Amid SIR push, Calcutta HC forms panel to manage cases


Amid SIR Push, Calcutta HC Forms Panel to Manage Cases

UPSC Study Note — Prelims + Mains


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Process Name Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of Electoral Rolls
Directing Authority Election Commission of India (ECI)
Constitutional Basis Article 324, Constitution of India
Statutory Basis Section 21, Representation of the People Act, 1950
Field Officers Booth Level Officers (BLOs)
Tool Enumeration Form (EF) — partially pre-filled
BLO visits Minimum 3 house-to-house visits
Phase-II Coverage ~51 crore electors; 9 States + 3 UTs; 321 districts; 1,843 ACs
Phase-II Enumeration Period October 27 – December 4, 2025
Special Roll Observers Deployed by ECI for major states [S5]
Appeal mechanism Section 24, RP Act 1950 — appeal to District Magistrate; second appeal to CEO
West Bengal SC Order February 20, 2026 — SC directed judicial officers for SIR
Calcutta HC CJ Sujoy Paul
HC Committee Members Justices Tapabrata Chakraborty, Arijit Banerjee; Registrar General Nabanita Ray; Registrar (Judicial Service) Raju Mukherjee; JR-cum-Secretary Ajay Kumar Das
District Committees District Judge + District Magistrate + Superintendent of Police

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative

Political / Governance

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. SIR stands for Special Intensive Revision — a comprehensive electoral roll update exercise directed by the ECI. [S2]
  2. Constitutional authority for SIR: Article 324 (ECI's plenary powers) + Section 21, Representation of the People Act, 1950. [S2]
  3. Phase-II SIR (2025) covered approximately 51 crore electors across 9 States and 3 UTs. [S2]
  4. During SIR, Booth Level Officers (BLOs) are required to visit every household a minimum of 3 times. [S3]
  5. The Enumeration Form (EF) used in SIR is partially pre-filled for existing registered electors. [S3]
  6. Under Section 24, RP Act, 1950, an appeal against an ERO's order goes to the District Magistrate; second appeal lies to the Chief Electoral Officer. [S3]
  7. The Supreme Court order directing judicial officers for SIR in West Bengal was passed on February 20, 2026. [S1]
  8. Chief Justice of Calcutta HC: Sujoy Paul — constituted the case-management committee in February 2026. [S1]
  9. The district-level compliance committees comprise District Judge, District Magistrate, and Superintendent of Police. [S1]
  10. The SC described the situation as a "stalemate" caused by "trust deficit" between the West Bengal government and the Election Commission. [S1]
  11. ECI deployed Special Roll Observers for SIR in major states — a distinct supervisory mechanism over BLOs. [S5]
  12. Electoral Rolls in India have two qualifying dates per year for summary revision; SIR is an additional, deeper exercise. [S3]
  13. Final Electoral Rolls post-SIR are mandatorily shared with all recognised National and State political parties. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: GS-II (primary); GS-IV (governance ethics, secondary)

Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: Functioning of Constitutional Bodies — Election Commission of India - GS-II: Separation of Powers; Judiciary — Role of High Courts - GS-II: Federalism — Centre–State relations in elections - GS-II: Representation of the People Act; Electoral Reforms

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The deployment of judicial officers for electoral roll revision in West Bengal reflects both the strength of judicial independence and the fragility of inter-institutional trust. Critically examine." 2. "Analyse the role of Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of Electoral Rolls in strengthening the integrity of India's democratic process. What are the challenges in its uniform implementation across states?" 3. "How do the constitutional provisions under Article 324 and the statutory framework of the Representation of the People Act, 1950 resolve conflicts between State governments and the Election Commission of India?"


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Representation of the People Act, 1950 & 1951 Statutory base for all electoral roll processes and ECI powers
Article 324 — Election Commission of India Constitutional anchor for SIR and all ECI directives
Electoral Reforms in India SIR is one pillar; understand Linked to ETPBS, VVPATs, Model Code of Conduct
Model Code of Conduct (MCC) Activated alongside electoral roll completion; understand sequencing
Article 227 — Supervisory Jurisdiction of High Courts Basis for Calcutta HC's authority to form compliance committees
Centre–State Relations (Part XI, Constitution) West Bengal–ECI friction is a federalism case study
Delimitation Commission Often confused with electoral roll revision; distinct but related
National Electoral Roll Purification Programme (NERPP) Predecessor/complementary ECI initiative for roll accuracy

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing SIR with Summary Revision: Summary Revision is the routine annual update with a qualifying date; SIR is an intensive, comprehensive campaign involving house-to-house enumeration by BLOs — do not conflate.
  2. Wrong enabling provision: SIR is directed under Section 21, RP Act, 1950 (not Section 28 or Section 24). Section 24 is the appeals provision.
  3. Misattributing HC authority: The Calcutta HC committee was constituted by the Chief Justice exercising administrative (not judicial) powers; aspirants may confuse this with a judicial bench or suo motu PIL.
  4. District committee composition: The district-level compliance committees are District Judge + DM + SP — not the District Collector alone or ECI officers.
  5. ECI vs. CEO vs. ERO hierarchy: Electoral Registration Officers (EROs) conduct the revision; appeals go DM → CEO → ECI. Do not invert or skip levels.

11. Sources