Is There a Mass Fake Voter Issue in CM Stalin's Kolathur Seat?

Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- Allegations of over 19,000 fake voter entries in Kolathur.
- Call for immediate investigation by the Election Commission.
- Potential impact on 2026 Assembly elections.
- Systemic manipulation of voter rolls alleged.
- Importance of maintaining electoral integrity.
Chennai, Sep 26 (NationPress) The Tamil Nadu BJP spokesperson A.N.S. Prasad has lodged an official grievance with the Chief Election Commissioner of India, Gyanesh Kumar, accusing the Kolathur Assembly Constituency (No. 13), currently held by Chief Minister M.K. Stalin, of experiencing extensive discrepancies in the voter rolls.
Prasad has requested that the Election Commission of India (ECI) conduct an urgent investigation and remove what he alleges to be over 19,000 fraudulent and duplicate voter records.
In a comprehensive email directed to the ECI's office in New Delhi, Prasad stated that the complaint falls under the Representation of the People Act, 1950, and Article 324 of the Constitution, which authorizes the Election Commission to uphold free and fair elections.
The BJP spokesperson contended that the integrity of the electoral process in Kolathur has been “compromised” due to “systemic manipulation” of voter rolls.
As per the complaint, an algorithmic assessment of voter data from 2023 and 2024, combined with ground-level investigations, revealed 19,476 questionable entries deemed potentially invalid, 4,379 duplicate registrations where voters appeared multiple times under different EPIC numbers, 9,133 invalid or fictitious addresses, such as 30 voter IDs linked to a single residence, and 5,964 mixed household discrepancies where numerous unrelated voters, often with conflicting community or family details, were listed at one address.
Prasad referenced findings from the BJP's report dated August 12, titled 'Ghuspaithiya Vote Bank Se Vote Chori', which garnered attention from major national news outlets.
He noted that BJP MP Anurag Thakur had previously raised similar issues during a press conference on August 13, specifically highlighting Kolathur as a case of alleged voter fraud.
The complaint implores the ECI to perform a thorough booth-level audit, initiate a Special Intensive Revision of the voter rolls, and take action against officials who failed to uphold the integrity of the voter list.
It also calls for public reporting of corrective actions within 30 days to regain trust in the democratic system.
Prasad, sharing his own voter ID and Aadhaar details, expressed his willingness to assist the ECI in verifying the information.
The Election Commission has yet to respond. If addressed, this action could initiate one of the most significant clean-ups of the voter rolls in Tamil Nadu in recent years, occurring just months before parties ramp up preparations for the 2026 Assembly elections.