Kerala Minister's Kin Reveals Voter List Omission Amid Local Polls

A retired IAS officer who happens to be the Kerala Transport Minister's brother-in-law found his name missing from the voter list. He tried to get included online but received no response from authorities. This experience made him reflect on how every single vote truly matters in elections. His story has sparked wider discussions about electoral roll accuracy ahead of Kerala's local body polls.

Key Points: Ganesh Kumar Brother-in-Law Missing from Kerala Voter List

  • Former Shipping Secretary discovers name missing from both constituencies
  • Online application for inclusion received no official updates
  • Recalls candidate losing by single vote in previous election
  • Plans symbolic vote for Congress candidate Vaishna in protest
2 min read

Kerala Minister's brother-in-law claims omission of name from voter list

Retired IAS officer K. Mohandas, brother-in-law of Kerala Transport Minister, finds his name omitted from electoral roll ahead of local body elections.

"The right to vote is not an entitlement, but an act of generosity from officials compiling the list - K. Mohandas"

Thiruvananthapuram, Nov 22

As Kerala prepares for the two-phase local body elections on December 9 and 14, K. Mohandas, the brother-in-law of State Transport Minister K. B. Ganesh Kumar, and a retired IAS officer, has expressed concern over the "omission" of his name from the electoral roll.

Taking to his social media, he wrote, "I was formerly a voter in Kottarakkara and later moved to Thiruvananthapuram before settling there permanently. My wife, also a long-time Kottarakkara resident, continues to remain on the voter list, but my name was omitted from both constituencies ahead of the civic polls."

He disclosed that his online application for inclusion in the Thiruvananthapuram Corporation electoral roll received no update, leading to the current exclusion, wrote Mohandas, a former Shipping Secretary.

Reflecting on his experience, Mohandas said he first realised the true value of a single vote during the previous local body election in Kottarakkara, when his preferred candidate lost by a single vote.

"Had I not voted, the margin would have doubled - from one to two," he noted.

He expressed frustration that the electoral system, rather than treating voting as a fundamental right, appears to function like a "discretionary privilege" extended by officials preparing the rolls.

"The right to vote is not an entitlement, but an act of generosity from officials compiling the list," he remarked.

Criticising neither the Chief Election Commissioner nor political leaders, he placed responsibility on the accuracy of local officials and the vigilance of voters themselves.

He also referred to instances where names were allegedly struck off, including that of a young woman named Vaishna, to illustrate how discrepancies in rolls affect democratic participation.

His wife will cast her vote in Kottarakkara on December 9, while he calls his own vote "a myth-imagined, conceptual".

As an act of symbolic civic participation, he says he will "vote" in the Thiruvananthapuram Corporation's Muttada ward for Vaishna, standing for those whose names were omitted due to administrative lapses.

Twenty-four-year-old Congress candidate Vaishna had to approach the Kerala High Court, and it was after that, the authorities included her name in the voter list, enabling her to contest.

His account has sparked conversations about electoral roll integrity and voter awareness amid intensified revision activities across Kerala ahead of polling.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
If a retired IAS officer can't get his name included, what hope do common people have? This shows how broken our electoral system is. We need better accountability from election officials.
S
Sarah B
His point about voting being treated as a "discretionary privilege" rather than a fundamental right is spot on. In a democracy, every eligible citizen should automatically be on the voter list. The burden shouldn't be on us to prove we exist!
A
Arjun K
While I appreciate him raising this issue, it's ironic that it takes a minister's relative to get attention. Thousands of common people face this every election cycle and nobody cares. Still, better late than never! 🙏
M
Michael C
His symbolic vote for Vaishna is a powerful statement. It highlights how administrative failures can disenfranchise citizens. We need digital solutions that make voter registration seamless and automatic.
K
Kavya N
I respect that he's not blaming politicians but focusing on systemic issues. The real problem is at the ground level - booth-level officers need better training and accountability. Every vote matters, as his Kottarakkara experience shows!
V
Vikram M
This is why we need to check our voter status regularly. I make it a habit to verify my family's

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