Punjab BJP flags SIR irregularities, urges Election Commission action
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Punjab Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) President Kewal Singh Dhillon has submitted a formal representation to the Election Commission of India (ECI) and the Chief Electoral Officer of Punjab, raising serious concerns over alleged irregularities by government officials and Booth Level Officers (BLOs) during the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in the state. The party has called on the Commission to intervene immediately and issue corrective directions.
What the Complaint Alleges
According to the representation, certain officials deployed for the SIR exercise are reportedly collecting data linked to state government welfare schemes under the cover of electoral roll revision, and are allegedly encouraging voters to enrol for those schemes. The BJP has termed such conduct 'completely contrary' to the objectives of the ECI's revision exercise and has described it as illegal.
In a separate concern, the party has alleged that BLOs at several locations are demanding unauthorised documents from tenant voters — including registered rent agreements or affidavits from landlords — even though no such requirement exists under the ECI's prescribed guidelines. Dhillon argued that these arbitrary demands are creating unnecessary hardship for ordinary voters and making the electoral process needlessly cumbersome.
What the BJP Has Demanded
The party has sought an immediate inquiry and strict disciplinary action against officials allegedly overstepping their mandate. Specifically, it has demanded:
Action against officials collecting welfare-scheme data during the SIR exercise; an end to BLOs demanding documents not prescribed under electoral rules; and strict instructions from the ECI to all District Election Officers (DEOs), Electoral Registration Officers (EROs), Assistant Electoral Registration Officers (AEROs), and BLOs to adhere only to the prescribed document requirements.
Why This Matters
Dhillon emphasised that the issue has a direct bearing on public interest and the credibility of the electoral process. The SIR exercise is a critical mechanism through which the ECI updates voter rolls — any misuse of the process, whether to harvest welfare-scheme data or to impose unofficial documentation burdens on voters, could undermine voter participation and trust in the system.
Notably, this complaint comes at a politically sensitive time in Punjab, where the ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government's officials are the subject of the BJP's allegations. The BJP has not named specific officials in its public communication, but has urged the ECI to conduct an independent probe.
What Happens Next
The Election Commission of India has not yet issued a public response to the representation. If the Commission acts on the complaint, it could direct state election authorities to conduct an internal review and submit a compliance report. The BJP has urged that the revision exercise be conducted in a 'fair, transparent, voter-friendly, and time-bound manner.'