Punjab CEO Urges Political Parties to Appoint Booth Level Agents for Voter Roll Revision

Punjab Chief Electoral Officer Anindita Mitra has urged registered and recognised political parties to appoint Booth Level Agents (BLAs) for the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls. The door-to-door voter form filling exercise will take place from June 25 to July 24, 2026, with 24,453 BLOs deployed across the state. Mitra warned that holding duplicate votes is a constitutional offence punishable with up to one year imprisonment. The SIR process aims to ensure inclusion of eligible citizens and deletion of ineligible persons from voter lists.

Key Points: Punjab CEO Urges Parties to Appoint Booth Level Agents

  • CEO Punjab Anindita Mitra urges political parties to appoint Booth Level Agents for electoral roll revision
  • Door-to-door visits planned from June 25 to July 24, 2026
  • 24,453 BLOs deployed across Punjab for the exercise
  • Duplicate votes punishable with up to one year imprisonment under Constitution
3 min read

Punjab: CEO Anindita Mitra urges registered and recognised political parties to appoint BLAs

CEO Punjab Anindita Mitra urges political parties to appoint Booth Level Agents for the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls to ensure transparency.

"The timely deployment of BLAs would facilitate their training alongside Booth Level Officers (BLOs) while ensuring regular sharing of information at every stage of the exercise to maintain complete transparency. - Anindita Mitra"

Chandigarh, May 14

With the Election Commission of India initiating the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls in the state, Chief Electoral Officer Punjab Anindita Mitra on Friday held a meeting with representatives of registered and recognised political parties and urged them to appoint Booth Level Agents at the earliest to ensure transparency and smooth conduct of the entire revision process.

During the meeting, the Chief Electoral Officer stressed that Booth Level Agents (BLAs) would play an extremely crucial role throughout the Special Intensive Revision process. The registered and recognised political parties in Punjab should complete their appointments without any delay. She said the timely deployment of BLAs would facilitate their training alongside Booth Level Officers (BLOs) while ensuring regular sharing of information at every stage of the exercise to maintain complete transparency. Besides this, she also asked political parties to expedite the appointment process of BLA-1.

Mitra said that throughout the SIR process, the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer, Punjab, will remain in continuous coordination with political parties. The political parties were also briefed about the voter-related officer mechanism.

She informed that under the Special Intensive Revision (SIR), BLOs across Punjab will conduct door-to-door visits from June 25 to July 24, 2026, for filling voter forms. For this exercise, the entire election machinery has been deployed, including 24,453 BLOs, 2,476 Supervisors, 117 EROs and 234 AEROs.

She further informed that training of BLOs and other preparatory arrangements related to the SIR exercise will be carried out from June 15 to June 24, 2026.

She said the objective of the exercise is to ensure inclusion of every eligible citizen in the electoral rolls and deletion of ineligible persons from the voter list. The Chief Electoral Officer said that holding duplicate votes is an offence under the Constitution of India and is punishable with imprisonment of up to one year.

Anindita Mitra further informed that 89.58 per cent of the mapping has already been completed in rural areas of the state, while 73 per cent of the mapping work has been completed in urban areas.

The Chief Electoral Officer also informed that a Special Intensive Revision had earlier been conducted in Punjab in 2003, and the current SIR exercise is being undertaken on the basis of that revision.

During the meeting, political parties raised certain queries regarding the SIR process, which were clarified by the Chief Electoral Officer. She assured all representatives that the entire SIR exercise would be conducted in a fully transparent manner.

Prominent amongst others who were present in the meeting included representatives of recognised political parties, namely Ferry Sofat from the Aam Aadmi Party, Avtar Singh Karimpuri from the Bahujan Samaj Party, N K Verma from the Bharatiya Janata Party, R L Modgill and Ranjit Singh from the Communist Party of India (Marxist), Amar Singh and Captain Sandeep Sandhu from the Indian National Congress, Daljit Singh Cheema and Advocate Arshdeep Singh Kler from the Shiromani Akali Dal.

Representatives from registered and unrecognised political parties who attended the meeting included Major R P S Malhotra from Jai Jawan Jai Kisan Party, P Kumar from Nationalist Justice Party, Sucha Lal from Sacho Sach Party, Sukhdev Singh from Sada Punjab Sanjha Punjab Party, Jaswinder Singh from Samajik Sangharsh Party and Kushalpal Singh Mann from Shiromani Akali Dal (Amritsar).

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Good initiative but why wait until 2026 for door-to-door visits? The 2003 SIR was ages ago. Many eligible voters, especially in border areas, have been left out. The 89.58% rural mapping sounds promising, but urban areas lagging at 73% needs urgent attention. Better late than never though.
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Arjun K
Good to see all major parties represented—AAP, BJP, Congress, Akalis, BSP, CPI(M) etc. But the proof is in the implementation. Will these BLAs be active and not just names on paper? And what about ensuring no intimidation of voters during the 'ineligible deletion' process? That's a grey area. 🤔
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Nisha Z
I appreciate that the CEO is taking this seriously. The fact that duplicate votes are an offense with up to 1 year imprisonment is a strong deterrent. But I hope the same rules apply equally to all parties—we've seen cases where big political families have multiple votes. Let's hold everyone accountable. 🇮🇳
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James A
As an NRI following Punjab news, I'm curious—will NRIs be included in this SIR? Many of us want to vote but face registration hurdles. The focus on BLAs is smart, but maybe a digital portal for overseas voters could help too. Good to see democracy being strengthened at the grassroots.

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