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Supreme Court Upholds Bihar Special Intensive Revision of Electoral Rolls

Supreme Court upholds Bihar Special Intensive Revision on 27 May 2026. Know SIR vs SSR, Article 324, Section 21(3) RPA 1950, ECI powers, and key facts for UPSC & SSC exams.

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📅 May 2026
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“The superintendence, direction and control of the preparation of the electoral rolls… shall be vested in the Election Commission.” — Article 324, Constitution of India

On 27 May 2026, the Supreme Court of India unanimously upheld the constitutional validity of the Election Commission of India’s (ECI) Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in Bihar. The judgment was delivered by a bench of Chief Justice of India Surya Kant, Justice Joymalya Bagchi, and Justice Vipul Pancholi, after nearly seven months of hearings across 29 hearing days. The case had been reserved for judgment on 29 January 2026.

The ruling settles a heated constitutional debate that began in June 2025, when the ECI notified the SIR ahead of the Bihar Assembly Elections held in November 2025. The court held that the SIR furthers the constitutional mandate under Article 324, within the precise contours provided by Section 21(3) of the Representation of the People Act, 1950. The Bihar SIR covered approximately 7.9 crore registered voters; the final roll comprised 7.42 crore electors — a net reduction of approximately 48 lakh names.

7.42 cr Final Bihar Electoral Roll
~48L Net Reduction in Names
29 Hearing Days (7 Months)
10+ Petitions Filed Against SIR
📊 Quick Reference
Judgment Date 27 May 2026
Bench CJI Surya Kant, Justice Joymalya Bagchi, Justice Vipul Pancholi
Verdict Unanimous — SIR upheld as constitutional
Lead Petitioner Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR)
Legal Basis Affirmed Article 324 + Section 21(3), RPA 1950
Reserved for Judgment 29 January 2026

🗳️ What is the Special Intensive Revision (SIR)?

The Special Intensive Revision is an extraordinary electoral roll revision exercise authorised under Section 21(3) of the Representation of the People Act, 1950. It is distinct from the routine Special Summary Revision (SSR), which is conducted annually and involves limited updating. An SIR is a comprehensive, house-to-house re-enumeration requiring all voters — including those already on the rolls — to resubmit their details and in some cases produce identity documents to establish eligibility.

The Bihar SIR was notified on 24 June 2025. The last SIR in Bihar was conducted in 2003 — over four decades earlier. The ECI cited:

  • Rapid urbanisation and large-scale internal migration causing duplication across constituencies
  • Systematic under-registration and over-registration in certain segments
  • Over four decades since the last intensive revision
  • Concerns about non-citizens being registered in border districts
24 Jun 2025
ECI notifies Bihar SIR; last SIR in Bihar was in 2003 — over 4 decades earlier
1 Jul 2025
House-to-house enumeration commences; form submission deadline: 25 July 2025
1 Aug 2025
Draft electoral roll published; 16.59 lakh citizens submit Form-6 for inclusion
14 Aug 2025
SC directs ECI to allow Aadhaar use by excluded voters to challenge omissions during claims period
30 Sep 2025
Final electoral roll published — 7.42 crore electors; ~65 lakh names removed (deceased, shifted, duplicate)
6 & 11 Nov 2025
Bihar Assembly Elections held (two phases); NDA wins 200+ of 243 seats
29 Jan 2026
SC bench reserves judgment after 29 hearing days across ~7 months
27 May 2026
SC unanimously upholds Bihar SIR; affirms ECI’s power under Article 324 + Section 21(3), RPA 1950
🎯 Simple Explanation

Think of an SIR as a school re-registration exercise. Every year the school updates its register (SSR = annual routine). But after 40 years, the school decides to restart from scratch — every student must re-enrol with fresh documents (SIR). Some students who were listed but moved away, or were never eligible, get dropped. New students get added. The final register is cleaner. The SIR is this “re-registration from scratch” for Bihar’s voter rolls.

Feature Special Summary Revision (SSR) Special Intensive Revision (SIR)
Frequency Annual (routine) Extraordinary — triggered by specific need
Legal basis Section 21(2), RPA 1950 Section 21(3), RPA 1950
Scope Limited update of existing rolls House-to-house re-enumeration; all voters re-verify
Documentation Standard; relies on existing records Requires fresh submission; 11 documents for new enrollees
Scale Incremental changes Comprehensive — can result in large-scale additions/deletions

⚖️ Petitions Challenging the SIR

Over ten petitions were filed, with the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) as the lead petitioner. Others included People’s Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL), activist Yogendra Yadav, and MPs from RJD, TMC, Congress, NCP (SP), CPI, Samajwadi Party, Shiv Sena (UBT), JMM, and CPI (ML).

