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SC seeks ECI response on plea to cross-verify vote count in EVMs with VVPATs

During the hearing, the bench asked advocate Prashant Bhushan, appearing for the NGO, if one is not sometimes over suspicious.
shish Tripathi
Last Updated : 17 July 2023, 11:36 IST
Last Updated : 17 July 2023, 11:36 IST
Last Updated : 17 July 2023, 11:36 IST
Last Updated : 17 July 2023, 11:36 IST

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The Supreme Court on Monday sought a response from Election Commission on a plea to cross verify the count in EVMs with votes that have been verifiably ‘recorded as cast’ by the voters themselves, ie, the VVPATs.

A bench of Justices Sanjiv Khanna and Bela M Trivedi sought a reply from the poll panel on a PIL by NGO Association for Democratic Reforms.

During the hearing, the bench asked advocate Prashant Bhushan, appearing for the NGO, if one is not sometimes over suspicious.

On this, Bhushan contended that sometimes the registers and the vote counts do not match, as only a few VVPATs are tallied with EVM vote counts.

The bench finally decided to examine the matter.

The plea sought a direction to the EC to give full effect to the purport and object of the Supreme Court’s directions issued in 'Subramanian Swamy vs Election Commission of India' (2013).

The court had then “taking note of the advantage in the system” without insisting on any incontrovertible proof of errors or manipulation and in order to “have fullest transparency in the system and to restore the confidence of the voters”, had held that “‘paper trail’ is an indispensable requirement of free and fair elections” and directed the ECI to introduce Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail (VVPAT) in Electronic Voting Machines.

However, only due the last minute nature of the proceedings in 'N Chandrababu Naidu vs Union of India', (2019), the Supreme Court, keeping in mind that the ECI had, “pointed out infrastructure difficulties, including manpower availability, at this point of time, in increasing the number of EVMs for verification” had directed the latter to count VVPATs in five polling stations per assembly constituency as opposed to the prayer in the writ petition for counting of 50 per cent VVPATs across the country.

The court had then also said that “the proximity to the election schedule announced by the EC must be kept in mind" and the poll panel had also said that because of this “declaration of result of election could be delayed by 5-6 days".

The plea stated, "The requirement of the voter verifying that her vote has been ‘recorded as cast’ is somewhat met when the VVPAT slip is displayed for about seven seconds after pressing of the button on the EVM through a transparent window for the voter to verify that her vote has been ‘recorded as cast’ on the internally printed VVPAT slip before the slip falls into a ‘ballot box’”.

However, there is a complete vacuum in law as the EC has provided no procedure for the voter to verify that their vote has been ‘counted as recorded’, which is an indispensable part of voter verifiability. “The failure of the EC to provide for the same is in the teeth of purport and object of the directions issued by this court in paragraphs 28 and 29 of Subramanian Swamy case, (2013)," the plea said.

The plea argued that the prevalent procedure, wherein the ECI only counts electronically recorded votes in all of the EVMs and cross verifies the relevant EVMs with the VVPATs in only five randomly selected polling stations in each assembly constituency, is inadequate.

“The electronic recording of the voter’s choice in the EVM does not meet the criteria of vote being verified as ‘recorded as cast’ as the voter only verifies the VVPAT; There is no way for any of the voters to verify that their individual vote has actually been ‘counted as recorded’ because there is no procedure provided for by the EC for them to match the VVPATs that they had certified as being ‘recorded as cast’ with what is actually counted,” the plea stated.

The plea also sought a direction to declare as unconstitutional the Conduct of Election Rules, 1961, and the practice and procedure of ECI to the extent that they violate the fundamental right of the voters to verify through VVPATs that their vote has been ‘recorded as cast’ and ‘counted as recorded'.

The plea also pointed out that during the 2019 general elections, there were EC acknowledged instances where there was variance in the results captured in the EVMs and that of the VVPATs.

To illustrate, it said that during mandatory verification of VVPAT, paper slips of five randomly selected polling stations in Andhra Pradesh's polling station No 63 of Mydukur assembly constituency in the 2019 general elections, the returning officer officially verified that there was a discrepancy of 14 votes in the EVM and VVPAT counts.

“The EVM count was 233 votes whereas the VVPAT count was 219 votes. In other words, 6 per cent of the counted votes in that EVM had not been cast. The Returning Officer of the constituency later clarified that the discrepancy is true and was due to non-clearance of votes polled in the mock-poll conducted at 7 am on the polling day from the EVM," the plea said.

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Published 17 July 2023, 11:36 IST

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