Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Curated Democracy and the Crisis of Constitutional Morality

 The 2026 Assembly Elections, Electoral Roll Revision, and the Transformation of India’s Democratic Order

-Ramphal Kataria

“The controversy of 2026 was not only about who won the election, but about who remained entitled to participate in democracy itself.”

“Universal adult franchise loses substance when inclusion depends upon unequal bureaucratic capacity.”

“The deepest democratic crisis is not the absence of elections, but the erosion of public trust in the neutrality of institutions.”

“A democracy governed through permanent suspicion eventually transforms citizenship into conditional belonging.”

Abstract

The 2026 Assembly elections in Assam, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and Puducherry marked one of the most politically consequential and institutionally contentious moments in the history of independent India. While the electoral outcomes produced dramatic shifts in regional politics — including the Bharatiya Janata Party’s historic victory in West Bengal, the consolidation of Himanta Biswa Sarma in Assam, the rise of Vijay’s TVK in Tamil Nadu, and the return of the Congress-led UDF in Kerala — the deeper significance of these elections lay in the institutional processes that shaped them.

The elections unfolded in the aftermath of the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, where the BJP failed to secure the much-publicised target of “Ab ki Baar, Chaar Sau Paar” and was reduced to 240 seats. Critics argued that this setback fundamentally altered the ruling establishment’s electoral strategy. The Election Commission of India’s nationwide Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercise, unprecedented voter deletions, large-scale deployment of Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF), judicial deference, media consolidation, and aggressive communal narratives together generated fears regarding the transformation of India from a competitive democracy into a more managed electoral system.

This essay critically examines the constitutional, political, and institutional dimensions of the 2026 elections. It analyses the controversy surrounding voter deletions, the role of the Election Commission, the Supreme Court’s approach to electoral disputes, the communalisation of political discourse, the weakening of federal opposition parties, and the increasing centralisation of democratic processes. It argues that the 2026 elections were not merely about electoral outcomes but about the future meaning of adult franchise, constitutional morality, and institutional autonomy in India.

Keywords

2026 Assembly Elections; Special Intensive Revision; Election Commission of India; Electoral Roll Deletion; CAPF Deployment; Federalism; Constitutional Morality; Supreme Court; BJP; Congress; West Bengal; Tamil Nadu; Kerala; Assam; Puducherry; Democracy; Electoral Governance; Adult Franchise; Communal Politics; Institutional Crisis.

Introduction: Elections in the Shadow of Institutional Anxiety

The 2026 Assembly elections in Assam, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and Puducherry were formally state elections. Politically, however, they became a national battle over the character of India’s democracy.

These elections did not emerge in isolation. They unfolded after the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, where the Bharatiya Janata Party, despite retaining power, failed to achieve the overwhelming mandate it had projected. The slogan “Ab ki Baar, Chaar Sau Paar” collapsed into a far more modest tally of 240 seats — significantly below the BJP’s 2019 strength of 304 seats.

For the first time in a decade, the aura of invincibility around Prime Minister Narendra Modi appeared politically shaken.

Economic distress had intensified. Inflation and spiraling prices of essential commodities had generated anger among the middle class and the poor alike. LPG prices, fuel costs, unemployment, and declining purchasing power produced widespread social unease. Simultaneously, sections of India’s foreign policy establishment faced criticism over what many perceived as growing strategic dependence upon the United States.

The Indo-US trade negotiations, pressure surrounding oil imports, India’s balancing posture during the Iran-US-Israel conflict, and perceptions of diminishing independent strategic autonomy became central political talking points.

Critics of the government argued that India’s foreign policy, once associated with strategic non-alignment and independent positioning, increasingly appeared shaped by external pressure from Washington.

At the same time, communal polarisation remained deeply embedded within the BJP’s electoral machinery. In several states, especially West Bengal and Assam, political discourse revolved around immigration, infiltration, national security, demographic anxiety, and Muslim identity.

Yet perhaps the single most controversial institutional development preceding the elections was the Election Commission of India’s Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls.

Presented officially as an exercise to remove duplicate, shifted, deceased, or illegal entries, the SIR quickly became one of the most disputed electoral processes in modern India.

Opposition parties described it as a mechanism of selective disenfranchisement.

Supporters of the exercise argued that electoral integrity required rigorous verification.

The conflict was not merely administrative.

It touched the heart of constitutional democracy itself.

Who has the right to vote?

Who decides legitimacy?

Can the state’s administrative power override the constitutional promise of universal adult franchise?

The 2026 elections forced India to confront these questions with unprecedented intensity.

