Sunday, April 12, 2026
26.1 C
New Delhi

Bengal SIR: TMC Vows Democratic Protest, Cautions Against ‘Trap’; BJP Welcomes Move To ‘Weed Out Infiltrators’

Show Quick Read

Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom

Bengal SIR: The Election Commission’s decision to launch a special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in West Bengal has triggered a political face-off between the ruling Trinamool Congress (TMC) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). While the TMC alleged that the move could be used to strike off genuine voters’ names at the BJP’s behest, the saffron party welcomed the exercise as a means to eliminate “illegal voters”.

According to the Election Commission of India (ECI), the second phase of the SIR will be conducted across 12 states and Union Territories — including West Bengal — from November 4, with draft rolls to be published on December 9 and final rolls on February 7. Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) Gyanesh Kumar said the exercise would cover about 51 crore voters and aims to ensure that “no eligible elector is left out and no ineligible elector is included”.

TMC Raises Concerns Over ‘Deletion of Eligible Voters’

Reacting sharply to the ECI’s announcement, Trinamool Congress spokesperson Kunal Ghosh said his party would “democratically protest” any attempt to remove legitimate voters from the rolls.

“If any attempts are being made to delete the names of any eligible voter, there will be protests. We have no problem with electoral roll revision, but in the name of it, if someone tries to delete the name of any eligible voter at the behest of the BJP, we will protest democratically,” Ghosh said, as quoted by news agency PTI.

He urged the people of West Bengal to remain calm and not “fall into the trap of the BJP”.

“We would urge everyone to maintain calm and not fall into the trap of the BJP. Just remember that West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee and TMC national general secretary Abhishek Banerjee are with the people of West Bengal,” he added.

BJP Welcomes ECI’s Move, Calls It a Step to Weed Out Illegal Voters

The BJP, on the other hand, described the ECI’s move as a necessary step to clean up the voters’ list.

Leader of Opposition Suvendu Adhikari said the revision would expose infiltrators who allegedly form a part of the TMC’s vote base.

“No illegal voters will be spared. Those who are legitimate voters have nothing to fear. But the infiltrators, who are the vote bank of the TMC, will be weeded out,” Adhikari told PTI.

Echoing the sentiment, Union Minister and former West Bengal BJP president Sukanta Majumdar said the SIR process had been long announced by the ECI and would proceed as scheduled.

“SIR was announced today in 12 states, including Bengal, and the process will start from tomorrow. The Election Commission had already announced that SIR was going to happen. Some people were jumping around in Bengal over this… now let’s see what those people will do because SIR has to happen anyway. Even before this, SIR has been done 12 times,” Majumdar said, as quoted by ANI from North 24 Parganas.

‘No Hurdles in Bengal’: CEC Gyanesh Kumar on Implementation

Amid political sparring, CEC Gyanesh Kumar clarified that there would be “no hurdles” in carrying out the SIR in West Bengal, as state governments are constitutionally obliged to cooperate with the Election Commission.

“There is no hurdle. The EC is doing its duty and state governments are constitutionally bound to discharge their duties… all constitutional bodies carry out their responsibility as enshrined in the Constitution,” he said, citing Article 324.

Kumar further stated that maintaining law and order is a state responsibility, adding that governments must provide the necessary personnel to the ECI for electoral roll preparation and the conduct of polls.

The West Bengal Chief Electoral Officer is scheduled to hold a press conference on Tuesday at 6 pm to address details of the upcoming revision process.

The SIR marks the ninth such nationwide exercise since Independence — the last one conducted between 2002 and 2004. West Bengal last underwent a special intensive revision in 2002.

Go to Source

Hot this week

Sindarov on verge of confirming Gukesh showdown as Vaishali’s Round 12 loss leaves Women’s Candidates wide open

Javokhir Sindarov continues to lead by two points in the ‘Open’ category of the 2026 Fide Candidates in Cyprus after his draw in Round 12. Read More

With 10.9% net voter deletions, Bengal 5th among 12 states, UTs

NEW DELHI: West Bengal, which has seen the most noise against SIR, ranked fifth in terms of net deletions (10. Read More

US will ‘probably’ need to use special forces to get Iran’s uranium, says Nikki Haley

Former Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley said that the United States will “probably” have to deploy special forces to secure Iran’s uranium stockpile. Read More

‘Not well received’: Trump says he once considered renaming Gulf of Mexico as ‘Gulf of Trump’

Trump has said he once considered renaming the Gulf of Mexico as the “Gulf of Trump” but later dropped the idea, acknowledging it would likely not have been well received. Read More

Amarnath yatra from July 3 to August 28, registration begins on April 15

JAMMU: The annual pilgrimage to the cave shrine of Amarnath will start on July 3 and continue for 57 days, concluding on Raksha Bandhan on Aug 28.“Pilgrims between the ages of 13 and 70 can undertake the yatra. Read More

Topics

Sindarov on verge of confirming Gukesh showdown as Vaishali’s Round 12 loss leaves Women’s Candidates wide open

Javokhir Sindarov continues to lead by two points in the ‘Open’ category of the 2026 Fide Candidates in Cyprus after his draw in Round 12. Read More

With 10.9% net voter deletions, Bengal 5th among 12 states, UTs

NEW DELHI: West Bengal, which has seen the most noise against SIR, ranked fifth in terms of net deletions (10. Read More

US will ‘probably’ need to use special forces to get Iran’s uranium, says Nikki Haley

Former Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley said that the United States will “probably” have to deploy special forces to secure Iran’s uranium stockpile. Read More

‘Not well received’: Trump says he once considered renaming Gulf of Mexico as ‘Gulf of Trump’

Trump has said he once considered renaming the Gulf of Mexico as the “Gulf of Trump” but later dropped the idea, acknowledging it would likely not have been well received. Read More

Amarnath yatra from July 3 to August 28, registration begins on April 15

JAMMU: The annual pilgrimage to the cave shrine of Amarnath will start on July 3 and continue for 57 days, concluding on Raksha Bandhan on Aug 28.“Pilgrims between the ages of 13 and 70 can undertake the yatra. Read More

J&K: 3 Kashmir varsities end MOUs with US NGO after ‘security concerns’

SRINAGAR: Three universities in Kashmir have terminated academic agreements with a US-based NGO, Kashmir Care Foundation (KCF), following internal reviews amid a buzz that intelligence agencies had flagged concerns over its activities Read More

We’ve been doing catch-up rather than leading the game: MI skipper Hardik Pandya

Mumbai, Apr 12 (PTI): Mumbai Indians skipper Hardik Pandya admitted his side needs to introspect and build momentum after losing to Royal Challengers Bengaluru fair and square in an IPL match here on Sunday. Read More

Delhi: Cop stabbed by burglars during raid, both accused held

New Delhi, Apr 12 (PTI): An assistant sub-inspector was injured after two alleged burglars attacked a Delhi Police team with a knife during an early morning raid in west Delhi’s Hari Nagar area on Sunday, an official said. Read More

Related Articles