UP minister questions duplicate voter registrations in Varanasi North

Uttar Pradesh minister Ravindra Jaiswal has questioned the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of the electoral roll in his Varanasi North constituency, where names of 9,200 voters were found registered at multiple polling booths. He labeled it as 'vote jihad' and demanded an inquiry from the district magistrate. Opposition parties have already been pointing to flaws in the SIR process.

On Saturday, Uttar Pradesh Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Stamp and Court Registration Fees, Ravindra Jaiswal, questioned the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of the electoral roll in Varanasi North constituency during a media interaction in Varanasi. He alleged that names of several voters were registered at multiple polling booths, with many belonging to a particular community. Jaiswal submitted a list of 9,200 such voters to District Magistrate-cum-District Election Officer Satyendra Kumar and demanded a comprehensive inquiry.

"We physically verified each voter's name before preparing the report and submitting it for inquiry. In the process, we found 9,200 names that are registered at multiple places," Jaiswal said. He explained that party workers verified 90,000 voters, discovering some names listed up to five times. In a social media video, he is heard saying, "I believe that every person in India should have their name on the voter list at only one place. If a name appears at two places, then what is the meaning of the SIR? The purpose of SIR was to conduct a thorough and in-depth verification. Yet, even now, we have found more than 9,200 such names in my assembly constituency alone. Reports from other areas are still awaited."

Jaiswal termed it 'vote jihad,' a controversial remark. Booth Level Officers (BLOs) and party workers conducted door-to-door verification, finding the same person's name—linked to father or husband—registered multiple times in various places. This incident raises questions about the credibility of the SIR process, especially as opposition parties have highlighted its alleged flaws.

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The Election Commission's Special Intensive Revision (SIR) second phase has reduced voters by about 5.4 crore in 12 states and Union Territories. Uttar Pradesh saw 2.05 crore names deleted with the release of its final electoral roll. The process began on October 27, 2025.

A workshop in Kalaburagi criticized the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) process for disenfranchising millions of voters, making them feel like outsiders in their own country. Activists claimed it targets the poor, Dalits, and minorities. However, Election Commission data links actual deletions to deceased, migrated, or duplicate registrations.

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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.

The Election Commission of India has published the electoral rolls for West Bengal on February 28, including 7.08 crore names, with 60 lakh under adjudication due to logical discrepancies. This follows the Special Intensive Revision process and Supreme Court directives. Voters can check their status online or offline to see if their name is verified, under review, or deleted.

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