Kerala CEO Suspends Official Over BJP Seal Blunder in Election Circular

The Kerala Chief Electoral Officer has suspended an Assistant Section Officer pending an enquiry after a clerical lapse led to an Election Commission communication bearing the BJP's official seal being circulated. The error occurred when the BJP's state unit submitted a photocopy of a 2019 guideline for clarification, and its seal was inadvertently included in the official circulation. The Deputy CEO formally withdrew the erroneous document and issued a corrected version to all political parties and election officers. Officials emphasized the incident did not affect the electoral process and urged against misleading interpretations.

Key Points: Kerala CEO Suspends Official for BJP Seal Error in Election Circular

  • Official suspended over clerical lapse
  • BJP seal on circulated ECI document
  • Error corrected, revised note issued
  • Incident during crucial election prep
  • CEO says electoral integrity unaffected
2 min read

Kerala CEO suspends official over clerical lapse in BJP 'seal' circular

Kerala Chief Electoral Officer suspends an official after a clerical error led to a BJP-sealed document being circulated to parties. Error corrected.

"The error was identified swiftly and corrective steps were initiated without delay. - CEO's Office"

Thiruvananthapuram, March 23

The Kerala Chief Electoral Officer on Monday suspended an Assistant Section Officer pending enquiry following a clerical lapse that led to the circulation of an official communication bearing the seal of the Bharatiya Janata Party.

The office of the Chief Electoral Officer in Kerala on Monday evening clarified that a letter from the Election Commission of India, carrying the BJP seal, had been circulated across Malayalam news channels, triggering confusion during a crucial phase of election preparations.

According to officials, the lapse occurred when the BJP's Kerala unit sought clarification on the 2019 guidelines relating to the publication of criminal antecedents of candidates.

As part of the request, the party had submitted a photocopy of the original directive that carried its official seal.

However, the symbol went unnoticed by officials, and the same document was inadvertently circulated to other political parties while issuing the clarification.

The CEO's office said the error was identified swiftly and corrective steps were initiated without delay.

On March 21, the Deputy Chief Electoral Officer formally withdrew the erroneous communication and circulated a revised version to all political parties, District Election Officers and Returning Officers, instructing them to disregard the earlier document.

Kerala goes to the polls on April 9 to elect 140 legislators, with an electorate of around 2.72 crore.

The election will see a triangular contest involving the CPI-M-led Left Democratic Front, the Congress-led United Democratic Front, and the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance.

Officials emphasised that the incident has not affected the integrity of the electoral process, noting that revised guidelines updated since 2019 had already been communicated to all stakeholders.

The CEO's office also urged the public and the media to avoid spreading misleading interpretations, reiterating that robust systems are in place to ensure a free and fair election.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
This is quite concerning. How does a party's seal go "unnoticed" on an official EC communication? It raises questions about the diligence of our election machinery. While corrected, it shouldn't have happened at all. Hope the enquiry is thorough.
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Rohit P
Mistakes happen, but in election time, everything is under a microscope 🔍. Good that they owned up and corrected it quickly. The real fight is on the ground in Kerala between LDF, UDF, and NDA. This is just a side story.
A
Ananya R
The media needs to be responsible too. The CEO's office has asked to avoid misleading interpretations. Instead of amplifying this error, channels should focus on the actual guidelines about criminal antecedents of candidates. That's what truly matters for voters.
V
Vikram M
Suspending a junior officer feels like making them a scapegoat. The process clearly has a flaw if a document with a party symbol can be circulated without proper checks. The system needs fixing, not just punishing one individual.
M
Michael C
Following Kerala elections from abroad. Glad to see transparency in reporting the error and the corrective steps. The integrity of the process is key. With 2.72 crore voters, the EC's job is tough. Hoping for a smooth and fair election on April 9!

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