CEC Sushil Chandra (centre) with ECs Rajil Kumar (left) and Anup Chandra Pandey.
Raising questions of propriety, Chief Election Commissioner Sushil Chandra and the two Election Commissioners, Rajiv Kumar and Anup Chandra Pandey, despite expressing reservations, joined an online âinteractionâ called by the Prime Ministerâs Office (PMO) on November 16, The Indian Express has learnt.
This was a day after the Election Commission received an unusually worded letter from an official of the Law Ministry â the administrative Ministry of the poll panel â that the Principal Secretary to PM, P K Mishra, will âchair a meetingâ on a common electoral roll and âexpects CECâ to be present.
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Such wording, an official said, caused a flutter in the poll panel since it read like a âsummonsâ that breached precedent and Constitutional norms, said a source.
For, at two previous meetings on the same subject â on August 13 and September 3 last year â EC officials took part, not the Commissioners.
Chandra was unavailable for comment but a senior EC official said that the CEC, on receipt of the note, made his âdispleasureâ felt to the Law Ministry and underlined that he would not attend the meeting. When asked about this note, a Law Ministry official declined to comment.
However, Chandra didnât exactly put his foot down.
CEC Sushil Chandra arrives at Chandigarh airport for a 2-day meeting on the upcoming Punjab elections, on December 15, 2021. (Express Photo)
So, while he and the other two Commissioners stayed away from the video meeting â in which their subordinates were present â as per precedent, the three did join an âinformal interactionâ with Mishra immediately after.
âThey discussed long-pending reforms like multiple cut-off dates to facilitate a common electoral roll. This was done to expedite reforms so that there is no gap in understanding and no delay,â said a senior official. In fact, these were part of the amendments cleared by the Cabinet Wednesday.
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Asked about the propriety of the interaction between the full Commission and the PMO, the senior official said: âThis was informal, not a meeting. The Commissioners did not discuss any matter pertaining to elections (the five Assembly elections for which notification is due soon). This was just for expeditious disposal of electoral reforms.â
Still, the interaction raises questions of Constitutional propriety. For, the three ECs usually maintain an armâs length from the Executive to insulate the functioning of the poll panel, a Constitutional authority, from external pressure.
As a result, the ECâs communication with the government on election matters is usually limited to its administrative ministry, the Law Ministry. On arranging security forces for elections, the EC communicates with the Home Ministry. If and when needed, government officers call on the three Election Commissioners and not the other way round.
CEC Sushil Chandra (centre) with ECs Rajiv Kumar (left) and Anup Chandra Pandey in Chandigarh Thursday. (Express Photo: Kamleshwar Singh)
Incidentally, the single votersâ list for elections to the panchayat, municipality, state Assembly and Parliament is among the promises made by the BJP in its manifesto for the Lok Sabha elections in 2019. It ties in with the partyâs commitment to hold elections simultaneously to the Lok Sabha, state Assemblies and local bodies, also mentioned in its manifesto.
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The incumbent government has pitched for a common electoral roll and simultaneous elections as a way to save an enormous amount of effort and expenditure.
This pitch for a single votersâ list is not new.
The Law Commission recommended it in its 255th report in 2015. The EC, too, has called for a common electoral roll in 1999 and 2004.
Currently, at least 29 states and UTs use the ECâs votersâ list for local body elections. While some have adopted it in totality, others use the EC roll as the basis for preparation and revision of rolls for municipality and panchayat elections.
Ritika Chopra, an award-winning journalist with over 17 years of experience, serves as the Chief of the National Bureau (Govt) and National Education Editor at The Indian Express in New Delhi. In her current role, she oversees the newspaper's coverage of government policies and education. Ritika closely tracks the Union Government, focusing on the politically sensitive Election Commission of India and the Education Ministry, and has authored investigative stories that have prompted government responses.
Ritika joined The Indian Express in 2015. Previously, she was part of the political bureau at The Economic Times, Indiaâs largest financial daily. Her journalism career began in Kolkata, her birthplace, with the Hindustan Times in 2006 as an intern, before moving to Delhi in 2007. Since then, she has been reporting from the capital on politics, education, social sectors, and the Election Commission of India. ... Read More