Maharashtra Congress demands impartial special intensive revision of electoral rolls

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.

A Maharashtra Congress delegation met Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) S Chockalingam on April 2, 2026, and submitted a memorandum demanding that the upcoming Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercise of electoral rolls be conducted in a “fair and transparent manner”.

State Congress president Harshwardhan Sapkal said, “The complaints that voters belonging to specific castes and religions were deliberately excluded, large-scale irregularities have been reported in SIR drives that might have benefited the ruling party.” He demanded that the SIR in Maharashtra be carried out impartially and without haste.

The memorandum, authorised by Congress Legislature Party leader Vijay Wadettiwar, former minister and Congress Working Committee member Naseem Khan, AICC Secretary and Telangana co-incharge Sachin Sawant, State General Secretary Adv. Sandesh Kondvilkar and State General Secretary Abhijit Sapkal, noted that the SIR exercise in other states was implemented hastily ahead of elections, creating confusion, panic, suspicion, and distrust.

Sapkal pointed out that SIR was previously conducted in Maharashtra between 2002-04 over nearly 13 months. With an increase of 3.5 crore voters, the process should be planned accordingly, even if it takes 1.5 to 2 years, as no elections are lined up for the next 2-3 years.

Congress also asked for SIR data in soft copy, OCR, or machine-readable formats, as well as hard copies, with a minimum one-month period to raise objections. It demanded at least seven days’ notice before deleting any voter’s name, a special drive for Booth Level Agent (BLA) registration, and preservation of all SIR data for at least five years at ERO and DEO levels, available to political parties as required.

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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.

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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Opposition parties in Assam have united against bulk and false objections in the ongoing Special Revision of electoral rolls, fearing genuine voters will be excluded. They submitted a memorandum to the Chief Electoral Officer demanding summary rejection of such objections. The move comes amid concerns over targeting specific communities ahead of state assembly elections.

A senior official in West Bengal's Chief Electoral Officer's office stated that the second supplementary voter list under the SIR process is likely to be published by March 27 or 28. Around 36 lakh voter entries from the pending list have been disposed of so far.

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Following extensive voter name deletions in urban areas of Uttar Pradesh under the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) 2026, the BJP's central leadership has placed the party in high-alert operational mode. Workers and leaders have been assigned to focus entirely on voter enrollment and recovery efforts to avert potential losses.

A booth-level officer in West Bengal's Bankura district died by suicide due to pressure from the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls. Haradhan Mandal, a 53-year-old headmaster at Rajakata Majherpara Primary School, left a note citing overwhelming stress. The Trinamool Congress and BJP have blamed the Election Commission and state government respectively for the incident.

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Protests continue in West Bengal's Malda district over deletions from electoral rolls under Special Intensive Revision, following the gherao of seven judicial officers. Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee endorsed Supreme Court remarks, urged calm and blamed the BJP. The BJP demanded the arrest of TMC minister Sabina Yeasmin.

 

 

 

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