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Electoral Reforms In India

[21st August 2025] The Hindu Op-ed: India’s democracy is failing the migrant citizen

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2022] Discuss the role of the Election Commission of India in the light of the evolution of the Model Code of Conduct.”

Linkage: Just as the Model Code of Conduct (MCC) evolved as a tool by the Election Commission of India (ECI) to ensure free and fair elections in a changing political landscape, the present crisis of migrant disenfranchisement in Bihar shows the need for the ECI to evolve its mechanisms to safeguard inclusivity similarly. The deletion of 3.5 million migrant voters highlights that electoral integrity today is not only about regulating political behaviour (through MCC) but also about ensuring universal participation by adapting to realities of circular migration, dual belonging, and portable identities. Strengthening ECI’s role in creating mobile and flexible voter registration systems, like Kerala’s migration surveys or cross-State verification, would be a natural extension of its democratic mandate.

Mentor’s Comment

The article highlights a silent but serious crisis unfolding in Bihar, where nearly 3.5 million voters, largely migrants, have been deleted from electoral rolls due to the Special Intensive Revision (SIR). This not only exposes flaws in India’s electoral infrastructure but also deepens the democratic deficit in migrant-heavy States. For UPSC aspirants, this issue links to democracy, citizenship, federalism, migration, and social justice, making it highly relevant for GS 2 (Polity & Governance) and GS 1 (Society).

Introduction

In a democracy of 1.4 billion citizens, every vote matters. Yet, millions of India’s migrant workers are quietly being left out of the democratic process. In Bihar, where migration is both an economic lifeline and a survival strategy, the recent mass deletion of 3.5 million voters (4.4% of the total electoral roll) raises critical questions about representation, inclusivity, and the design of India’s electoral system. The crisis is not an isolated administrative lapse but a systemic failure rooted in an outdated model of citizenship tied to permanent residence, ignoring the realities of circular and seasonal migration.

The disenfranchisement of Bihar’s migrants in the news

  1. Mass deletion: Nearly 3.5 million voters were deleted under the Special Intensive Revision (SIR).
  2. Reason given: “Permanently migrated”, migrants absent during house-to-house verification.
  3. Permanent loss of rights: These voters cannot vote either in host States (where they work) or in home States (where their names are deleted).
  4. Democratic rupture: Bihar’s voter turnout is already low, 53.2% in the last four Assembly elections, compared to 66.4% in Gujarat and 70.7% in Karnataka.
  5. Scale of migration: 7 million annual outflow from Bihar, of which 4.8 million migrate seasonally. Around 2.7 million return during October–November festivals, yet many will be unable to vote this year.

Electoral system and the migrant challenge in India

  1. Sedentary citizen model: Voter registration tied to proof of residence and in-person verification.
  2. Documentation barriers: Migrants often live in rented rooms, construction sites, or slums with no accepted address proof.
  3. Regionalism & exclusion: Migrants in host States are seen as “outsiders” with fears of electoral influence discouraging registration.
  4. Dual belonging demonised: Migrants contribute economically in host States but are denied political identity both at origin and destination.

Studies revealing migrant exclusion in electoral participation

  1. TISS Study (2015): “Inclusive Elections in India” (funded by ECI) confirmed marginalisation of migrants.
  2. Triple burden: Administrative barriers, digital illiteracy, social exclusion.
  3. Correlation: Higher migration = Lower voter turnout in source States.
  4. Mobile data estimates: 7 million circular migrants annually from Bihar, proving large-scale exclusion.

Welfare exclusions and the migrant voting crisis

  • One Nation One Ration Card Scheme (2019):
    1. Limited uptake: only 3.3 lakh households from Bihar availed portability by May 2025.
    2. Barriers: Dual residency, bureaucratic hurdles, fear of losing entitlements.
    3. Parallel with voter IDs: migrants keep origin-based documents for security.
  1. Cross-border complexities: Along the 1,751 km India-Nepal border, traditional “roti-beti” ties now face exclusion due to restrictive documentation, disproportionately affecting women.

Reforms to safeguard migrant voting rights

  1. Portable voter identity: Mobile, flexible, and portable voter ID system.
  2. Cross-verification model: Coordination between origin and destination States to prevent disenfranchisement.
  3. Local bodies’ role: Panchayats and civil society to aid migrant re-registration.
  4. Kerala model of migration surveys: Replicate in high-migration States like Bihar and UP.
  5. Immediate halt to blanket deletions: Safeguard against the “largest silent voter purge in post-Independence India.”

Conclusion

Migrants embody India’s paradox, economic backbone but political invisibility. The deletion of millions of voters from Bihar is not just an administrative failure; it is a systemic denial of democratic rights. If India’s electoral infrastructure does not adapt to the realities of migration, democracy risks leaving behind its most hard-working and vulnerable citizens. Ensuring portable electoral rights is not charity, it is the essence of a living democracy.

Value Addition

Constitutional and Legal Angle

  • Article 326: Provides for universal adult suffrage — any exclusion of migrant workers undermines this fundamental principle.
  • Representation of People Act, 1950 & 1951: While they govern electoral rolls and voting procedures, they are silent on portable voting rights for internal migrants.
  • Supreme Court in PUCL vs Union of India (2003): Declared the right to vote as part of freedom of expression under Article 19(1)(a). Denial to migrants raises constitutional concerns.

Scale of the Problem – National Context

  • Census 2011: 45.6 crore internal migrants in India (37% of the population).
  • Economic Survey 2017: ~9 million people migrate annually for work, education, or marriage.
  • Migrants form a huge electoral constituency, yet remain politically invisible.

Policy/Election Commission (EC) Initiatives Beyond Bihar

  • EC’s Remote Voting Machine (RVM) Proposal, 2023: Aimed to allow migrants to vote from remote locations, but postponed after opposition from political parties.
  • E-EPIC (Electronic Voter Photo ID Card), 2021: Step toward portability but lacks full integration across States.

Comparative Global Insights

  • Philippines: Overseas absentee voting law enables migrants abroad to vote in national elections.
  • Mexico: Postal voting rights for citizens abroad.
  • South Africa: Mobile registration and voting stations in migrant-dense areas.
  • India lags in creating portable political rights for its massive migrant population.

Democratic & Governance Implications

  • Political alienation → weakens democratic legitimacy in migrant-heavy States (Bihar, UP, Odisha).
  • Rise of sub-nationalism → exclusion in host States deepens identity politics.
  • Urban governance: Migrants in cities are tax contributors (indirectly via consumption) but lack political representation → urban policies ignore their needs.

Ethical & Social Justice Dimension

  • Ambedkar’s warning: “Political democracy cannot last unless… social democracy is its foundation.” Excluding the poor migrants fractures this balance.
  • Gandhian perspective: True Swaraj is when “the last man” (Antyodaya principle) participates in democracy — migrant exclusion violates this ethic.

Mapping Microthemes

  • GS Paper I (Society): Migration, regionalism, exclusion of vulnerable groups.
  • GS Paper II (Polity & Governance): Electoral reforms, federal coordination, democratic rights.
  • GS Paper III (Economy): Migration as economic survival strategy.
  • GS Paper IV (Ethics): Justice, fairness, and democratic inclusivity.

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