Bengal's Electoral Crisis: Mamata Warns CEC Over Dangerous Voter Revision

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has written a strongly worded letter to the Chief Election Commissioner expressing grave concerns about the ongoing Special Intensive Revision. She described the exercise as "unplanned, chaotic, and dangerous" while highlighting multiple systemic failures. The CM emphasized that Booth Level Officers are struggling with impossible workloads and inadequate training. She urgently requested the Election Commission to halt the revision process to prevent irreversible consequences for the electoral system.

Key Points: Mamata Banerjee Urges CEC to Halt Bengal Voter Revision

  • CM warns SIR exercise threatens electoral integrity and democratic framework
  • BLOs operating beyond human limits with inadequate training and support
  • Unrealistic timelines and server failures crippling the revision process
  • Lack of basic preparedness and clear communication from day one
3 min read

SIR being carried out in dangerous manner in Bengal: Mamata Banerjee to CEC

West Bengal CM writes to Election Commission, calling Special Intensive Revision "chaotic and dangerous" while requesting immediate suspension of the exercise.

"The manner in which this exercise is being forced upon officials and citizens is not only unplanned and chaotic, but also dangerous - Mamata Banerjee"

Kolkata, Nov 20

West Bengal Chief Minister, Mamata Banerjee, on Thursday wrote to the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC), Gyanesh Kumar, objecting to Special Intensive Revision (SIR), claiming that the manner in which the exercise is being forced upon the electoral officials and citizens is “unplanned”, “chaotic” and “dangerous”.

“I have time and again flagged my serious concerns in respect of the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR) and the way it has been thrust upon the people,” she said.

The Chief Minister said that she is being compelled to write as the situation surrounding the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR) has reached a deeply alarming stage.

“The manner in which this exercise is being forced upon officials and citizens is not only unplanned and chaotic, but also dangerous,” she said.

The Chief Minister said that the absence of even basic preparedness, adequate planning, or clear communication has crippled the process from day one.

The Chief Minister also requested the CEC to put on hold the SIR exercise in order to avoid more drastic consequences in the future.

“I would request you to kindly intervene decisively to halt the ongoing exercise, stop coercive measures, provide proper training and support, and thoroughly reassess the present methodology and timelines,” she said.

The Chief Minister said that if this path is not corrected without delay, the consequences for the system, the officials, and the citizens will be irreversible.

“This intervention is not only necessary but imperative to protect the integrity of the electoral process and our democratic framework,” the Chief Minister’s letter read.

She said that the process lacks critical gaps in training, the lack of clarity on mandatory documentation, and the near-impossibility of meeting voters in the midst of their livelihood schedules have made the exercise structurally unsound.

The Chief Minister further said that while she deeply appreciated the strenuous efforts put in by the BLOs under these extremely pressing circumstances and huge workload, it could not be denied that the BLOs were not provided adequate training, support, and time required for undertaking a mammoth exercise of this nature.

She said that the unrealistic workload, impossible timelines, inadequate support, and the pressure of data entry have collectively placed the entire process and its credibility at severe risk.

“BLOs are now operating far beyond human limits. They are expected to manage their principal duties (many being teachers and frontline workers) while simultaneously conducting door-to-door surveys and handling complex e-submissions,” she said.

The Chief Minister said that most are struggling with online forms due to a lack of training, server failures, and repeated data mismatches.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
While I appreciate the concerns, this seems like political posturing before elections. The Election Commission needs to conduct voter revision properly. Both sides should work together instead of blaming each other.
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Arjun K
As a teacher who's also serving as BLO, I can confirm the situation is chaotic. We're expected to manage classes and this massive survey simultaneously. The online portal keeps crashing and no proper training was given. System needs fixing!
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Sarah B
Living in Kolkata, I haven't seen any BLO visit our area yet. If the process is so disorganized, how can we trust the voter list accuracy? This affects our fundamental democratic rights.
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Vikram M
The timing is all wrong! With festivals and winter harvest season, people are busy. BLOs coming during odd hours when no one is home. Proper planning would have avoided this mess completely. 😠
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Michael C
Having worked on electoral processes in other states, I can say West Bengal's situation seems particularly challenging. The combination of complex geography and tight deadlines creates perfect conditions for failure. The EC should reconsider the approach.

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