The Electoral Outcomes: A Nation Reconfigured

Table 1: Broad Results of the 2026 Assembly Elections

State/UT

Total Seats

Winning Formation

Approximate Result

Assam

126

BJP-led NDA

101+ seats

West Bengal

294

BJP

200+ seats

Tamil Nadu

234

TVK

Largest party

Kerala

140

Congress-led UDF

100+ seats

Puducherry

30

NDA

Comfortable majority

The results reflected different local political dynamics, but all were shaped by broader national trends:

Increasing centralisation of political power.

Decline of regional opposition formations.

Rise of security-driven electoral management.

Aggressive ideological mobilisation.

Transformation of elections into highly curated political exercises.

The most consequential result was undoubtedly West Bengal.

The BJP’s victory there symbolised not merely electoral success but the collapse of one of the strongest anti-BJP political fortresses in India.

Yet equally significant was the process through which the elections unfolded.

The Special Intensive Revision (SIR): Cleansing the Rolls or Cleansing the Electorate?

The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercise became the defining institutional controversy of the 2026 election cycle.

The Election Commission defended the exercise by invoking Article 324 of the Constitution and provisions of the Representation of the People Act, 1950. According to the ECI, the purpose was to ensure “clean and accurate electoral rolls” by removing:

Duplicate entries

Dead voters

Shifted residents

Non-citizens

Unverifiable electors

On paper, the exercise appeared administrative and constitutional.

In practice, however, it generated enormous political controversy.

The scale of deletions was unprecedented.

Table 2: Approximate SIR Reductions Across States

State

Electorate Before Revision

Revised Electorate

Approximate Reduction

Uttar Pradesh

15.44 crore

13.39 crore

~2.05 crore

West Bengal

7.69 crore

6.86 crore

~83.86 lakh

Tamil Nadu

6.41 crore

5.67 crore

~74 lakh

Bihar

7.89 crore

7.42 crore

~47 lakh

Gujarat

5.08 crore

4.40 crore

~68 lakh

Kerala

2.78 crore

2.69 crore

~9 lakh

The opposition described the process as “electoral engineering.”

Critics argued that the deletions disproportionately affected:

Muslims

Migrant workers

Economically vulnerable populations

Refugee communities

Informal settlement residents

Women lacking documentary continuity

The Election Commission rejected these allegations.

Yet the timing of the exercise — immediately before critical state elections — intensified suspicion.

In Bihar, where the first phase of SIR was conducted, approximately 47 lakh names were reportedly deleted.

The BJP and its allies subsequently won the state election.

Opposition parties challenged the process in the Supreme Court.

But despite dramatic headlines and legal petitions, critics argued that no meaningful institutional intervention occurred before the election concluded.

This pattern repeated itself in West Bengal.

West Bengal: Democracy Under Security Supervision

West Bengal became the epicentre of the national debate.

The state witnessed one of the most heavily securitised elections in Indian history.

Approximately 3.5 lakh CAPF personnel were reportedly deployed across multiple phases.

The Election Commission justified the deployment as necessary to ensure free and fair elections in a state historically associated with political violence.

But critics viewed the deployment differently.

To them, Bengal appeared less like a democratic election and more like a controlled security operation.

The visual symbolism was striking:

Streets flooded with paramilitary personnel.

Extensive surveillance.

Centralised polling management.

Massive voter scrutiny.

Legal uncertainty around electoral eligibility.

The atmosphere created a sense that democracy itself had become militarised.

For the BJP, however, the strategy proved electorally effective.

The party successfully combined:

Hindu nationalist mobilisation

Anti-Muslim rhetoric

Anti-immigration narratives

Welfare communication

Organisational expansion

Electoral management

The communal dimension of the campaign was unmistakable.

Muslim-majority districts were repeatedly projected as centres of “illegal infiltration” and “demographic threat.”

Political discourse revolved around “ghuspathiyas,” border security, and citizenship verification.

The SIR process became intertwined with these narratives.

Critics argued that electoral revision effectively transformed into demographic filtering.

The BJP rejected such accusations and insisted that genuine citizens had nothing to fear.

Yet the psychological consequences were enormous.

Reports emerged of:

Fear among Bengali-speaking Muslims

Anxiety within refugee communities

Panic migration in border areas

Confusion regarding documentation

Long queues for verification

Overburdened appeal systems

The issue became even more contentious after judicial proceedings surrounding voter deletions.

The Supreme Court and the Crisis of Constitutional Confidence

The Supreme Court’s handling of the SIR disputes became one of the most debated institutional developments of the election cycle.

Petitions challenging mass deletions were filed repeatedly.

