Poll body to deploy Central forces in West Bengal from March 1


Poll Body to Deploy Central Forces in West Bengal from March 1

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Deploying Authority Election Commission of India (ECI)
Requesting Ministry Union Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA)
Constitutional Basis Article 324 (superintendence, direction, control of elections)
Total Forces Deployed ~480 companies of CAPF
Phase 1 ~240 companies from March 1, 2026
Phase 2 ~240 companies from March 10, 2026
Forces Involved CRPF, BSF, ITBP, SSB, CISF
Phase 1 Breakdown CRPF 110 + BSF 55 + ITBP 27 + SSB 27 + CISF 21
Phase 2 Breakdown CRPF 120 + BSF 65 + ITBP 20 + SSB 19 + CISF 16
Polling Dates April 23 and April 29, 2026
Total Constituencies 294 (West Bengal Assembly)
Post-poll retention ~70,000 personnel retained until further orders
Controlling Ministry (CAPF) Ministry of Home Affairs
MHA CAPF page mha.gov.in/en/central-armed-police-forces [S5]

Key Acronyms: - CAPF: Central Armed Police Forces - CRPF: Central Reserve Police Force (governed by CRPF Act, 1949) [S6] - BSF: Border Security Force - ITBP: Indo-Tibetan Border Police - SSB: Seema Suraksha Bal (Sashastra Seema Bal) - CISF: Central Industrial Security Force


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Political / Ethical

Historical

Social


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. The Election Commission of India (not MHA) ordered CAPF deployment in West Bengal from March 1, 2026. [S1]
  2. Total CAPF deployment for West Bengal 2026 elections: ~480 companies in two phases. [S1]
  3. Phase 1 (March 1): 240 companies; Phase 2 (March 10): 240 companies. [S1]
  4. Force mix in Phase 1: CRPF 110 + BSF 55 + ITBP 27 + SSB 27 + CISF 21 companies. [S1]
  5. Force mix in Phase 2: CRPF 120 + BSF 65 + ITBP 20 + SSB 19 + CISF 16 companies. [S1]
  6. CRPF (not BSF) contributed the largest number of companies in both phases. [S1]
  7. ECI characterised early deployment as a "confidence-building measure" for West Bengal voters. [S1]
  8. Constitutional authority for ECI to requisition CAPF: Article 324. [S5]
  9. CRPF Act, 1949 is the oldest statute governing any of the deployed CAPFs. [S6]
  10. The CAPF (General Administration) Bill, 2026 was introduced in Rajya Sabha on March 25, 2026 — first unified CAPF legislation. [S4]
  11. West Bengal 2026 elections were held in 2 phases (April 23 and April 29) — reduced from 8 phases in 2021. [S2]
  12. ~70,000 CAPF personnel were retained in West Bengal even after polling ended. [S2]
  13. Trinamool Congress has historically opposed CAPF deployment in West Bengal, including during local body polls. [S1]
  14. MHA deployed forces were communicated via letters to West Bengal's Chief Secretary, Home Secretary, and DGP. [S1]
  15. The 2026 West Bengal polls recorded zero deaths and no major bomb blasts — attributed to unprecedented CAPF presence. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-II (Polity & Governance; Indian Constitution)

Syllabus headings: - Powers, functions, and responsibilities of the Election Commission of India - Federal structure — Centre-State relations (law and order, deployment of central forces) - Constitutional bodies — independence and accountability

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Election Commission's deployment of Central Armed Police Forces in West Bengal ahead of the 2026 Assembly Elections set a new precedent in confidence-building and electoral integrity. Analyse the constitutional basis, operational challenges, and outcomes of such deployment." 2. "Examine the tension between Centre-State relations and the Election Commission's power to deploy CAPF in states. How does Article 324 resolve this tension?" 3. "In light of the zero-violence outcome of the 2026 West Bengal Assembly Elections, evaluate the effectiveness of proactive, pre-announcement CAPF deployment as a tool of electoral governance."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Article 324 & Powers of ECI Constitutional basis for deploying central forces without state consent
Model Code of Conduct (MCC) MCC kicks in after schedule announcement; CAPF deployment preceded MCC here — key distinction
Representation of the People Act, 1951 Statutory framework for elections, including ECI's power to requisition personnel
Central Armed Police Forces (General Administration) Bill, 2026 Pending legislation to unify all CAPF statutes — directly impacts these forces' legal architecture
Centre-State Relations (Articles 355, 356) Centre's constitutional duty to protect states from internal disturbance — connects to CAPF deployment rationale
Political Violence in India — NCRB Data West Bengal's ranking in political violence statistics — context for ECI decisions
2021 West Bengal Post-Poll Violence & Supreme Court Judicial backdrop that raised stakes for 2026 ECI approach
Federal Polity & State Police Powers (Article 246, List II) "Police" is a State subject — why CAPF deployment requires careful constitutional navigation

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. "MHA deployed CAPF" — WRONG framing. ECI ordered the deployment; MHA is the executing arm that writes to state officials. Authority flows from Article 324 via ECI. [S1]
  2. Confusing SSB with BSF: SSB = Seema Suraksha Bal (guards Nepal/Bhutan borders); BSF guards Pakistan/Bangladesh borders. Both are CAPF. Not interchangeable.
  3. "Police is a Central subject" — WRONG. Police is a State List (List II) subject under the Seventh Schedule. CAPF deployment for election duty is a special exception under Article 324, not routine Centre authority.
  4. Confusing pre-MCC and post-MCC deployment: This deployment was ordered before the formal election schedule announcement and MCC trigger — a deliberate and novel confidence-building approach. Don't assume CAPF only deploys post-MCC.
  5. CRPF vs CISF confusion: CRPF contributed the largest share (110 + 120 = 230 companies). CISF contributed the smallest (21 + 16 = 37 companies). Frequently reversed in MCQs.

11. Sources