Grounds of challenge:

  • Violated Articles 14, 19, 21, 325, and 326 of the Constitution and Rule 21A of the Registration of Electors Rules, 1960
  • Exclusion of Aadhaar, ration cards, and Voter ID (EPIC) from acceptable documents placed unreasonable burden on the poor, Dalits, extremely backward communities, and migrant workers
  • Shifted the burden of proof from the State to the citizen to establish voting eligibility
  • Compressed timeline (~2 months) made it impossible for marginalised voters to secure inclusion before November 2025 elections
  • Conducted in a poll-bound state at short notice, without adequate prior consultation

On 10 July 2025, an early bench urged the ECI to consider accepting Aadhaar, ration cards, and EPIC. On 14 August 2025, the court directed the ECI to allow Aadhaar use by excluded voters to challenge their omissions during the claims period.

⚠️ Exam Trap

SIR vs SSR: Section 21(2) governs routine Special Summary Revision; Section 21(3) governs the Special Intensive Revision. The court upheld the SIR under Section 21(3), not Section 21(2). Do not confuse the two. Also note: the ECI initially excluded Aadhaar from the 11 acceptable documents — but the court later directed ECI to allow Aadhaar for challenging omissions (not for initial enrolment).

📜 The Supreme Court’s Judgment: Three Key Findings

1. ECI’s Power to Conduct SIR — Affirmed
The court held the ECI has constitutional and statutory authority under Article 324 read with Section 21(3), RPA 1950. Section 21(3) specifically contemplates a “special revision” at any time, for reasons to be recorded, in such manner as the Commission deems fit — materially distinct from the ordinary Section 21(2) revision. The ECI’s stated reasons (four decades since last intensive revision, urbanisation, migration, duplicate entries) were accepted as adequate justification.

2. Citizenship Examination — Limited to Electoral Purposes
The court held that the ECI can examine questions relating to citizenship while preparing or revising electoral rolls — since only citizens are entitled to vote under Article 326. However, a critical constitutional boundary was drawn: any such determination is limited to electoral purposes and cannot be treated as a final declaration on citizenship status. Final determination rests exclusively with competent authorities under the Citizenship Act, 1955.

3. 2003 Deletions — Direction for Formal Adjudication
The court issued a specific direction regarding persons deleted from the 2003 Bihar electoral roll on citizenship grounds — deletions from over two decades ago that had never been referred for formal citizenship adjudication. The ECI was directed to:

  • Refer such cases to a competent authority under the Citizenship Act, 1955 within four weeks
  • Adjudication must be completed before the next Assembly or local body elections in Bihar
  • After notice and hearing, if found to be citizens, their names must be restored to the electoral rolls
💭 Think About This

The court validated the SIR’s constitutional basis — but critics noted the ruling’s emphasis on deletion (preventing ineligible voters) was not matched by equal insistence on inclusion (protecting eligible voters). The ADR noted that wrongful exclusions from the Bihar elections could not be reversed retroactively. Is the right to vote truly protected if the procedural safeguards arrive too late for the election they were meant to protect?