Opposition parties, civil rights groups, and affected citizens argued that millions of voters risked disenfranchisement.

However, the Court largely refrained from direct intervention in the Election Commission’s administrative powers.

Critics described this as excessive judicial restraint.

Supporters argued that courts should not interfere excessively in electoral administration.

But the controversy deepened after remarks attributed in public discourse to Justice Baghchi during hearings relating to voter exclusion.

The reported observation — interpreted by critics as suggesting that if 27 lakh voters could not vote in one election they could participate in the next — triggered widespread outrage among constitutional commentators.

Critics argued that such a position fundamentally misunderstood the nature of democratic rights.

Voting in a democracy is not a postponable administrative convenience.

Every election carries immediate political consequences.

To deny participation in one electoral cycle is not a temporary inconvenience; it is the denial of equal citizenship during a decisive constitutional moment.

The criticism became sharper because the Supreme Court historically treated voting rights and democratic participation as central to constitutional governance.

Legal scholars pointed out that universal adult franchise forms part of the basic democratic structure of the republic.

The broader concern was not merely legal but philosophical.

If millions of citizens can be excluded through administrative procedures while courts remain deferential, then democracy risks shifting from a rights-based order to an administratively managed order.

The judiciary’s role in maintaining public confidence became deeply contested.

For many critics, the Court’s reluctance to intervene reinforced perceptions that constitutional institutions were increasingly aligning with executive priorities.

Adult Franchise Under Administrative Suspicion

One of the most disturbing aspects of the SIR controversy was the emergence of a new electoral logic:

that voting was no longer an inherent democratic entitlement but something subject to continuous state verification.

The constitutional promise of adult franchise under Article 326 rests upon inclusion.

Yet the SIR exercise shifted the burden heavily onto citizens themselves.

Poor and vulnerable communities faced the greatest difficulties.

A middle-class citizen with:

stable housing,

continuous documentation,

digital access,

legal awareness,

and bureaucratic literacy

rarely experiences exclusion.

But migrant labourers, displaced populations, women without property documents, and informal workers often struggle to maintain uninterrupted documentary trails.

The problem, therefore, was not only legal.

It was structural.

The burden of proof fell unequally upon unequal citizens.

This transformed electoral revision into a deeply political process.

Critics argued that the new electoral culture increasingly operated on a dangerous principle:

only those voters considered administratively desirable could reliably participate.

The Election Commission denied any political motivation.

Nevertheless, public trust became deeply fractured.

Assam: Consolidation Through Polarisation

Assam represented another major victory for the BJP.

Table 3: Assam Election Snapshot

Indicator

Data

Total Seats

126

BJP Seats

82

NDA Total

101+

Congress Alliance

Around 20

Turnout

Approx. 86%

Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma emerged as one of the BJP’s most powerful regional leaders.

His political model combined:

aggressive communal rhetoric,

welfare redistribution,

centralised administration,

and nationalist mobilisation.

The Assam result also demonstrated the decline of older regionalist politics.

Parties born out of the Assam Movement, which once dominated the state’s political imagination, were increasingly marginalised.

Critics noted an irony.

Although Assam had historically been central to debates around migration and citizenship — including the NRC process — it did not witness the same scale of SIR turbulence as West Bengal.

Opposition voices argued that this reflected selective institutional focus.

The BJP dismissed such claims as politically motivated.

Yet the larger political atmosphere remained deeply communalised.

Electoral discourse frequently revolved around:

demographic fears,

border identity,

Muslim population growth,

and infiltration narratives.

Such rhetoric proved electorally potent.

Tamil Nadu: The Disruption of Dravidian Stability

Tamil Nadu produced one of the most dramatic political surprises of the election cycle.

Actor Vijay’s Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) disrupted the Dravidian political order that had dominated the state since 1967.

Table 4: Tamil Nadu Election Snapshot

Indicator

Data

Total Seats

234

TVK

Emerged as largest force

DMK-led alliance

Defeated

AIADMK alliance

Fragmented

Approximate deletions debated publicly

74 lakh to nearly 1 crore

The emergence of TVK reflected:

anti-incumbency against the DMK,

collapse of AIADMK coherence,

youth dissatisfaction,

celebrity charisma,

and social media-driven political mobilisation.

But the election was also shaped by controversies surrounding electoral revision.

Critics argued that Tamil Nadu witnessed one of the largest reductions in electoral rolls despite relatively limited public justification.

The BJP itself remained electorally weak in the state.

However, the defeat of the DMK carried broader national implications because the DMK had emerged as one of the strongest parliamentary critics of centralisation.

