Key Points

The Election Commission of India has disclosed that 60,010 individual claims have been filed for Bihar's draft electoral rolls. Surprisingly, no political parties have submitted any objections despite having over 67,000 booth-level agents available. The revision process allows voters to add or remove names until September 1, 2025. This highlights a significant gap in political party engagement with the electoral registration process.

Key Points: Bihar Electoral Rolls 60,010 Claims No Political Party Objections

  • 60,010 individual voter claims filed in Bihar electoral rolls
  • No political party submitted any objections to draft rolls
  • 1,98,660 new electors applied for inclusion
  • Revision process open until September 1
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60,010 claims, objections filed in Bihar; none from political parties: ECI

Election Commission reveals 60,010 voter claims in Bihar draft rolls with zero political party submissions amid revision process

"Submit your claims and objections to rectify any errors - Election Commission of India"

New Delhi, Aug 20

The Election Commission of India (ECI) on Wednesday said the office of the Bihar Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) has so far received 60,010 claims and objections from individual voters seeking inclusion or deletion of names in the state's draft electoral rolls.

Of these, 2,394 applications have been disposed of by the Electoral Registration Officers (EROs).

The poll body underlined that no political party has filed any complaint or objection even after 20 days of the draft rolls being published on August 1. The window for filing claims and objections will remain open until September 1.

According to the rules, claims and objections are decided seven days after verification of supporting documents is completed.

Meanwhile, the Commission said that since August 1, as many as 1,98,660 new electors -- those who turned 18 after the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercise -- have applied for inclusion in the rolls.

The ECI has provided a month-long opportunity for individuals, political parties, and their 1.6 lakh booth-level agents (BLAs) to file objections or seek corrections. Of these BLAs, the RJD has 47,506, the Congress 17,549, and Left parties over 2,000 -- together accounting for more than 67,000 representatives.

The Commission stressed that despite repeated appeals, parties have not participated actively in the revision exercise.

"Submit your claims and objections to rectify any errors in the draft electoral roll of Bihar published on August 1. So far, not even a single claim or objection has been submitted by any political party," the EC said in a statement.

The poll panel further clarified that electoral rolls are prepared strictly as per law.

Any eligible voter left out can submit Form 6 with a copy of Aadhaar by September 1, 2025.

If any ineligible name has been included, objections can be filed through Form 7 by an elector of the concerned Assembly constituency.

BLAs of recognised parties can also submit Forms 6 and 7 on behalf of voters.

Even non-electors of that constituency can file objections with a declaration under Rule 20(3)(b) of the RER 1960, the ECI statement said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Good to see individual citizens taking responsibility. 60,000+ applications show people are aware and engaged. Political parties should learn from common voters!
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Aman W
Parties only wake up during elections to complain about voter lists. When given actual opportunity to participate in revision process, they disappear. Typical!
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Sarah B
As an observer, I find this fascinating. In democratic systems, political parties are usually the most active in voter list verification. This seems unusual for Bihar's political landscape.
Nikhil C
Maybe the draft roll is actually quite accurate this time? Otherwise parties would have definitely raised objections. ECI doing good work in Bihar 👍
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Kavya N
2 lakh new young voters! That's the real story. Our youth is engaged and wants to participate in democracy. Future looks bright despite political parties' negligence.

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