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Electoral bonds: ‘Matching’ code may be missing, but petitioners hope for ‘quid pro quo’ trends

On March 15, the Election Commission of India will compile its data on electoral bonds issued from April 12, 2019 to February 15, 2024. What kind of data will be made available to the public, exactly?

Electoral Bonds: One of the SBI Branch in Delhi.A petitioner, told The Indian Express they were expecting the Unique Number assigned by SBI on both the silos of data. (Express photo by Shivam Kumar Jha)

When the Election Commission of India compiles and puts out on March 15 the data on electoral bonds provided to it by the State Bank of India, details on the bonds issued from April 12, 2019 to February 15, 2024, will be available in public domain in two separate lists.

One list will have the date of purchase of bonds, name of purchaser, and the denomination for each bond; the other will provide the details of every bond encashed by political parties, the date of encashment, and the denomination of the bond.

What is not expected to be made public is the unique alphanumeric code printed on each electoral bond that is only visible under certain light. This, according to SBI, was not recorded in the system. Former Finance Secretary Subhash Chandra Garg, who was Economic Affairs Secretary when the Electoral Bond scheme was formulated in 2017, said the unique code on each bond was a security feature and not recorded either at the time of sale, or at the time of depositing by a political party.

Without this, it would be impossible to match the donor with the party, he said.

But petitioners and lawyers arguing the case in the Supreme Court are hopeful there would be enough evidence in the datasets to establish quid pro quo. Senior lawyer Prashant Bhushan, who represented the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR), a petitioner, told The Indian Express they were expecting the Unique Number assigned by SBI on both the silos of data (the donor details and the purchaser details) to be made public.

“The whole purpose of the exercise is that the voters should know who is funding whom. The SBI has both sets of Unique Numbers and they will have to give them along with the donor and buyer data sheets. Otherwise we will again file a contempt petition against the SBI,” Bhushan said. While the Supreme Court said there was no need for SBI to do the “matching exercise” or “correlate it with the purchaser and the political party”, his interpretation is this could easily be done by others subsequently.

Jagdeep Chhokar, Founding Member and Trustee, ADR, the organisation that has been campaigning for transparency in election funding, was more circumspect, but said this would be enough to establish “obvious quid pro quos”.

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He told The Indian Express they were gearing up to conduct forensics on the SBI data, depending on what the disclosures were. “We don’t expect watertight proof but yes, broad trends in funding will emerge. I am confident some amount of matching will be possible if no major obstacles and roadblocks exist in the data or have been created in it. If that be the case, we will take whatever constitutional actions are available to us,” he said.

According to him, once the date of purchase of an electoral bond by a donor was available (since the instrument had to be redeemed within 15 days) along with the date of encashment by a political party, “ several co-relations can be established”. For instance, he said, connections can be drawn with changes in government policy and the donations or actions by investigating and enforcement agencies prior to the electoral bonds being purchased.

The details of the bonds sold and encashed before April 12, 2019, were given to the Supreme Court in a sealed cover earlier as per its interim order in 2019. On Monday, the Supreme Court asked the ECI to make that earlier set of data public as well. The disclosures from all political parties about receipt of bonds, lying in a sealed box with the EC and later in the top court’s registry, was opened in court Monday, and ordered to be put up on EC website.

Commodore Lokesh Batra (Retd), an activist whose replies obtained through RTI have been used extensively by the petitioners in the case said, the court’s decision to include the disclosure of the receipts supplied by all political parties was a “tactically correct” move by the apex court.

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“What political parties have submitted and what the SBI will give can easily be matched. There should be no discrepancies. The Supreme Court has hinted to the SBI that they too should reveal everything since this data is also going to be made public,” he said.

Damini Nath is an Assistant Editor with the national bureau of The Indian Express. She covers the housing and urban affairs and Election Commission beats. She has 11 years of experience as a reporter and sub-editor. Before joining The Indian Express in 2022, she was a reporter with The Hindu’s national bureau covering culture, social justice, housing and urban affairs and the Election Commission. ... Read More

Ritu Sarin is Executive Editor (News and Investigations) at The Indian Express group. Her areas of specialisation include internal security, money laundering and corruption. Sarin is one of India’s most renowned reporters and has a career in journalism of over four decades. She is a member of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) since 1999 and since early 2023, a member of its Board of Directors. She has also been a founder member of the ICIJ Network Committee (INC). She has, to begin with, alone, and later led teams which have worked on ICIJ’s Offshore Leaks, Swiss Leaks, the Pulitzer Prize winning Panama Papers, Paradise Papers, Implant Files, Fincen Files, Pandora Papers, the Uber Files and Deforestation Inc. She has conducted investigative journalism workshops and addressed investigative journalism conferences with a specialisation on collaborative journalism in several countries. ... Read More

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