Paromita Das
New Delhi, 4th August: In a rare public rebuke, the Election Commission of India (ECI) has taken direct aim at Congress leader Rahul Gandhi’s recent allegations surrounding the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in Bihar. Gandhi’s charges of voter disenfranchisement, vote fraud, and procedural lapses during the SIR have ignited fierce political debate—but new official statements and data suggest much of the controversy rests on shaky foundations.
A Commission on the Defensive

On June 12, the ECI issued a formal communication to Gandhi, referencing a media article of June 7, 2025, that had echoed his criticisms. The Commission elaborated in its statement—shared via its official X handle—that the electoral process is deeply decentralized and involves:
- Over 1,00,186 Booth Level Officers (BLOs),
- 288 Electoral Registration Officers,
- 139 General Observers, 41 Police Observers,
- 71 Expenditure Observers, and 288 Returning Officers,
- In addition, more than 1,08,000 booth-level agents, including 28,241 nominated by the Indian National Congress itself in Maharashtra.
By pointing this out, the ECI highlighted the scale of participation by not only officials, but also party-appointed agents across electoral boundaries—undermining claims of one-sided bias or arbitrary roll revision.
Transparency Measures and Appeals
The ECI also stressed that during the preparation of the 2024 Lok Sabha electoral rolls, drafts and final lists were shared with all political parties under Section 24 of the Representation of the People Act 1950. Despite having the opportunity to challenge inaccuracies, the Congress filed hardly any appeals across the 36 states and union territories.

In fact, under Section 80 of the RP Act of 1951, only eight election petitions were filed by losing INC candidates. The absence of systematic challenges, according to the Commission, undercuts Gandhi’s claim of widespread disenfranchisement without legal recourse.
Misleading Allegations and Political Pressure
The ECI did not hold back in its criticism: “Rahul Gandhi has repeatedly made unsubstantiated and misleading allegations including baseless claims of ‘vote chori’… It appears that these unfounded allegations are intended to discredit the impartial and transparent hard work of election officials and to exert undue pressure on the electoral machinery—without even filing a single appeal.”
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By tying Gandhi’s rhetoric to threats against election officials, the Commission portrayed his statements as damaging to the credibility and morale of public servants tasked with overseeing democratic processes.
The Scope of the SIR Exercise
Launched on June 24, 2025, the SIR in Bihar targets those named in the 2003 electoral rolls—roughly 2.9 crore voters out of the 7.8 crore total registered electorate. These individuals have been asked to provide proof of citizenship in order to remain in the rolls.
Notably, the ECI has excluded Aadhaar as standalone proof, citing risks of forgery. This decision sparked criticism from the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR), which submitted a rejoinder to the Supreme Court, labeling the exclusion “patently absurd.” ADR argued that all accepted documents face similar risks and questioned why Aadhaar should be singled out.

Moreover, ADR flagged operational issues: some Electoral Registration Officers reportedly handle over three lakh forms each, raising concerns over verification thoroughness and potential human error.
Trinamool’s Allegations of Absurd Document Acceptance
Opposition parties have seized on anomalies in the revision process. The Trinamool Congress released startling images of bogus documents issued for a dog named “Dog Babu” and a woman named “Sonalika Tractor,” with fictitious parental names like “Sawraj Taractor” and “Car Devi.”

Trinamool MP Sagarika Ghose condemned the SIR exercise as a threat to democratic integrity and demanded a full parliamentary debate, asserting that the procedural laxity observed in Bihar may have broader political repercussions in West Bengal and beyond.
A Supreme Court Clarion Call
Amidst growing controversies, the Supreme Court intervened on July 10. It issued a directive asking the ECI to consider Aadhaar, voter ID, and ration cards as valid documentation “in the interest of justice.” While the Court stopped short of annulling SIR procedures, its recommendation signals judicial concern over fairness and accessibility of proof requirements.
Rhetoric vs. Reality—Does the Truth Matter Anymore?
Rahul Gandhi’s narrative around SIR has resonated deeply within opposition circles. Claims of voter disenfranchisement—buttressed by the drama of fake documents and procedural chaos—are powerful political tools. Yet, when you peel back the political rhetoric, what remains is a complex administrative order involving millions of stakeholders and layers of bureaucratic oversight.

The ECI’s detailed clarification and data invocation suggest that many of Gandhi’s allegations could have been challenged through formal appeals—if they were indeed valid. Instead, the narrative took center stage, sidestepping institutional mechanisms.
To be a democratic leader is to challenge power—but it should never come at the expense of truth or procedural integrity. Undermining confidence in electoral systems, even inadvertently, may yield immediate attention. But credibility once lost is difficult to regain.
Debate Deserves Balance, Not Hyperbole
The current controversy over Bihar’s SIR highlights deeper fault lines in Bharatiya democracy: trust in institutions, equitable inclusion, and political accountability. While the exercise may well contain logistical flaws and genuine concerns about documentation, the process of grievance redress still exists—and must be pursued through formal channels before sensational claims gain currency.
Rahul Gandhi’s allegations may have sparked debate—but balance demands that we weigh data alongside dissent. In a democracy, politics and process must coexist harmoniously. When rhetoric trumps reality, trust becomes the casualty.
Let this be a reminder: before discarding an entire system, challenge it—not by halting its wheels—but by navigating through its prescribed lanes of appeal and verification. Only then can healthy democratic dissent become constructive reform.
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