West Bengal Voter List Shrinks by 58 Lakh After Intensive ECI Revision

The Election Commission of India has released the final electoral roll for West Bengal following a Special Intensive Revision, reducing the total number of voters from 7.66 crore to 7.04 crore. More than 58 lakh names were deleted, with reasons including deceased voters, permanent shifts, and duplicate registrations. The revision process, involving 100% physical verification by Booth Level Officers, has become a major point of contention between the ruling TMC and the opposition BJP. The exercise has also led to legal battles, with the Supreme Court recently refusing to restrain the ECI from issuing directions to judicial officers involved in the verification process.

Key Points: West Bengal Electoral Roll: 58 Lakh Voters Deleted in Final List

  • Over 58 lakh names deleted from voter list
  • Total voters now 7.04 crore vs 7.66 crore earlier
  • 24 lakh deceased, 12 lakh absent, 19 lakh shifted
  • SIR exercise sparks political clash between TMC and BJP
3 min read

West Bengal SIR: ECI releases final electoral rolls, over 58 lakh names deleted

ECI releases final West Bengal electoral roll after SIR, deleting over 58 lakh names. Total voters now 7.04 crore. Political tussle ensues.

"This exhaustive approach ensured the integrity of the electoral roll - West Bengal CEO"

Kolkata, February 28

The Election Commission of India released the final electoral roll following the Special Intensive Revision of voter lists in West Bengal, stating that 5,46,053 voters have been deleted using Form 7 after the draft list was published in December 2025.

The total number of voters in West Bengal now stands at 7,04,59,284 voters (7.04 crore) as compared to 7,66,37,529 (7.66 crore) before the SIR exercise, showing a change of more than 61 lakh names in the list.

According to a press note by the West Bengal Chief Electoral Officer (CEO), a total of 58,20,899 Enumeration Forms were not received, as the poll body found 24,16,852 voters to be deceased, 12,20,039 absent, 19,88,076 shifted, 1,38,328 already enrolled, and 57,604 names were deleted based on other reasons.

After the ECI published the draft voter list on December 16, 2025, the poll body added a total of 1,82,036 voters to the list using Forms 6 and 6A, and made 6,671 additions by Form 8.

As per the Commission, 60,06,675 electors under adjudication were included in the final roll,

The gender ratio stands at 956, the same as after the publication of draft rolls.

The main objective of the SIR exercise was to ensure the inclusion of all the eligible electors and the exclusion of all the ineligible electors with full transparency at every stage of the process. The revision process utilised a 100 per cent physical verification strategy, where Booth Level Officers (BLOs) personally managed the distribution and collection of enumeration forms, the press note said.

This exhaustive approach ensured the integrity of the electoral roll by successfully identifying and removing ineligible entries, specifically addressing deceased individuals, permanent out-of-state migrations, and duplicate registrations, the West Bengal CEO said.

The ECI has advised the electors to verify their names in the electoral roll and if required, submit applications for inclusion (Form-6/6A), Correction (Form-8) or deletion (Form-7) through online or offline modes.

The SIR exercise in West Bengal has been a subject for tussle between the ruling TMC government and the BJP. The Mamata Banerjee government has criticised the whole exercise, while alleging a collusion between the BJP and the ECI.

However, the BJP has raised the illegal immigration issue, which the party is likely to turn into a poll plank for the 2026 Legislative Assembly elections. BJP leader Dilip Ghosh also said that CM Mamata was "rattled" by the SIR exercise.

West Bengal SIR was dragged to the courts, leading to a legal battle between the TMC and Centre and the ECI. Recently, the Supreme Court permitted the Chief Justice of the Calcutta High Court to deploy additional civil judges with three years of experience and, if required, seek assistance from the Chief Justices of Jharkhand and Odisha for verifying objections. The decision was welcomed by the West Bengal government.

Meanwhile, the apex court on Friday refused to entertain a request by the West Bengal government seeking to restrain the Election Commission from allegedly issuing directions to judicial officers engaged in verification of documents under the SIR of electoral rolls in the state.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
The numbers are staggering! 24 lakh deceased voters on the list? This shows how outdated our rolls can become. Physical verification by BLOs must have been a massive task. Kudos to them for the hard work.
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Sarah B
While cleaning the list is important, I hope genuine voters haven't been wrongly removed in the process. The political blame game between TMC and BJP is unfortunate. The focus should be on ensuring every eligible citizen can vote.
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Aman W
The Supreme Court's involvement and the deployment of additional judges shows how sensitive this issue is. Transparency is key. Everyone should check their name online now. Don't wait for election day!
K
Karthik V
Respectfully, the timing and scale of this exercise raise questions. Deleting 61 lakh names just before major elections? The process might be technically sound, but the perception of fairness matters just as much in a democracy.
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Nisha Z
The gender ratio remaining at 956 is a point to ponder. We need more women on the electoral rolls. Hopefully, the new additions through Form 6A helped some. Let's encourage all eligible women in our families to register.

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