Judicial drift in the Special Intensive Revision hearings


Judicial Drift in the Special Intensive Revision Hearings

UPSC Study Note — GS-II (Polity & Governance)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year/Period Milestone
Pre-2025 Periodic electoral roll revision conducted under Section 21–28, Representation of the People Act, 1950 and Registration of Electors Rules, 1960
July 2025 ECI announces SIR for Bihar; petitions filed in Supreme Court questioning its constitutionality
August–October 2025 SIR extended to multiple states; challenges multiply in court; Court issues interim orders but defers constitutional hearing
November 2025 Bihar elections conducted; Bihar SIR becomes fait accompli before legal challenge resolved
January 2026 ECI issues directions implementing Supreme Court orders on SIR in West Bengal — including public display of names under "Logical Discrepancies" and "Unmapped" categories [S2]
February 2026 CM Mamata Banerjee appears before Supreme Court; Court's 9 Feb directions and the "no impediment" statement trigger scholarly critique of judicial drift [S1]

4. Core Static Facts

Enabling Legal Framework - Representation of the People Act, 1950 — Sections 21–28 (preparation/revision of electoral rolls) - Registration of Electors Rules, 1960 - Article 324, Constitution of India — vests "superintendence, direction and control" of elections in the ECI - Article 326 — universal adult suffrage; right to vote is a statutory right, not a fundamental right (per SC jurisprudence)

Key Bodies - Implementing body: Election Commission of India (ECI) - Oversight (judicial): Supreme Court of India (ongoing PIL hearings) - State resistance led by: West Bengal (CM Mamata Banerjee), multiple opposition-ruled states

Key Terminology - SIR (Special Intensive Revision): accelerated, intensive re-verification of voter rolls - "Logical Discrepancies" category: voters whose entries show data inconsistencies — flagged for re-verification [S2] - "Unmapped" category: voters whose addresses cannot be mapped to a booth — subject to special scrutiny [S2] - Judicial drift: term coined by legal scholar Gautam Bhatia to describe the Supreme Court's slide from constitutional adjudicator to administrative manager in this case [S1] - Fait accompli: legal/strategic situation where the Bihar SIR was completed before the court could rule on its constitutionality

Scope - SIR announced initially for Bihar (July 2025), subsequently extended to multiple states - Bihar elections: November 2025


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Federalism

Social / Equity

Ethical / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks


8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping | Paper | Syllabus Heading | |---|---| | GS-II | Indian Constitution — Features, Significant Provisions; Functioning of Judiciary; Election Commission of India; Federalism | | GS-II | Separation of Powers; Constitutional Bodies | | GS-IV | Ethics in Public Administration; Accountability of institutions |

Plausible Mains Questions 1. "The Supreme Court's conduct in the Special Intensive Revision hearings exemplifies 'judicial drift' — a shift from constitutional adjudication to administrative management. Critically analyse this phenomenon with reference to the principles of separation of powers and the Court's role as a constitutional court." (GS-II) 2. "Discuss the constitutional dimensions of the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls. How does the tension between the Election Commission's powers under Article 324 and citizens' right to vote raise questions about electoral accountability?" (GS-II) 3. "What are the implications of a constitutional challenge becoming a fait accompli due to judicial delay? Examine with reference to the Bihar SIR case and propose institutional safeguards." (GS-II)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Article 324 and ECI Powers The ECI's constitutional mandate is central to the SIR controversy
Representation of the People Act, 1950 & 1951 Statutory basis for electoral roll preparation and revision
NRC / NPR (National Register of Citizens) Analogous documentation burden and citizenship-exclusion concerns
Judicial Activism vs. Judicial Restraint Theoretical framework for analysing the SC's approach in the SIR case
Federalism in India — Centre-State Relations West Bengal's opposition illustrates federal friction in the electoral domain
ADM Jabalpur Case (1976) Historical precedent of judicial abdication during politically sensitive executive action
Right to Vote — Statutory vs. Fundamental The SC's framing of the franchise directly affects remedies available to disenfranchised voters
Electoral Roll Purging — Comparative (USA, EU) International comparisons help contextualize India's approach to voter roll management

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. "Right to vote is a fundamental right" — WRONG. The Supreme Court has consistently held the right to vote is a statutory right under the Representation of the People Act, not a fundamental right under Part III. Do not confuse with the right to contest elections.
  2. Conflating SIR with Summary Revision — "Summary Revision" is a routine, less intensive annual exercise; "Special Intensive Revision" is a special, compressed re-verification exercise; "Intensive Revision" is a full re-enumeration exercise. These are distinct under electoral law.
  3. "Article 324 gives ECI unlimited power" — WRONG. ECI's Article 324 powers must be exercised within enacted law and consistent with constitutional rights; they are not untrammeled.
  4. Thinking Bihar elections were stayed — WRONG. Bihar elections proceeded in November 2025; the SIR challenge was not decided before the elections, making it a fait accompli.
  5. Attributing "judicial drift" critique to the ECI — WRONG. The term was used by Gautam Bhatia (lawyer/scholar) to critique the Supreme Court's conduct, not the ECI.

11. Sources


Note: This study note is grounded primarily in the Tier 4 article (The Hindu, Gautam Bhatia, 12 Feb 2026) and supplemented by government broadcaster and news search results. Aspirants should verify latest SC orders and ECI notifications via pib.gov.in and eci.gov.in as the litigation is ongoing.