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Odisha News Updated Dec 27, 2025

CEC Gyanesh Kumar Calls Booth Officers Backbone of Elections in Odisha Visit

Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar began a multi-day visit to Odisha, emphasizing the critical role of booth-level officers in India's electoral machinery. His trip combines official reviews of election preparedness with personal cultural visits, including to the Jagannath Temple. The visit underscores the Election Commission's focus on strengthening last-mile management ahead of upcoming state polls. Concurrently, the ECI is advancing preparatory work nationwide, including the draft electoral roll release for Tamil Nadu.

Odisha: CEC Gyanesh Kumar highlights role of Booth Level Officers as backbone of electoral process

Bhubaneswar, December 27

Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar on Saturday said that booth-level officers form the backbone of India's electoral machinery, as he began a two-to-three-day visit to Odisha that combines official engagements with outreach to grassroots election functionaries.

"I have come to Odisha with my family to visit the Jagannath temple, to understand and experience the local culture, and also to meet with our booth-level officers, who are the backbone of our election campaign. We will be in Odisha for two to three days," Kumar told reporters in Bhubaneswar.

The CEC's visit underscores the Election Commission of India's focus on strengthening last-mile election management ahead of upcoming state polls across the country. During his stay, Kumar is expected to interact with election officials and BLOs to review preparedness, address operational challenges and reinforce best practices in voter services and roll management.

Earlier on Friday, he met Ina H. Krisnamurthi, Ambassador of Indonesia to India, at Nirvachan Sadan in New Delhi. An official post by the Election Commission of India on X said the meeting was held in Kumar's capacity as Chief Election Commissioner of India and Chairperson of the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (International IDEA).

On December 3, Kumar assumed the Chairship of the Council of Member States of International IDEA for the year 2026.

In recent weeks, Kumar has combined official reviews with field-level interactions across states. Last Saturday, he offered prayers at the Bhagyalakshmi Temple in Hyderabad with his family and later met booth-level officers to discuss measures for strengthening the electoral process and improving efficiency. He also visited the Srisailam Devasthanam and sought the blessings of Lord Shiva and Goddess Parvati.

Meanwhile, the Election Commission of India continues preparatory work for the 2026 Assembly elections. On December 19, the ECI released the draft electoral roll for Tamil Nadu after collecting over 5.43 crore voter enumeration forms. The final electoral roll is scheduled for publication on February 2, 2026, following a Special Intensive Revision exercise conducted nearly five months ahead of the polls.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Rohit P

Good to see focus on ground-level workers. But I hope this visit translates into better resources and training for them. Many BLOs in remote areas work with outdated lists and minimal support. The EC must ensure their efforts are backed by solid tech and logistics.

Arjun K

Combining temple visits with official work shows a nice blend of duty and faith, very Indian. The BLO is indeed the backbone. Last election, ours helped my elderly father vote from home. More power to them!

Sarah B

As an observer, India's electoral process is fascinating in its scale. The reliance on local officers for the "last mile" is a massive undertaking. The international chair role for CEC Kumar is a recognition of that expertise.

Vikram M

The preparation for 2026 elections already starting? That's planning! Hope the focus on BLOs means cleaner voter lists and less hassle on polling day. Jai Hind!

Kavya N

Respectfully, while meeting BLOs is good, the CEC's schedule seems packed with temple tours. The electoral machinery needs constant, focused oversight, not just periodic visits combined with pilgrimage. The work in Tamil Nadu on the draft roll is the real story.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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