The response of the Election Commission of India (ECI) to Rahul Gandhi’s detailed presentation raising specific concerns that go to the very heart of the working of India’s election system is shocking, to say the least. The ECI has no reason to turn this into a slanging match with the Leader of the Opposition.
The ludicrous demand put up by the Chief Electoral Officer of Karnataka and two other states that Gandhi should sign off the charges under oath or apologise to the nation only indicates the unease within the ECI in the face of what to the common eye are credible questions and valid concerns on the integrity of the poll process.
Ideally, it should be in the interest of the ECI to set up a task force and get to the bottom of this in time, in a manner that satisfies all parties and lays all doubts to rest, or results in corrective action. This investigation ought to be no less serious and rigorous than the election process is meant to be.
Election Commission and the trust it must rebuild
After all, what is in doubt is not just the outcome of one seat with fake voters, as Rahul Gandhi has been able to show in the Mahadevapura Assembly segment in Bengaluru, but the very future of Indian democracy. Every Indian, irrespective of political colour or party of preference, would agree that at the heart of India’s constitutional democracy is a national commitment to conducting elections that are regular, free, and fair. These are also the words headlined on the ECI website under its link titled “election management”.
This is now looking more like election mismanagement, less in the sense of slackness and more in the sense of sinister. “Regular, free, and fair” are three non-negotiables required for the integrity of the process. When the fairness of the process is suspect, the regularity of the process becomes meaningless, and ‘free’ becomes a hollow term. Further, as anyone can see, fairness is not only in the formality of the paperwork or in the closed confines of the ECI offices or records. The process must also be seen to be fair, for which we need an ECI that is transparent and sensitive to the fears of those who have increasingly begun to doubt the process, not just now but over the last several years.
It is also surprising that the BJP has come to the rescue of the ECI, which does a disservice to the party as well as to the ECI in that it feeds into other fears of cosiness that further erode trust in the process. The bitterness of the attacks on Rahul Gandhi, including by Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis of the BJP, indicates just how much the exposé has angered the BJP.
History will judge
What should be the road ahead if India is not to collapse as a democracy? First, the election commissioners should commit to the nation that all data on record, including voter lists, polling records, video recordings, all camera feeds, and paper trails, as well as the EVM machines, would be preserved and available for a full-fledged inquiry at any future date. The process of such a preservation should be independently audited, and timelines must now stretch well beyond those specified in rule books, since we are living through unusual circumstances and very serious allegations from the major opposition party. Original files need to be encrypted and vaulted. This would assure the nation that even if something has gone wrong in the field, including any concerted attempt by interested parties to defeat the process, the ECI is serious about getting to the bottom of it. It allows the ECI to separate itself from the political fight and stand apart with professional pride.
Second, there is no reason why soft copies of voter lists should not be made available with immediate effect. If, for some reason, these are not available, prints provided to the Leader of the Opposition ought to be, at a minimum, machine-readable. Why would the ECI not do so? Third, the hastily conducted Bihar Special Intensive Revision (SIR) is fraught.
There is enough material now from the ground to indicate that new names could be added without adequate verification, so that those that may not qualify will become voters, while many marginal groups run the risk of being disenfranchised. Lakhs of names on draft rolls have house numbers reported to be zero. The data on revised rolls has again been made non-machine-readable. Downloading the SIR draft revised rolls shows the zero house numbers in many cases, but it is not possible to count the numbers automatically because the file is not machine-readable.
Given the circumstances, from Rahul Gandhi’s allegations of vote theft to ground reports from Bihar, it appears difficult to escape the thought that there is something very rotten in the system. The ECI leadership should know and understand that this is an important moment in the history of free India. The people in charge of the ECI and how they conduct themselves will be seen not only in today’s context but will also be remembered and recalled years from now. When the very foundations of elections were under threat, what did the most important free institution charged with conducting elections do? What does a free and fair election mean?
Can names be added without due scrutiny or excluded without valid reasons, when house numbers are marked as zero in the tens of thousands in the new list? If the voter list
is vitiated, Indian democracy is effectively erased. India will be stripped of its most valuable jewel – a democratic process that the world admires and every Indian has been proud of. The ECI must act fast.
(The writer is a journalist and faculty member at SPJIMR; Syndicate: The Billion Press)