Banner
WorkflowNavbar

Contact Counsellor

Special Intensive Revision (SIR) in Bihar

Key Issues

  1. Trigger:

    • ECI ordered SIR of Bihar's electoral rolls (June 2025) ahead of Nov 2025 Assembly elections.
    • Opposition alleges disenfranchisement of voters on citizenship grounds; ECI denies this.
  2. Legal Framework:

    • Article 326 (Constitution): Elections based on adult suffrage (citizens aged ≥18).
    • RPA, 1950 (Sections 19-21):
      • Conditions for voter registration: Citizenship, age ≥18, "ordinary residence" (Sec 20).
      • Disqualifications: Unsound mind, specific conditions under RPA 1961.
    • ECI’s Powers (Article 324): "Reservoir of power" for free/fair elections (Mohinder Singh Gill v CEC, 1978).

Controversial Aspects of SIR

ECI’s ActionLegal Challenge
Qualifying Date: 01/07/2025RPA Sec 21(2)(b) mandates Jan 1 as qualifying date for revisions.• July 1 has no statutory sanction.
State-wide Revision• SIR ordered for entire Bihar, but RPA Sec 21(c)(i) allows special revision only for a constituency/part of it.
"Special Intensive Revision"Not defined in RPA; lacks statutory basis.
Citizenship VerificationRule 8 (Registration Rules): Info to be furnished "to the best of ability" of citizens.• Allegations of summary rejection of applications.

ECI’s Legal Constraints

  • Article 324 ≠ Unlimited Power:
    • ECI must act under existing laws (RPA) where statute exists (Mohinder Singh Gill case).
    • Power under Art 324 applies only where law is silent.
  • Natural Justice: ECI must adhere to due process (citizenship proofs cannot be summarily rejected).

Previous UPSC Questions

  • "The Election Commission is a constitutional body with vast powers, but it must function within the framework of the law." Discuss (GS II, 2020).
  • Examine the legal provisions for electoral roll revision in India. Can the Election Commission override statutory mandates? (GS II, 2018).

Categories