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Mamata Banerjee warns Election Commission against voter list revision in Bengal – ‘we will oppose it tooth and nail'
Mamata Banerjee warns Election Commission against voter list revision in Bengal – ‘we will oppose it tooth and nail'

Mint

time9 hours ago

  • Politics
  • Mint

Mamata Banerjee warns Election Commission against voter list revision in Bengal – ‘we will oppose it tooth and nail'

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee said on July 16 that her party will oppose the Election Commission's Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls 'tooth and nail' if it is carried out in the TMC-ruled state, where assembly elections are scheduled next year. The TMC chief alleged that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has plans to remove names from Bengal's voter list. 'We will oppose it tooth and nail if the Election Commission calls for an electoral roll revision in Bengal ahead of the assembly polls,' Mamata said, addressing a public gathering while leading a protest march against the labelling of Bengali-speaking people as Bangladeshis in BJP-ruled states. The TMC chief alleged that the BJP has plans to remove names from Bengal's electoral rolls."We will fight them inch by inch," she said at the rally. Opposition leaders, including Mamata Banerjee, have raised questions on the poll panel's ongoing special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in poll-bound Bihar. The Congress party has dubbed it 'a rigging attempt' orchestrated by the Election Commission under instructions from the ruling regime, while the TMC accused the poll panel of trying to implement the contentious NRC, or National Register of Citizens, through 'backdoors' to seek documentary evidence of citizenship from some people. The poll panel has said it intends to replicate the Bihar model of SIR across the country. The Supreme Court on July 10 allowed the Election Commission of India to continue with its revision of electoral rolls in poll-bound Bihar. The top court, however, asked the poll panel to consider using the Aadhaar card, the Election card, and the ration card as valid documents for voter identification. The top court was hearing a batch of petitions, including one by TMC MP Mahua Moitra. Moitra has alleged that the Election Commission of India's SIR of electoral rolls in poll-bound Bihar is intended to deprive the bonafide young electorate from voting during the upcoming elections. The panel's next target would be West Bengal, Moitra alleged. While Bihar goes to the polls later this year, assembly elections in West Bengal are scheduled in 2026. The TMC will fight against the Bharatiya Janata Party(BJP) in the West Bengal assembly elections. "They (EC) have now introduced it to deprive the bonafide young electorate of Bihar, where elections are slated to be held shortly. Later, they will target Bengal, where elections are due in 2026," Moitra told news agency PTI. At the Kolkata rally on Wednesday, Mamata alleged that the BJP won in Maharashtra by removing names from electoral rolls and that it is doing the same in Bihar now. 'As many as 22 lakh migrant workers from Bengal working in other parts of country, they have valid identity documents,' claimed Mamata at the rally. The Telugu Desam Party (TDP), the Bhartiya Janata Party's second-largest ally in the National Democratic Alliance, has sought clarity from the Election Commission on 'the scope' of the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls underway in poll-bound Bihar and likely to be replicated nationwide. We will oppose it tooth and nail if the Election Commission calls for an electoral roll revision in Bengal ahead of the assembly polls. The TDP has said that the Election Commission of India's exercise should ideally be conducted 'not within six months' of any major election and that it should be made clear that it is 'not related to citizenship verification'.

Today in Politics: An update on SIR revision — from the EC and an appeal by Bihar Chief Electoral Officer
Today in Politics: An update on SIR revision — from the EC and an appeal by Bihar Chief Electoral Officer

Indian Express

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • Indian Express

Today in Politics: An update on SIR revision — from the EC and an appeal by Bihar Chief Electoral Officer