Issue SC’s Ruling
ECI’s power to conduct SIR Upheld — under Article 324 + Section 21(3), RPA 1950; reasons given by ECI were adequate
ECI examining citizenship Permitted — but only for electoral purposes; not a final citizenship determination
Final citizenship determination Exclusive province of competent authorities under Citizenship Act, 1955 — not ECI
2003 roll citizenship deletions ECI must refer to competent authority within 4 weeks; adjudication before next Bihar elections
Wrong deletions (residing voters) Entitled to approach election authorities via representations to be considered in accordance with law
  • Article 324: Vests superintendence, direction, and control of preparation of electoral rolls and conduct of all elections exclusively in the ECI.
  • Article 325: No person to be ineligible for inclusion in electoral rolls on grounds of religion, race, caste, or sex.
  • Article 326: Right to vote in elections restricted to citizens who are not otherwise disqualified. (Constitutional basis for citizenship verification in rolls.)
  • Section 16, RPA 1950: Disqualifies a person from being registered as a voter if not a citizen, of unsound mind, or otherwise disqualified.
  • Section 21(2), RPA 1950: Governs routine annual Special Summary Revision (SSR).
  • Section 21(3), RPA 1950: Authorises Special Intensive Revision at any time, for reasons to be recorded, and in such manner as the ECI deems fit. The core statutory basis for the Bihar SIR.
  • Rule 21A, Registration of Electors Rules, 1960: Subordinate legislation governing roll preparation mechanics — cited by petitioners as violated by the SIR’s documentation requirements.
  • Citizenship Act, 1955: Final authority for citizenship adjudication — the SC held ECI’s citizenship findings are provisional and electoral only, not conclusive.
Provision Significance in SIR Judgment
Article 324 ECI’s superintendence over elections and rolls — primary source of SIR authority
Article 325 Non-discrimination in electoral rolls (cited by petitioners as potentially violated)
Article 326 Voting right restricted to citizens — justifies ECI’s citizenship verification in rolls
Section 21(3), RPA 1950 Statutory basis for SIR — authorises special revision at any time, for recorded reasons
Section 16, RPA 1950 Disqualifies non-citizens from voter registration — legal hook for citizenship examination
Citizenship Act, 1955 Exclusive province for final citizenship determination — ECI’s findings are electoral only

🌏 Broader Significance: SIR in Other States

The Bihar SIR was not isolated. The ECI extended the Special Intensive Revision to West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and nine other states and three Union Territories in a subsequent phase announced in late 2025. The opposition — led by the DMK and others — challenged the second phase as well. The SC’s judgment of 27 May 2026 will serve as the governing precedent for all ongoing and future SIR exercises.

The ruling also connects directly to the MHA’s High-Level Committee on Demographic Changes (HLCDC): the integrity of electoral rolls in border-sensitive states is a connected policy concern, since fraudulently obtained Aadhaar and Voter IDs are cited as a mechanism by which undocumented migrants can register as electors.

✓ Article 324 vs Section 21(3) — The Two-Key Principle

Remember: Article 324 is the constitutional source of ECI’s power (superintendence over elections). Section 21(3) is the statutory mechanism for the SIR (special revision at any time). The SC held the SIR is valid because it is rooted in both. One without the other would be insufficient — you need both the constitutional grant AND the statutory procedure.

🧠 Memory Tricks
SIR Bihar Numbers — “7.9 → 7.42 → 48L”:
7.9 crore covered → 7.42 crore in final roll → ~48 lakh net reduction. Also: 65 lakh removed (dead/shifted/duplicate), 16.59 lakh added via Form-6.
Three SC Findings — “P-C-D”:
Power affirmed (Article 324 + Sec 21(3)) → Citizenship examination permitted but limited to electoral purposes → Deletions from 2003 rolls must be referred for formal adjudication within 4 weeks.
Articles 324-325-326 in Sequence:
324 = ECI’s power (superintendence) | 325 = no discrimination in rolls (religion/race/caste/sex) | 326 = right to vote (citizens only, not disqualified). In SIR: 324 + 326 justify ECI’s citizenship check; 325 was cited by petitioners as potentially violated.
Section 21(2) vs 21(3) — “2 = Routine, 3 = Special”:
21(2) = annual Special Summary Revision (routine, incremental). 21(3) = Special Intensive Revision (extraordinary, comprehensive, at any time, for recorded reasons). The Bihar SIR was under 21(3).
Lead Petitioner — ADR:
Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) — India’s leading election watchdog NGO. Same organisation known for the landmark 2002 SC judgment requiring candidates to disclose criminal records, assets, and education in affidavits. PUCL and Yogendra Yadav also petitioned.
📚 Quick Revision Flashcards

Click to flip • Master key facts

Question
What did the Supreme Court rule on 27 May 2026 regarding the Bihar SIR, and which bench delivered the judgment?
Click to flip
Answer
The SC unanimously upheld the constitutional validity of the Bihar SIR on 27 May 2026. Bench: CJI Surya Kant, Justice Joymalya Bagchi, Justice Vipul Pancholi. Heard over 29 days across ~7 months; reserved for judgment on 29 January 2026. Legal basis affirmed: Article 324 + Section 21(3), RPA 1950.
Card 1 of 5
🧠 Think Deeper

