: Candidates may incorrectly recall Bihar or Assam as the states placed on standby. The article clearly names Odisha and Jharkhand — geographically contiguous to West Bengal.
  5. Scale confusion: "50 lakh pending claims" (as of Feb 25, 2026) refers to unresolved objections before EROs. "60 lakh total under scrutiny" is the broader universe. Do not conflate these two figures in answer writing.

11. Sources