Delhi BJP SIR review: Malhotra chairs meet, 12,000+ booths covered
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Delhi Bharatiya Janata Party President Harsh Malhotra on Friday, 4 July 2025, chaired the first review meeting on the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls being conducted by the Election Commission of India (ECI) across the capital. The meeting assessed the progress made in the first two days of the exercise, which was formally launched on 1 July 2025.
Who Attended the Meeting
The review was attended by BJP National Secretary Om Prakash Dhankhar, Delhi BJP Organisation General Secretary Pawan Rana, and SIR In-charge and Member of Parliament Yogender Chandolia. Also present were Delhi SIR team members Ramesh Bidhuri and Advocate Sanket Gupta, along with district presidents, district SIR team members, and BLA-2 (Booth Level Agent) coordinators from all districts of Delhi.
BJP's Ground-Level Readiness
Addressing the meeting, MP Yogender Chandolia stated that the BJP has its BLA-2 representatives duly registered with the Election Commission, in line with other political parties operating in the city. He noted that of Delhi's total 13,033 polling booths, the BJP has registered BLA-2 agents at more than 12,000 locations. These booth-level workers have already been engaged in voter verification and mapping at their respective polling stations, making them well-positioned to support the Booth Level Officers (BLOs) appointed by the ECI for the SIR exercise.
Chandolia further informed that former MP Ramesh Bidhuri and Advocate Sanket Gupta are coordinating directly with the Election Commission on behalf of Delhi BJP, and are also overseeing the training of the party's BLA-2 representatives across all districts.
What the SIR Exercise Involves
The Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls is an ECI-mandated process aimed at updating voter lists — adding eligible new voters, removing duplicate or deceased entries, and correcting errors. Booth Level Officers conduct door-to-door verification, while registered BLA-2 agents from political parties are authorised to assist and observe the process. Notably, Delhi recently concluded a high-stakes assembly election, making clean, updated rolls a priority ahead of future civic and parliamentary contests.
Delhi BJP Media Teams Restructured
In a separate development on the same day, a joint meeting of the Delhi BJP's central media department and its 12 newly constituted district media teams was held at the party's state office. The meeting was chaired by Delhi BJP Media Chief Praveen Shankar Kapoor and addressed by Chief Spokesperson and MLA Abhay Verma. All newly appointed district media chiefs and spokespersons were formally introduced, after which Verma outlined the current political context. Kapoor briefed participants on the working procedures of the media department and the protocols for engaging with the press.
Together, both meetings signal a coordinated organisational push by the Delhi BJP — strengthening its electoral infrastructure at the booth level while simultaneously expanding its communications apparatus ahead of what is expected to be an active political calendar.