ECI scrutinizes progeny mapping discrepancies in West Bengal

The Election Commission of India is focusing on progeny mapping in West Bengal's electoral roll revision amid major discrepancies in submissions. Over 50% of electors claimed progeny mapping, but irregularities in parental links have surfaced, particularly in certain districts. Verification processes, including house-to-house surveys, are underway to ensure the accuracy of the draft roll due on December 16.

The Election Commission of India (ECI) is intensifying efforts on progeny mapping as part of the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in West Bengal, ahead of the state's assembly polls in summer 2026. The enumeration phase concluded on Thursday night, with the draft electoral roll set for publication on December 16, 2025.

Progeny mapping refers to linking new electors in the 2025 roll to blood relatives in the 2002 roll, following the last SIR. The three categories are self-mapping for those appearing in both rolls, progeny mapping for those related to 2002 voters, and no mapping for those with no connections, who must provide documentary proof at hearings.

Out of 7.66 crore electors, 2.93 crore submitted self-mapping forms, 3.84 crore progeny mapping, and 30 lakh no mapping. However, forms from 58 lakh electors remain unfiled, including 24.18 lakh deceased, 12.01 lakh untraceable, 19.93 lakh permanently shifted, 1.37 lakh enrolled multiple times, and 57,509 others.

Significant discrepancies have emerged in progeny mapping claims. Many 2025 voters linked to 2002 parents contradict their own records. A senior ECI official noted, “Our experts have already analysed submissions with progeny mapping, and we got many dubious results which are now subject to verification.”

The highest concentrations are in South 24-Parganas and North 24 Parganas. Examples include 705 of 779 voters at a booth in Hingalganj (North 24 Parganas) and 977 of 1,119 in Hemtabad (North Dinajpur) showing contradictory parental data. Similar issues appear in Dhupguri, Dabgram-Phulbari, Dinhata, Murarai, Habibpur, and other constituencies.

To address false mappings, ECI has initiated house-to-house surveys. District Electoral Officers will compile suspect lists, followed by hearings for document verification. Electors in self-mapping or verified progeny cases need no further proof. Kolkata is expected to face the maximum impact from potential deletions.

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Illustration of Election Commission officials deleting 2.7 million names from West Bengal voter list amid TMC-BJP political row and Supreme Court backdrop.
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Election Commission deletes over 27 lakh names from West Bengal voter list

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The Election Commission of India has deleted over 27 lakh names from West Bengal's voter list following Special Intensive Revision, affecting many who voted in the 2024 Lok Sabha polls. The move has sparked accusations of bias from TMC and defenses from BJP ahead of assembly elections. The Supreme Court recently declined further intervention.

Delhi's chief electoral officer reported that nearly 42% of voters have been mapped to 2002 rolls. The special intensive revision of electoral rolls will begin on June 30.

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The Election Commission of India has placed 106 individuals with criminal records under preventive detention in three West Bengal districts ahead of the first phase of assembly elections on April 23. The action aims to ensure a violence-free polling process. The ruling Trinamool Congress has filed a PIL in Calcutta High Court against potential further detentions.

As voting ended in the second phase of West Bengal assembly elections, Chief Electoral Officer Manoj Agarwal stated repolls would follow verification of EVM tampering claims involving tapes or ink. The BJP shared videos alleging issues in Falta constituency booths. The commission invoked its zero-tolerance policy while examining reports.

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West Bengal is voting today in the second and final phase of its 2026 Assembly elections, with over 2,300 companies of Central Armed Police Forces deployed for peaceful polling. The BJP aims to improve on its 2021 performance of 77 seats, amid allegations against TMC. Results are due on May 4.

Tamil Nadu recorded 85.11% turnout across all 234 seats and West Bengal's phase 1 in 152 constituencies saw 92.35%, marking historic highs. The Election Commission described polling as largely peaceful, though sporadic violence occurred in parts of Bengal. High turnout persisted despite electoral roll reductions from Special Intensive Revision (SIR).

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