On issues such as:

delimitation,

federal fiscal rights,

language policy,

and governors’ powers,

Tamil Nadu under the DMK had consistently challenged the Union government.

Its defeat weakened a major federal counterweight.

The first-past-the-post electoral system magnified the consequences.

The TVK’s geographically concentrated support converted votes into seats far more efficiently than the more evenly distributed support of the DMK.

Thus, electoral mathematics amplified political disruption.

Kerala: Restoration, Yet Anxiety Remains

Kerala’s election appeared more conventional.

The Congress-led UDF decisively defeated the CPI(M)-led LDF.

Table 5: Kerala Election Snapshot

Indicator

Data

Total Seats

140

UDF

100+ seats

LDF

Heavy defeat

BJP

Historic high of 3 seats

SIR-related reduction

Around 9 lakh

Kerala restored its familiar cycle of alternating governments.

Yet even here, larger national anxieties persisted.

The BJP’s gradual expansion into Kerala’s political landscape reflected a long-term ideological strategy.

At the same time, the defeat of Pinarayi Vijayan’s government exposed the limits of personality-centric politics even within Left traditions.

Critics argued that the CPI(M) leadership increasingly centralised authority around the Chief Minister.

The Congress benefited from anti-incumbency.

Yet the UDF victory also raised a strategic question:

Could the Congress transform isolated state victories into a coherent national alternative?

The answer remained uncertain.

Puducherry: Peripheral Yet Symbolic

Puducherry attracted less national attention but remained politically symbolic.

The NDA retained power comfortably.

Table 6: Puducherry Election Snapshot

Indicator

Data

Total Seats

30

NDA

Majority retained

Electorate reduction

Approx. 7.5%

The result reinforced the BJP’s growing capacity to operate effectively through regional alliances even where it lacked dominant independent strength.

The CAPF Question: Elections or Internal Security Operations?

The deployment of approximately 3.5 lakh CAPF personnel, especially in West Bengal, marked a turning point in the nature of Indian elections.

Supporters of the deployment argued that:

Bengal has a history of political violence.

Central forces ensure neutrality.

Voters feel safer under CAPF protection.

But critics viewed the scale of deployment as symptomatic of a larger democratic crisis.

The imagery resembled extraordinary security management rather than ordinary democratic participation.

Polling booths increasingly operated under military-style supervision.

This generated a disturbing philosophical question:

Can democracy remain psychologically free when conducted under overwhelming coercive visibility?

Security-heavy elections may prevent overt violence.

But they can also produce atmospheres of fear, surveillance, and administrative intimidation.

The unprecedented scale of deployment suggested declining trust between institutions, political parties, and citizens.

Media, Narrative, and Manufactured Consent

The role of media during the election cycle became another major point of criticism.

Large sections of mainstream television media amplified:

immigration narratives,

communal anxieties,

national security rhetoric,

and accusations against opposition parties.

The distinction between journalism and political messaging appeared increasingly blurred.

At the same time, social media transformed into the central battlefield of political persuasion.

Algorithms rewarded outrage and polarisation.

Nuanced constitutional discussions rarely travelled as effectively as emotionally charged narratives.

Regional parties struggled to compete with the BJP’s highly centralised digital machinery.

This imbalance further strengthened the perception that elections were increasingly shaped through narrative management rather than merely political mobilisation.

The International Context: Foreign Policy, Economic Anxiety, and Electoral Politics

The elections also unfolded during a period of significant international turbulence.

The Iran-US-Israel conflict placed India in a diplomatically sensitive position.

Critics argued that India’s foreign policy increasingly appeared reactive rather than strategically independent.

The government also faced criticism regarding:

Indo-US trade negotiations,

pressure concerning oil purchases,

and perceived alignment with American geopolitical priorities.

Opposition voices argued that India’s historical posture of strategic autonomy had weakened.

Economic consequences added to domestic dissatisfaction.

Rising fuel prices, inflation, and supply disruptions intensified public frustration.

The cost of living became a major electoral issue.

Yet despite this anti-incumbency atmosphere, the BJP achieved major victories.

Critics attributed this paradox partly to what they described as a “curated electoral pitch.”

The metaphor frequently invoked was that of a cricket pitch prepared strategically for a predetermined style of play.

According to this argument, the electoral environment itself — through voter revision, institutional management, security deployment, and narrative construction — had been calibrated to favour the ruling party.

Supporters of the BJP rejected such allegations as conspiracy-driven opposition rhetoric.

Nevertheless, the perception gained substantial traction among sections of the political opposition and civil society.

