New Delhi: The Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls has officially completed its first year, striking out nearly six crore voters from the national register and intensifying the ongoing political gridlock between the opposition parties and the Election Commission of India. The massive, multi-phase poll roll purification drive continues to reshape the voting landscape across 19 states and Union Territories. While the election authority maintains the exercise is vital to eliminate duplicate, deceased, and ineligible entries, opposition leaders and civil rights activists have fiercely criticized the scale of the removals, characterizing the stringent documentation requirements as a targeted effort toward voter disenfranchisement.
The extensive pan-India exercise was initiated as a pilot in Bihar on June 24 last year, directly preceding the state assembly elections. The initial phase resulted in the removal of nearly 65 lakh names from Bihar’s electoral list, triggering immediate allegations that the poll panel was acting under political influence. Despite the severe political backlash and legal challenges, the constitutional validity of the cleanup drive was unanimously upheld by the Supreme Court in March, solidifying the commission’s authority to execute deep electoral revisions.
The social and administrative fallout of the data purification has quickly extended beyond voting booths. Following recent state assembly elections, the state governments of Bihar and West Bengal announced that the voter deletion data is actively being integrated with social security networks. Consequently, citizens whose names were scrubbed during the revision are now facing immediate exclusion from key state-sponsored welfare benefits. Concurrently, the academic framework has adapted to the policy, with the national school curriculum body incorporating the purification drive into the latest NCERT Social Science textbooks, framing it as an essential administrative tool to balance electoral accuracy.
Data released from the second phase, which was announced on October 27 last year across 12 states and Union Territories, highlights the unprecedented scale of the cleanup. Covering a massive pre-revision voter base of 50.99 crore across regions including Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, and Rajasthan, the final rolls shrank by 10.2 per cent, leaving a revised electorate of 45.81 crore. ECI data indicates that over 66.88 lakh deceased individuals were officially purged, with Uttar Pradesh logging the highest volume at 25.47 lakh, closely followed by West Bengal at 24.16 lakh. An additional 63.16 lakh names were struck down following formal objections and official adjudication.
The final data sets for the second phase were published on staggered timelines, concluding with Uttar Pradesh releasing its verified register. The administrative focus has now shifted to the expansive third phase, launched on May 14 this year. This latest round spans 16 states and three Union Territories—including high-stakes regions like Maharashtra, Karnataka, Punjab, Telangana, and the National Capital Territory of Delhi—and encompasses an electorate of 36.73 crore voters. The third phase is scheduled to conclude later this year as the election panel pushes forward with its nationwide roll purification.