How Electoral Rolls Became Instruments of Exclusion, and Constitutional Guardians Turned into Silent Witnesses
-Ramphal Kataria
Abstract
This essay is an extended narrative reflection on the ongoing crisis of mass voter deletions in India, with a particular focus on West Bengal, where nearly 89 lakh names are reported to have been struck off electoral rolls ahead of elections. Situating this development within similar exercises in Bihar and Tamil Nadu, it argues that what is unfolding is not merely administrative correction but a structural reconfiguration of the electorate. The piece critically examines the role of the Election Commission of India and the Supreme Court of India, suggesting that a combination of institutional passivity, procedural opacity, and political context has produced a moment where democracy appears formally intact but substantively diminished. Through a narrative mode, constitutional references, and historical parallels, the essay foregrounds the erosion of universal suffrage as both a legal and moral crisis.
The Vanishing
It does not begin with a loud announcement. There is no siren, no proclamation, no visible rupture in the machinery of the State. It begins with absence.
A name that once existed on the electoral roll is no longer there. A citizen, who voted in previous elections, suddenly finds herself transformed into a non-entity in the eyes of the Republic. No explanation arrives with clarity. No process feels accessible. What was once a constitutional assurance now appears as a fragile, revocable privilege.
In West Bengal, this absence has multiplied into a phenomenon of staggering proportions—nearly 89 lakh names missing. Districts like Murshidabad, Malda, and North 24 Parganas are not merely administrative units anymore; they are sites where citizenship itself appears to be under quiet negotiation. Entire communities—particularly those already vulnerable—find themselves standing outside the gates of democracy, not by choice, but by deletion.
And yet, elections proceed.
A Pattern That Refuses to Be Accidental
What is happening in West Bengal does not stand alone. It echoes what has already unfolded in Bihar and Tamil Nadu, where the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercises have resulted in similarly massive exclusions. The numbers, when placed together, do not read like corrections—they read like contraction.
State | Voters Deleted (Approx.) | Observations |
West Bengal | 89 lakh | Concentrated deletions in border and minority-heavy regions |
Bihar | 65 lakh (draft stage) | Elections advanced without final judicial closure |
Tamil Nadu | 97 lakh+ | Large-scale urban deletions; systemic scale |
Kerala | Emerging | Concerns raised during SIR |
Puducherry | Emerging | Revision controversies amid elections |
These are not marginal adjustments. These are structural subtractions.
The repetition across states begins to suggest design, or at the very least, a deeply entrenched institutional indifference to the consequences of such scale.
The Courtroom as Theatre
If the citizen’s first instinct in the face of such exclusion is to seek refuge in the judiciary, what unfolds there is both perplexing and unsettling.
The Supreme Court of India has not been absent. It has heard petitions. It has expressed concern. It has issued directions—asking the Election Commission of India to ensure transparency, to publish names, to clarify procedures. It has acknowledged, in careful language, the “stress and strain” imposed upon citizens.
But beyond this, something crucial is missing: finality.
In Bihar, even as lakhs of names were excluded, the Court chose not to halt the process. It allowed the machinery to move forward, even as questions remained unresolved. Elections approached, and then elections passed, without a definitive judicial pronouncement on whether the very foundation of those elections—the voter list—was constitutionally sound.
Now, in West Bengal, the script appears to be repeating itself.
The hearings continue. The concerns are recorded. The language remains measured. But outside the courtroom, reality moves faster than judicial caution. Rolls are finalized. Campaigns intensify. The democratic clock does not pause for constitutional uncertainty.
It is here that the line between adjudication and performance begins to blur.
The courtroom begins to resemble a space where democracy is narrated, not enforced.
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar had warned that the success of the Constitution depends not on its text, but on those entrusted with its implementation. When the Court, the final guardian, chooses incremental observation over decisive intervention, it does not remain neutral—it becomes historically consequential.
In electoral matters, delay is not benign. It is transformative. By the time a final judgment arrives—if it arrives at all—the election is over, the government is formed, and the democratic injury has already been absorbed into political reality.
The Burden That Shifts Silently
Meanwhile, the citizen is asked to prove herself again.
The logic of the process has subtly shifted. Instead of the State ensuring inclusion, the individual must now establish eligibility, often through documentation that is difficult to procure, especially for the poor, the migrant, the marginalised.
The Election Commission of India, constitutionally entrusted with safeguarding electoral integrity, appears increasingly to operate through a framework where exclusion precedes verification.
This inversion is not merely procedural—it is philosophical.
The Constitution begins with “We, the People.”
The process now seems to begin with: “Prove that you are among the people.”
Politics in the Background, Power in the Foreground
No electoral process exists in a vacuum. The political stakes in West Bengal are immense. The Bharatiya Janata Party seeks to expand its footprint, while Mamata Banerjee fights to retain power.
In this charged atmosphere, allegations of targeted deletions have emerged. Communities already situated at the edges of power structures now find themselves confronting a new kind of exclusion—one that operates not through overt denial, but through bureaucratic disappearance.
Leaders like Rahul Gandhi have raised concerns publicly, pointing to the scale and pattern of deletions. Yet, these warnings seem to dissolve into the larger institutional silence.
The machinery moves forward.
Elections Without Assurance
India has, in its past, shown the capacity to pause elections when circumstances threatened their credibility. Insurgency, instability, and unrest have all been recognised as valid grounds for deferral.
But today, a different kind of crisis unfolds—a crisis not of security, but of legitimacy.
What does it mean to hold an election when the voter list itself is contested, incomplete, and possibly exclusionary?
What is being measured when votes are counted, if the very pool of voters has been altered in opaque ways?
An election without a trustworthy roll is not an expression of the popular will—it is a managed arithmetic.
The Republic and Its Reflection
Mahatma Mahatma Gandhi once observed that democracy is not a mechanical arrangement but a moral order. That moral order rests on trust—trust that every citizen counts, that every voice matters, that institutions will act not merely with legality, but with fairness.
Today, that trust appears strained.
The deletions in West Bengal are not just about one state. They are a mirror held up to the Republic. In that mirror, one sees not the collapse of democracy, but something perhaps more insidious—its gradual hollowing.
The forms remain intact: elections are announced, campaigns are conducted, votes are cast.
But beneath these forms, something essential is shifting.
Conclusion: The Silence That Shapes Outcomes
Democracy does not always die in darkness. Sometimes, it recedes in daylight—through procedures that appear legitimate, through institutions that speak but do not act, through courts that observe but do not conclude.
The deletion of 89 lakh voters is not just a statistic. It is a question.
A question about who belongs.
A question about who decides.
And ultimately, a question about what remains of a democracy when its people begin to disappear from its most fundamental process.
When exclusion becomes systemic and accountability becomes deferred, democracy does not collapse—it is carefully, quietly rewritten.
Footnotes
1. Article 326, Constitution of India — Mandates elections based on universal adult suffrage.
2. Representation of the People Act, 1950 — Governs preparation and revision of electoral rolls.
3. Representation of the People Act, 1951 — Governs conduct of elections.
4. Proceedings before the Supreme Court of India on Special Intensive Revision (SIR), Bihar (2025–2026).
5. Data released by the Election Commission of India on voter deletions across states.
6. Historical precedents of election deferral: Punjab (1987–1992), Jammu & Kashmir (1990s), Assam (1980s).