The Election Commission and the Crisis of Neutrality

The Election Commission of India historically enjoyed enormous institutional prestige.

Its authority rested not merely on constitutional provisions but on public trust.

However, the events surrounding the 2026 elections significantly altered public perception.

The appointment of Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar became politically controversial.

Critics argued that the Commission increasingly appeared aligned with executive priorities.

Supporters dismissed these accusations and defended the Commission’s autonomy.

Yet neutrality in democracy depends not only upon legality but also upon perception.

If substantial sections of society cease to believe that electoral institutions operate impartially, democratic legitimacy weakens.

The controversy surrounding SIR, CAPF deployment, and judicial restraint collectively intensified this crisis of confidence.

Opposition Fragmentation and the Collapse of Federal Resistance

The 2026 elections also exposed the fragmentation of opposition politics.

In West Bengal, the Left and Congress struggled to navigate a complex political landscape where anti-incumbency against the TMC indirectly benefited the BJP.

In Tamil Nadu, the emergence of TVK fragmented anti-BJP federal politics.

In Assam, regional formations collapsed.

Only Kerala provided the Congress with a significant victory.

The weakening of the DMK and TMC had consequences extending far beyond state politics.

These parties had become crucial parliamentary and federal counterweights.

Their decline strengthened the BJP’s capacity to centralise political authority.

Democracy and the Administrative State

The most enduring significance of the 2026 elections may lie in the relationship between democracy and administrative power.

Modern democracies increasingly depend upon:

digital databases,

biometric identification,

documentation,

surveillance,

verification systems,

and algorithmic governance.

In such systems, citizenship itself becomes mediated through administrative legibility.

Those who fail documentation tests risk exclusion.

The SIR controversy reflected precisely this danger.

The state’s administrative machinery acquired enormous power to determine political participation.

The danger is not necessarily overt dictatorship.

Rather, it is the gradual normalisation of managed participation.

Elections continue.

Parties compete.

Votes are counted.

But the electorate itself becomes increasingly curated.

This is what alarmed many constitutional critics.

Constitutional Morality and the Future of India

B.R. Ambedkar repeatedly warned that constitutional democracy requires more than institutions.

It requires constitutional morality.

That morality depends upon:

restraint in the exercise of power,

respect for dissent,

institutional independence,

and equal citizenship.

The controversies surrounding the 2026 elections forced India to confront uncomfortable questions.

Can electoral dominance coexist with institutional neutrality?

Can democracy survive when trust in constitutional bodies becomes polarised?

Can universal adult franchise remain meaningful if participation becomes bureaucratically precarious?

These are not temporary political disputes.

They concern the future architecture of the republic.

Conclusion: A Republic at the Edge of Transformation

The 2026 Assembly elections may eventually be remembered as a turning point in India’s democratic evolution.

On the surface, the elections reflected ordinary democratic competition:

governments won,

governments lost,

new political forces emerged,

old parties declined.

But beneath this electoral surface lay deeper institutional tensions.

The controversies surrounding:

the Special Intensive Revision,

mass voter deletions,

judicial restraint,

CAPF deployment,

communal polarisation,

media concentration,

and administrative centralisation

collectively generated profound anxiety regarding the future of India’s constitutional democracy.

The BJP demonstrated extraordinary political and organisational power.

Its victories in West Bengal and Assam, combined with its continued national dominance, reaffirmed its central position in Indian politics.

Yet democratic legitimacy cannot rest solely upon electoral success.

It depends equally upon public confidence that institutions function impartially.

The danger confronting India is not necessarily the abolition of elections.

More subtle dangers are emerging:

administrative over-centralisation,

shrinking institutional trust,

selective inclusion,

and the conversion of democratic participation into a bureaucratically mediated privilege.

Democracies rarely disappear suddenly.

They evolve gradually.

Institution by institution.

Procedure by procedure.

Narrative by narrative.

The central question raised by the 2026 elections is therefore not only who won.

It is whether India’s democratic republic can preserve the spirit of constitutional equality in an era of increasingly centralised political power.

That question will shape the future of the republic long after the electoral numbers themselves are forgotten.

Selected References

1. Constitution of India — Articles 324 and 326.

2. Representation of the People Act, 1950.

3. Election Commission of India notifications on Special Intensive Revision.

4. Publicly available electoral statistics and state election data.

5. Supreme Court proceedings and commentary relating to electoral roll revision.

6. Reports and analyses published by The Hindu, Indian Express, BBC, Economic Times, India Today, Hindustan Times, The Wire, Frontline, The Print, and other publications.

7. Academic literature on constitutional morality, federalism, and electoral democracy in India.