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The Election Commission of Indias (ECI) Special Intensive Revision (SIR), an exercise intended to clean electoral rolls, has become the epicentre of a significant political controversy. Opposition parties across several states are questioning the timing, intent, and execution of SIR, alleging it is being used by the BJP-led Centre to manipulate voter lists and selectively remove names unfavourable to the ruling party.
In Tamil Nadu, Chief Minister M.K. Stalin has strongly opposed the SIR, terming it a "targeted political plot" aimed at removing vulnerable groups, including minorities, women, and working-class voters, ahead of the 2026 assembly elections.
He highlighted a precedent in Bihar where similar deletions under SIR affected over 65 lakh people, urging DMK cadres to protect voting rights.
Concurrently, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has criticised both the EC and the BJP-led central government. She alleges that SIR could serve as a "backdoor mechanism" to implement the National Register of Citizens (NRC), with the TMC vowing to prevent arbitrary deletion of voters names.
Despite the EC's insistence that SIR is a routine technical process, political tensions are mounting, raising serious questions about voter rights, transparency, and the integrity of the electoral process as the 2026 assembly elections approach.