Datia Assembly bypoll on July 30, counting August 3: ECI schedule

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Datia Assembly bypoll on July 30, counting August 3: ECI schedule

Synopsis

The Datia Assembly seat in Madhya Pradesh goes to a bypoll on 30 July after Congress MLA Rajendra Bharti was disqualified over a 1998 bank fraud conviction — a rare instance of the Lily Thomas ruling directly triggering a mid-term election. Results are due on 3 August.

Key Takeaways

The Election Commission of India announced the Datia Assembly bypoll schedule on 3 July 2026 .
Polling is set for 30 July ; vote counting will take place on 3 August 2026 .
Congress MLA Rajendra Bharti was convicted on 1 April 2026 in a 1998 fixed deposit fraud at the Datia Cooperative Rural Development Bank and sentenced to three years' imprisonment with a fine of ₹1 lakh .
Disqualification was immediate under Section 8(3) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 and the Supreme Court's Lily Thomas judgment (2013) .
The Model Code of Conduct is now in force in the Datia constituency; nominations close on 13 July .

The Election Commission of India (ECI) on Thursday, 3 July 2026, announced the full schedule for the Datia Assembly by-election in Madhya Pradesh, setting polling day as 30 July and vote counting for 3 August. The bypoll was triggered after Congress MLA Rajendra Bharti was disqualified following his conviction in a decades-old bank fraud case.

Key Dates in the Election Schedule

As per the official notification, the formal election notification will be issued on 6 July. Candidates may file their nominations until 13 July, with scrutiny of papers scheduled for 14 July. The last date for withdrawal of candidatures is 16 July. The entire election process is set to conclude by 4 August 2026.

The Model Code of Conduct came into immediate effect across the constituency upon the ECI's announcement. Voting will be conducted using Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs) and Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail (VVPAT) units at all polling centres.

Why the Seat Fell Vacant

The bypoll was necessitated after a special MP-MLA court found Bharti guilty on 1 April 2026 in connection with a 1998 fixed deposit fraud at the Datia Cooperative Rural Development Bank. Investigators alleged that bank records were manipulated to extend a fixed deposit tenure from three years to 15 years, enabling interest withdrawals between 1999 and 2011. At the time, Bharti served as both chairman of the bank and a trustee of the institution.

The court sentenced him to three years' imprisonment and imposed a fine of ₹1 lakh on 2 April 2026. While the execution of the sentence was stayed for 60 days to allow an appeal, the conviction itself remained operative.

Legal Basis for Disqualification

Under Section 8(3) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, and the Supreme Court's 2013 ruling in the Lily Thomas case, Bharti's disqualification took effect immediately upon conviction — without waiting for the sentence to be served. Article 191(1)(e) of the Constitution mandates disqualification of any legislator sentenced to imprisonment of two years or more.

The Madhya Pradesh Assembly Secretariat issued a notification on the same day, terminating Bharti's membership and formally declaring the Datia seat vacant, before informing the Election Commission.

What to Watch Next

Political parties are expected to intensify their campaigns in the coming weeks, with the bypoll now determining who will represent the Datia Assembly constituency. This contest carries added significance as a test of local sentiment following a high-profile disqualification — a scenario that often draws sharper-than-usual political mobilisation. The result, due on 3 August 2026, will indicate whether voters endorse or rebuke the political fallout from the conviction.

Point of View

Which stripped legislators of the protection they once enjoyed against immediate disqualification on conviction. Bharti's case — rooted in a 1998 fraud that allegedly ran for over a decade — underscores how slowly the legal system moves against sitting lawmakers, even as the Lily Thomas precedent now accelerates the political fallout once a verdict arrives. For the Congress, the seat is a defensive fight in unfavourable circumstances; for the Bharatiya Janata Party, which dominates Madhya Pradesh, it is an opportunity to consolidate. What the bypoll will also test is whether voters in Datia separate the individual's legal troubles from broader party allegiance — a calculus that has often defied straightforward predictions in central Indian constituencies.
NationPress
3 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

When is the Datia Assembly bypoll and when will votes be counted?
Polling in the Datia Assembly bypoll is scheduled for 30 July 2026 , with vote counting on 3 August 2026 . The entire election process is set to conclude by 4 August 2026.
Why is the Datia Assembly seat vacant?
The seat fell vacant after Congress MLA Rajendra Bharti was convicted on 1 April 2026 in a 1998 fixed deposit fraud case at the Datia Cooperative Rural Development Bank. He was sentenced to three years' imprisonment, triggering immediate disqualification under the Representation of the People Act.
What is the legal basis for Bharti's disqualification?
Under Section 8(3) of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, and the Supreme Court's 2013 Lily Thomas judgment, any legislator convicted and sentenced to two or more years in prison is disqualified immediately upon conviction — regardless of whether the sentence is under appeal.
What was the nature of the fraud case against Rajendra Bharti?
Bharti was found guilty in a case alleging manipulation of bank records at the Datia Cooperative Rural Development Bank to extend a fixed deposit tenure from three years to 15 years, enabling interest withdrawals between 1999 and 2011. He was serving as chairman of the bank at the time.
What is the nomination schedule for the Datia bypoll?
The formal election notification will be issued on 6 July 2026. Candidates can file nominations until 13 July, with scrutiny on 14 July and the last date for withdrawal on 16 July.
Nation Press
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