Rahul Gandhi
NEW DELHI: A group of 272 eminent citizens, comprising 16 judges, 123 retired bureaucrats including 14 former ambassadors, and 133 retired armed forces officers issued an open letter criticising the Lok Sabha leader of opposition Rahul Gandhi and the Congress for what they describe as attempts to undermine constitutional institutions, particularly the Election Commission of India (ECI).The letter, titled Assault on National Constitutional Authorities and dated 18 November 2025, accuses opposition leaders of levelling “venomous rhetoric” against key institutions and using “provocative but unsubstantiated accusations” to further political narratives. It states that after attacking the armed forces, the judiciary, Parliament and constitutional authorities, the opposition has now targeted the ECI with “systematic and conspiratorial attacks.”The signatories said the Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha has repeatedly claimed to possess “open and shut proof” of vote theft, alleging that the ECI is guilty of “treason.” The letter points out that he has threatened officials, saying he will “not spare them,” yet has not filed a formal complaint or supported his allegations with a sworn affidavit.According to the letter, leaders from the Congress, other opposition parties, left-leaning NGOs and “ideologically opinionated scholars” have amplified similar charges, even calling the Commission the “B-team of the BJP.” The signatories argue that these claims collapse upon scrutiny. They note that the ECI has publicly shared its methodology for the Statewide Intensive Revision, conducted court-sanctioned checks, removed ineligible names and added new eligible voters.The letter calls this pattern of allegations “impotent rage,” suggesting it stems from “electoral failure and frustration” rather than evidence. It says opposition parties criticise the ECI only when results do not favour them, calling this “selective outrage” and “opportunism.”The citizens invoke the legacy of former chief election commissioners TN Seshan and N. Gopalaswami, saying they upheld the Commission’s authority with fearlessness and impartiality, and turned it into a “formidable constitutional sentinel.”The letter urges civil society to stand with the ECI “out of conviction, not flattery,” and asks political parties to stop undermining institutions with “baseless allegations and theatrical denunciations.” It also raises concerns about ensuring the integrity of electoral rolls, warning that fake voters and non-citizens should have no role in determining India’s government. The letter compares India’s approach to that of the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, Japan, South Korea, Germany and France, arguing that strong safeguards are essential to preserve democratic stability.The signatories call on the Election Commission to maintain transparency, publish complete data and defend itself legally when required. They also urge political leaders to compete through policy, not accusations, and to accept election outcomes with maturity.The letter concludes by reaffirming faith in the Indian armed forces, judiciary, executive and the Election Commission. It says India’s democratic institutions must not become “political punching bags” and calls for leadership grounded in “truth, ideas and service.” Go to Source
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