What Happened
- West Bengal's electoral rolls have contracted by approximately 12% since the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) began in October 2025, with a total of about 91 lakh voters excluded.
- The latest phase involved 27 lakh additional voters whose names were placed "under adjudication" — these have now been removed following examination.
- The highest number of deletions has been recorded in Murshidabad district, which has a large Muslim-majority population.
- The Supreme Court, on April 7, 2026, declined to permit interim inclusion of voters who had failed verification by judicial officers during the SIR, while their appeals remain pending.
- Out of approximately 20 lakh deletions under adjudication, nearly 7 lakh voters had already approached appellate forums.
- The Election Commission of India (ECI) cited concerns that a significant number of voters in West Bengal were illegal immigrants from Bangladesh who had obtained voter identity cards using fraudulent documents.
- The SIR exercise is being conducted ahead of the 2026 West Bengal Assembly elections.
Static Topic Bridges
Electoral Roll Revision — Representation of People Act, 1950
The Representation of the People Act, 1950 (RPA 1950) governs the preparation, revision, and maintenance of electoral rolls in India.
- Section 21: The electoral roll shall be revised before each general election; the Election Commission may also direct a "special revision" at any time for reasons to be recorded in writing — this is the legal basis for the SIR.
- Section 22: Correction of entries — the Electoral Registration Officer may delete names found ineligible after inquiry.
- Section 23: Inclusion of names — any person not listed may apply for inclusion; the Officer must be satisfied the applicant is entitled to registration.
- Section 16: Disqualifications for registration — a person is disqualified if not a citizen of India; if of unsound mind; if disqualified under any law relating to corrupt practices or election offences.
- Qualifying date: January 1 of the year of revision (or the date of issue of a public notice) is the reference date for eligibility.
Connection to this news: The SIR in West Bengal is a "special revision" under Section 21 of the RPA 1950, triggered by concerns about illegal immigrants in the voter rolls. The mass deletions are being challenged as procedurally flawed and potentially targeting legitimate citizens.
Election Commission of India — Powers and Independence
The Election Commission of India is a constitutional body established under Article 324 of the Constitution, vested with superintendence, direction, and control of elections to Parliament, state legislatures, and offices of President and Vice-President.
- Article 324(1): Superintendence, direction, and control of preparation of electoral rolls and conduct of all elections vest in the Election Commission.
- The ECI is a multi-member body (Chief Election Commissioner + Election Commissioners) since the 1989 amendment.
- Chief Election Commissioner v. Union of India (2023): Supreme Court held that the appointment process for Election Commissioners must be transparent and independent of executive control; a committee comprising the PM, Leader of Opposition, and CJI was mandated until Parliament enacted a law.
- Election Laws (Amendment) Act, 2023: Subsequently enacted by Parliament, replacing the CJI with a Union Cabinet Minister in the appointment committee — facing a legal challenge.
- The ECI's power to direct special revision without court approval underscores its constitutional autonomy, but that autonomy is balanced by judicial review.
Connection to this news: The Supreme Court's refusal to grant interim inclusion of deleted voters shows it is not intervening to override the ECI's exercise of its Article 324 powers, while still monitoring the process through the appellate mechanism.
Voter Rights, Illegal Immigration, and Citizenship
India's Constitution ties voting rights to citizenship. Only citizens of India who are 18 years or older and not disqualified under any law are entitled to vote (Article 326).
- Article 326: Universal adult franchise — elections on the basis of adult suffrage, with disqualifications permitted by Parliament on grounds of non-residence, unsound mind, crime, or corrupt or illegal practices.
- Citizenship Act, 1955: Defines Indian citizenship; illegal migrants cannot claim citizenship.
- National Register of Citizens (NRC): The Assam NRC (2019) excluded approximately 19 lakh people from the electoral rolls; a nation-wide NRC has not been implemented.
- The issue of Bangladeshi migrants in West Bengal is a politically sensitive demographic concern with direct electoral implications.
- Murshidabad's prominence in the deletion data is contentious — critics allege that the SIR is being used to disproportionately target Muslim voters ahead of elections.
Connection to this news: The SIR's disproportionate impact on Murshidabad raises fundamental questions about the intersection of voter list integrity, citizenship rights, and electoral fairness — a core concern in democratic governance.
Judicial Oversight of Electoral Processes
While the ECI has autonomous power over electoral rolls, courts have consistently held that the process must be fair, transparent, and comply with the statutory framework.
- Supreme Court has intervened in the past to ensure compliance with proper procedures in electoral roll revision (e.g., ensuring adequate notice is given before deletion).
- Section 22 of RPA 1950 requires the Electoral Registration Officer to conduct an inquiry before deleting a name — mass deletions without individual inquiry have been challenged as violating natural justice.
- The Madras High Court and Calcutta High Court have both issued orders in SIR-related cases requiring the ECI to follow due process.
Connection to this news: The Supreme Court's April 7 order declined interim inclusion but left open the appellate process — signalling that courts will scrutinise whether individual deletions followed due process under Section 22 of the RPA 1950.
Key Facts & Data
- Total voters excluded in West Bengal SIR (since October 2025): approximately 91 lakh (about 12% of the electorate).
- Latest fresh exclusions: 27 lakh voters (under adjudication, now removed).
- Highest deletions: Murshidabad district (Muslim-majority).
- Other high-deletion districts: North 24 Parganas, Malda, Nadia (Nadia: ~78% of under-adjudication voters struck off).
- Around 7 lakh voters had approached appellate forums as of April 7, 2026.
- The ECI cited illegal immigration from Bangladesh as the primary justification for the SIR.
- West Bengal Assembly elections are scheduled in 2026; the SIR is being conducted in the lead-up.
- Article 326 of the Constitution guarantees universal adult suffrage to all citizens aged 18+.