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Supreme Court Permits Deployment of Judicial Officers for Electoral Roll Verification in Bengal

Supreme Court Permits Deployment of Judicial Officers for Electoral Roll Verification in Bengal


PTI, Feb 24, 2026, New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Tuesday permitted the Calcutta High Court Chief Justice to deploy civil judges and also requisition judicial officers from neighbouring Jharkhand and Odisha to deal with 80 lakh claims and objections in the ongoing Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls in West Bengal.

A bench of Chief Justice Surya Kant and Justices Joymalya Bagchi and Vipul M. Pancholi took note of a letter by the Calcutta High Court Chief Justice that said 250 district judges deployed in the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercise will take around 80 days to deal with the claims and objections.

Taking note of the grim situation and the time constraints, the bench permitted the deployment of civil judges to conduct the process. It asked the Calcutta High Court Chief Justice to request his Jharkhand and Odisha counterparts and requisition judicial officers of similar ranks to deal with the situation. It directed the Election Commission (EC) to bear the expenses for deploying judicial officers from Jharkhand and Odisha.

The apex court also allowed the EC to publish the final electoral roll on February 28, and clarified that the poll panel can issue supplementary lists as the verification process proceeds. It exercised plenary powers under Article 142 to enlist voters in the supplementary electoral rolls to be part of the February 28 final list published by the poll panel.

The logical discrepancies in progeny linking with the 2002 voter list include instances of a mismatch in the parent's name and the age difference between a voter and his/her parent being less than 15 years or more than 50 years.

On February 20, 2026, dismayed over the ongoing tussle between the West Bengal government and the EC, the top court issued an "extraordinary" direction to deploy serving and former district judges to assist the poll panel in the controversy-ridden SIR exercise in the state.

Ruing the "unfortunate blame game" and the "trust deficit" between the EC and the "democratically elected" Trinamool Congress government in Bengal, the bench passed a slew of fresh directions to ensure the completion of the SIR exercise.

The Trinamool Congress and BJP both hailed the Supreme Court's Tuesday order. The TMC blamed the Election Commission's "arrogant attitude" for such a situation, while the BJP accused TMC of deliberately plotting to stall SIR by delaying the process from the outset.

Describing the SC order as another resounding victory for "Bengal's Maa-Mati-Manush" in the Supreme Court, the TMC said in a post on X handle: "the EC's arrogant stranglehold on Bengal's SIR process has been decisively snapped."

The TMC claimed Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee "demanded and fought for tooth and nail" to safeguard people's rights to cast vote, and "the SC has now taken the reins, stripping the ECI of its unchecked discretion."

Squarely blaming TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee and other party functionaries, BJP state president Samik Bhattacharya said the order of the SC that the judicial officers from two other neighbouring states should also be deployed in the SIR exercise means the "highest court in the country has no faith in the Bengal administration."

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