For GDPI, Essay Writing & Critical Analysis

🗳️
The SC upheld the SIR but critics say the ruling focused more on preventing ineligible voters than on protecting eligible ones. Is “electoral purity” always in tension with “universal enfranchisement”? Can both be simultaneously achieved, or does one necessarily trade off against the other?
Consider: Article 326’s universal adult franchise vs Article 326’s citizenship restriction. Documentation requirements and their unequal burden on poor/Dalit/migrant communities. The retroactive problem — exclusions that happened before the SC’s Aadhaar direction. Comparative models: US voter ID laws and their jurisprudence.
⚖️
The court held ECI’s citizenship findings are provisional and electoral only — not conclusive. Yet the 2003 Bihar deletions stayed unchallenged for over two decades. What does this say about the gap between constitutional protections and their practical enforcement for marginalised communities?
Think about: Access to justice — who actually challenges administrative decisions. Legal aid and awareness gaps. The Assam NRC parallel — provisional findings that became practically permanent for excluded persons. The role of civil society organisations like ADR and PUCL in bridging the gap.
🎯 Test Your Knowledge

5 questions • Instant feedback

Question 1 of 5
The Supreme Court upheld the Bihar SIR on 27 May 2026. Which bench delivered the judgment, and what was the verdict?
A) 5-judge bench led by Justice B.V. Nagarathna; 3:2 majority in favour
B) CJI Surya Kant, Justice Joymalya Bagchi, Justice Vipul Pancholi; unanimous
C) CJI Surya Kant and Justice Sanjeev Sachdeva; 2:1 majority
D) 7-judge Constitution Bench; 5:2 majority in favour
Explanation

The Bihar SIR judgment was delivered on 27 May 2026 by a bench of CJI Surya Kant, Justice Joymalya Bagchi, and Justice Vipul Pancholi. The verdict was unanimous — the SIR was upheld as constitutionally valid.

Question 2 of 5
Under which provision of the Representation of the People Act, 1950 is the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) authorised?
A) Section 21(1) — periodic revision
B) Section 21(2) — Special Summary Revision
C) Section 16 — disqualification from registration
D) Section 21(3) — special revision at any time for recorded reasons
Explanation

The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) is authorised under Section 21(3) of the RPA, 1950 — which allows a special revision at any time, for reasons to be recorded, in such manner as the ECI deems fit. Section 21(2) governs routine annual Special Summary Revision (SSR).

Question 3 of 5
The SC held that the ECI can examine citizenship while revising electoral rolls. What is the limit of this power?
A) ECI can make final citizenship determinations binding on all government authorities
B) ECI cannot examine citizenship at all — only the Home Ministry may do so
C) ECI can examine citizenship for electoral purposes only; final citizenship determination rests with authorities under the Citizenship Act, 1955
D) ECI’s findings on citizenship are conclusive but can be appealed to the High Court
Explanation

The SC held that the ECI can examine citizenship for electoral purposes (since Article 326 restricts voting to citizens) but CANNOT make a final determination on citizenship. Final citizenship adjudication is the exclusive province of competent authorities under the Citizenship Act, 1955.

Question 4 of 5
Which organisation was the lead petitioner in the Supreme Court challenge to the Bihar SIR?
A) Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR)
B) Election Watch India
C) National Human Rights Commission (NHRC)
D) Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD)
Explanation

The lead petitioner was the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR). Other petitioners included PUCL, Yogendra Yadav, and MPs from RJD, TMC, Congress, NCP (SP), CPI, SP, Shiv Sena (UBT), JMM, and CPI (ML).

Question 5 of 5
The Bihar SIR was notified on 24 June 2025. When were the Bihar Assembly Elections held, and when did the SC reserve judgment?
A) Elections: September 2025; Judgment reserved: November 2025
B) Elections: December 2025; Judgment reserved: March 2026
C) Elections: 6 & 11 November 2025; Judgment reserved: 29 January 2026
D) Elections: October 2025; Judgment reserved: December 2025
Explanation

Bihar elections were held on 6 and 11 November 2025. The SC reserved judgment on 29 January 2026 and delivered it on 27 May 2026 — nearly 7 months of hearings across 29 days.