A day after a petition was filed in the Supreme Court challenging the Election Commission's (EC) controversial Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in Bihar, the poll panel wrote to Chief Electoral Officers (CEOs) of all other states on July 5, directing them to begin preparations for a similar exercise — this time with January 1, 2026, as the qualifying date. The qualifying date mentioned in the letter indicates that while the nationwide exercise may start soon, a final timeline for the rest of the country is yet to be decided — though the aim is to include everyone who turns 18 years of age by January 1, 2026. Since 2003 has been chosen for Bihar as 'probative evidence of eligibility' — meaning voters on the electoral roll that year, when the last intensive revision was done, will be presumed Indian citizens unless proven otherwise — other states are also likely to use the year of their last intensive roll revision as the cut-off for presumption of citizenship for existing voters. For instance, Delhi's electoral roll was last intensively revised in 2008. In its instructions, the Commission — referring to paragraph 10 of its order dated June 24, when it formally announced the SIR in Bihar and said detailed guidelines for the rest of the country would follow — has asked all CEOs to complete 'pre-revision activities.' The EC's letter is significant against the backdrop of the upcoming Assembly elections in 2025 in BJP-ruled Assam; TMC-ruled West Bengal; DMK-ruled Tamil Nadu; and Left-ruled Kerala. The Union Territory of Puducherry will also elect a new Assembly next year. Whether the SIR in these four states — three of which are ruled by Opposition parties at the Centre — will be linked to the Assembly elections next year may depend on how the Supreme Court hearing on the Bihar exercise unfolds. During the hearing on Thursday (July 10), the court raised concerns about the timing of the exercise and whether it could be delinked from the state election. Justice Joymalya Bagchi, part of the two-judge bench, flagged the risk of disenfranchising voters by removing names from the rolls just months before polling, even if the broader objective of cleansing the rolls is legitimate. The Supreme Court eventually declined to restrain the EC from proceeding with its intensive revision of electoral rolls in poll-bound Bihar but suggested that the poll panel also consider Aadhaar, voter ID, and ration cards for the purpose of updating the rolls. Bihar Booth Level Officers scramble on the ground: Long hours, slow Internet, and a mountain to climb Bihar electoral roll revision: Why 3 papers SC suggests widen net, dial down panic In Bihar, EC doesn't follow its own practice, puts burden of proof on voters, ignores existing rolls In a conversation with The Indian Express, Bihar's Chief Electoral Officer Vinod Singh Gunjiyal, a 2007 batch IAS officer, addressed concerns about the SIR exercise in Bihar. Asked what happens to those voters who have submitted forms without one of the 11 mandated documents for the exercise, Gunjiyal said: 'We took out advertisements in newspapers twice that voters can submit forms with or without one of 11 documents. There is no need to panic — documents can be submitted by August 30. A BLO (Booth Level Officer) will attach those documents with respective uploaded forms. We also know that there's been a surge in domicile applications (one of the 11 documents) by voters. They can submit it to us by 30 August.' On the Supreme Court's suggestions to consider Aadhar, voter ID and ration cards as valid documents for the exercise, he said the ECI's legal team will looking at the suggestions of the Supreme Court. 'ECI goes per mandate of Article 326. We are here to follow ECI's order. There are learned people in Honourable Supreme Court and ECI. Let them discuss and decide. Ayog ka mandate hai: sahi electors rahna chahiye, galat katna chahiye,' he said. In the Valley The Srinagar district magistrate on Saturday rejected the National Conference's plea seeking permission to pay homage to the 22 people 'martyred' by the forces of the Dogra Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir, Hari Singh, on July 13, 1931. The party, in an application sent to the district magistrate, had said that NC president Farooq Abdullah and other senior functionaries intend to visit the graveyard of 'martyrs' at Naqshband Sahib near Nowhatta on Sunday. 'The District Administration Srinagar has denied permission to all applicants intending to proceed towards Khawaja Bazar, Nowhatta on 13th July 2025 (Sunday),' Srinagar Police said in a public advisory posted on its handle on X. The police said the general public is hereby advised to strictly comply with these instructions and refrain from violating the orders issued by the district administration. 'Any violation of these orders shall invite strict legal action under relevant provisions of law,' the police warned. July 13 used to be a public holiday in Jammu and Kashmir before the reorganisation of the erstwhile state into two Union territories in August 2019. A state function would be held every year on the day. However, the administration dropped the day from the list of gazetted holidays in 2020. — With PTI inputs

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