In the case of Association For Democratic Reforms & Ors. v. Election Commission of India & Ors. (2026 INSC 564), the Supreme Court of India examined a batch of writ petitions challenging an Order dated June 24, 2025, issued by the Election Commission of India (ECI). The ECI’s order directed a Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of the electoral rolls across all assembly constituencies in the State of Bihar ahead of the 2025 legislative assembly elections.
The core legal controversy centers on the balance between ensuring an accurate, inclusive electorate and preventing the arbitrary disenfranchisement of lakhs of voters. The petitioners contended that the ECI’s strict verification requirements and reliance on the 2003 electoral roll as baseline evidence would cause mass voter exclusion. Conversely, supporting petitions argued that periodic intensive revisions are necessary to eliminate ineligible listings caused by illegal migration and rapid demographic shifts.
1. Constitutional and Historical Context
- The Character of Electoral Rolls: Chief Justice Surya Kant, delivering the judgment, observed that disputes regarding electoral rolls are fundamental to the foundation of representative government, going far beyond mere administrative exercises.
- Historical Origins: The judgment traces the roots of organized public assembly and membership in India back to ancient republican polities like the Vajji confederacy in Vaishali (ancient Bihar). While these historic systems were not modern democracies based on universal adult suffrage, they established a legacy of settled, institutional procedures to determine who could participate in the polity.
- Colonial Framework to Constitutional Evolution: The modern legal structure for electoral rolls emerged under the Government of India Act, 1935, which transformed registration from scattered practices into a formal legal regime. Post-independence, the framers of the Constitution deliberately shifted the electoral roll from an instrument of an exclusionary franchise into the foundation of universal, independent political participation governed by an insulated, autonomous Election Commission.
- Plenary Powers of the ECI: Under Article 324 of the Constitution, the ECI is granted the absolute authority of superintendence, direction, and control over the preparation of electoral rolls, keeping the process free from executive interference.
2. Origin of the Controversy
- The Impugned Order: On June 24, 2025, the ECI exercised its powers under Article 324 of the Constitution and Section 21(3) of the Representation of the People Act, 1950, to order a Special Intensive Revision (SIR) in Bihar.
- The Justification: The ECI pointed out that Bihar’s last intensive revision occurred in 2003. For over two decades, the state relied strictly on summary revisions. Given significant demographic shifts due to rapid urbanization and large-scale migration, an intensive door-to-door verification was deemed essential prior to the late-2025 Bihar Assembly elections.
- Conflicting Legal Interests: A batch of petitions filed under Article 32 sought to quash the order, fearing it would result in the arbitrary disenfranchisement of lakhs of eligible citizens. Meanwhile, cross-petitions supported the SIR, arguing that regular intensive revisions are vital to cleanse the rolls of illegal influx and ineligible persons.
3. Key Modalities of the Special Intensive Revision (SIR)
The ECI laid out specific criteria and structured guidelines to govern the house-to-house collection and verification process:
- The 2003 Benchmark: Clause 11 of the ECI’s order established that names appearing on the 2003 electoral roll serve as probative (primary) evidence of eligibility unless rebutted.
- Evidentiary Standard for New Voters: Anyone whose name does not appear on the 2003 roll must produce one or more government documents from an indicative list of eleven (11) prescribed options to independently verify their eligibility.
- Enumeration Requirement: Citizens were required to submit a finalized “Enumeration Form” alongside their documents by July 25, 2025. The draft guidelines directed that the newly prepared draft electoral roll would exclusively feature citizens who submitted these physical or verified digital forms, leaving non-respondents vulnerable to initial exclusion.
4. Statutory Safeguards and Dispute Redressal
To prevent arbitrary omissions, the judgment highlights structural procedural protections embedded within the ECI’s Guidelines:
- Mandatory Show-Cause Scrutiny: If an Electoral Registration Officer (ERO) or Assistant ERO finds an applicant’s eligibility doubtful, they cannot summarily remove them. They are legally mandated to issue a formal show-cause notice, receive the elector’s defense, and render a transparent, reasoned speaking order.
- Two-Tier Appellate System: Any individual aggrieved by an ERO’s decision retains the statutory right to file a first appeal before the District Magistrate. If dissatisfaction persists, a second appeal can be preferred before the Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) of the State within thirty days.
2026 INSC 564
Association For Democratic Reforms & Ors. V. Election Commission Of India & Ors. (D.O.J. 27.05.2026)