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📌 Key Takeaways for Exams
1
The Judgment: SC unanimously upheld Bihar SIR on 27 May 2026. Bench: CJI Surya Kant + Justice Joymalya Bagchi + Justice Vipul Pancholi. 29 hearing days over ~7 months. Reserved: 29 January 2026. Legal basis: Article 324 + Section 21(3), RPA 1950.
2
Bihar SIR Numbers: Notified: 24 June 2025. Last SIR: 2003 (4+ decades). Covered: ~7.9 crore voters. Removed: ~65 lakh. Added (Form-6): 16.59 lakh. Final roll: 7.42 crore. Net reduction: ~48 lakh. Bihar elections: 6 & 11 November 2025.
3
Three Findings (P-C-D): Power affirmed (Article 324 + Sec 21(3)) | Citizenship examination permitted but limited to electoral purposes — final determination = Citizenship Act 1955 | 2003 deletions: refer to competent authority within 4 weeks; adjudicate before next Bihar elections.
4
SIR vs SSR: Section 21(2) = annual routine Special Summary Revision. Section 21(3) = Special Intensive Revision (extraordinary; at any time; for recorded reasons; comprehensive re-enumeration). Bihar SIR was under Section 21(3).
5
Petitioners: Lead: ADR (Association for Democratic Reforms). Also: PUCL, Yogendra Yadav, MPs from RJD/TMC/Congress/NCP(SP)/CPI/SP/Shiv Sena (UBT)/JMM/CPI(ML). Grounds: Articles 14, 19, 21, 325, 326; exclusion of Aadhaar/ration card; burden shifted to citizen; compressed timeline.
6
Broader Impact: SC ruling governs SIR in West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, 9 other states, and 3 UTs. Connected to MHA HLCDC (fraudulent Aadhaar/Voter IDs cited as mechanism for undocumented migrants to enter electoral rolls).

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) and how does it differ from the ordinary electoral roll revision?
The SIR is an extraordinary electoral roll exercise under Section 21(3) of the RPA, 1950, requiring comprehensive house-to-house re-enumeration — all voters must resubmit details, and new/unverified enrollees must produce one of 11 identity documents. It is distinct from the routine Special Summary Revision (SSR) under Section 21(2), which is conducted annually and involves incremental updates. An SIR is triggered by specific circumstances — in Bihar, over four decades had passed since the last intensive revision, and concerns about duplication, migration, and non-citizen entries justified the extraordinary measure.
Can the ECI determine citizenship while revising electoral rolls?
Yes, but only to a limited extent. The SC held that the ECI can examine citizenship questions while preparing or revising rolls, since Article 326 restricts voting rights to citizens. However, any such finding is limited to electoral purposes — it cannot constitute a final declaration on citizenship status. Final citizenship determination is the exclusive province of competent authorities under the Citizenship Act, 1955. This is why the court directed ECI to refer the 2003 Bihar citizenship deletions to a competent authority for formal adjudication.
What is Article 324 and why is it central to this judgment?
Article 324 vests the superintendence, direction, and control of the preparation of electoral rolls and the conduct of all elections to Parliament, state legislatures, and the offices of President and Vice-President exclusively in the Election Commission of India. It is the constitutional source of the ECI’s authority over all matters relating to elections, including roll revisions. The SC held that the Bihar SIR furthers rather than contradicts Article 324’s mandate — giving teeth to the ECI’s constitutional responsibility to maintain accurate electoral rolls as the foundation of free and fair elections.
Why was Aadhaar excluded from the 11 acceptable documents, and how did the SC respond?
The ECI excluded Aadhaar cards (along with ration cards and Voter IDs/EPIC) from the 11 documents acceptable for establishing voter eligibility, taking the position that Aadhaar is not proof of citizenship — merely a biometric identity document that can be obtained by non-citizens who are long-term residents. Petitioners argued this unreasonably burdened the poor and marginalised who were least likely to hold the listed 11 documents. On 14 August 2025, the SC directed ECI to allow Aadhaar to be used by excluded voters to challenge their omissions during the claims period — a partial concession, not a full reversal of the ECI’s position.
What happened to the Bihar elections, and what is the broader impact of the SIR ruling?
The Bihar Assembly Elections were held on 6 and 11 November 2025. The NDA (led by BJP and Nitish Kumar’s JD(U)) swept the elections, winning over 200 of Bihar’s 243 assembly seats. The SC’s 27 May 2026 judgment now serves as the governing precedent for SIR exercises in West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, nine other states, and three Union Territories, where the ECI extended the SIR in a subsequent phase. The ruling also intersects with the MHA’s HLCDC work on demographic changes, since electoral roll integrity in border districts is a connected national security concern.
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