Supreme Court of India scene with disappointed West Bengal election staff and vibrant polling booth crowds highlighting high turnout.
Supreme Court of India scene with disappointed West Bengal election staff and vibrant polling booth crowds highlighting high turnout.
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Supreme Court directs 65 Bengal poll duty staff to approach tribunals

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India's Supreme Court directed petitioners, including 65 on election duty in West Bengal whose names were deleted from the voter list after Special Intensive Revision (SIR), to approach appellate tribunals. The court refused their plea for immediate voting rights. It also praised the record 92.88% turnout and peaceful polling in the first phase.

A Supreme Court bench comprising Chief Justice Surya Kant, Justices Joymalya Bagchi and Vipul M Pancholi on Friday directed several petitioners, including 65 on poll duty in West Bengal whose names were deleted during the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, to approach appellate tribunals.

Senior Advocate M R Shamshad, representing the petitioners, highlighted the irony, stating, “A person who is conducting the election can’t vote.” He noted that their duty orders initially included Electoral Photo Identity Card (EPIC) numbers, later deleted, without show-cause notices. Justice Bagchi responded, “This election, we understand. More valuable right to remain on the rolls, we will examine.”

The court refused to entertain pleas for immediate voting rights, noting appeals filed on April 5 remained unheard. In a related hearing, the bench hailed the 92.88% voter turnout in the first phase across 152 of 294 seats on Thursday, describing polling as largely peaceful.

“Individually, as a citizen of India, I am very happy to see the percentage of voting,” CJI Kant said. Solicitor General Tushar Mehta commended security forces for the historic turnout despite minor violence. The court granted liberty to approach the Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court for urgent issues.

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Discussions on X focus on the Supreme Court's refusal to grant immediate voting rights to 65 West Bengal poll duty staff excluded from voter lists after SIR, directing them to appellate tribunals. News outlets neutrally reported the hearing, including the court's praise for 92.88% turnout and peaceful polling. Users and activists expressed skepticism, irony, and criticism over the deletions affecting even election officers, questioning the SIR process and judicial intervention.

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Illustration depicting Supreme Court judges ordering a freeze on West Bengal voter rolls, with iced documents symbolizing the directive.
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Supreme Court orders freeze of West Bengal voter rolls

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The Supreme Court directed the Election Commission to freeze West Bengal's voter rolls and publish the supplementary list by midnight after noting that adjudication of claims from voters deleted during the Special Intensive Revision was nearly complete. The court refused to set a deadline for appellate tribunals, stressing the need to freeze the lists now.

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.

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The Election Commission has published the second supplementary voters' list for West Bengal under the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) process, with over 37 lakh adjudication cases disposed of. This follows the first list released on March 23, covering about 29 lakh cases.

A Maharashtra Congress delegation met Chief Electoral Officer S Chockalingam on Thursday and submitted a memorandum demanding a fair and transparent Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls. State Congress president Harshwardhan Sapkal alleged deliberate exclusion of voters from specific castes and religions along with irregularities.

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The Gujarat high court has directed the state election commission to include the name of Ahmedabad resident J B Patel in the electoral list to be published on April 10. Patel’s name was deleted during the special intensive revision (SIR) of the assembly electoral rolls. The order comes ahead of the Ahmedabad municipal corporation polls on April 26.

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has accused the Election Commission and BJP of a deliberate design to seize control of the state ahead of assembly elections. She claimed over 50 senior officials were summarily removed. Banerjee described it as political interference of the highest order.

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While Tamil Nadu's April 23 assembly elections set an all-time high voter turnout of 85.1%—as initially reported amid peaceful polling—the absolute increase in votes cast marks the smallest rise over the prior election in 15 years, per Election Commission provisional data. This follows a Special Intensive Revision (SIR) that net deleted 68 lakh electors.

 

 

 

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