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Reimagining Electoral Inclusion in Migrant India: A Case Study of Bihar’s Voter Roll Revisions


Syllabus:

GS 2

  • Election Commission of India
  • Protection of vulnerable sectionS

Why in the News?

The ongoing revision of electoral rolls in Bihar brings to the forefront the structural challenges of electoral inclusion in a highly mobile society. Allegations of disenfranchisement amid rising internal migration call for a rethinking of the Representation of People Act and push for inclusive reforms that balance roll integrity with the right to vote, particularly for vulnerable migrant populations.

Introduction: Revising the Electoral Roll in Bihar

  • As the Election Commission of India (ECI) concludes the first phase of the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls in Bihar (August 1, 2025), the exercise has triggered political controversy.
  • Opposition parties allege disenfranchisement of poor, minority, and migrant populations.
  • Conversely, supporters argue that deletions are part of routine roll maintenance to ensure accuracy and integrity of elections.

The Core Allegation: Mass Deletions and Targeting Vulnerable Groups

  • Over 1.2 million names have been deleted from the voter rolls across Bihar.
  • The primary reason cited is “non-residency” at the time of verification.
  • In high-migration districts like Gopalganj and Sitamarhi, deletions range from 5% to 7%.
  • These figures are not statistically negligible and indicate deep-rooted structural exclusions affecting economically weaker and mobile sections of society.

The Migrant Dilemma in Numbers

  • According to the 2011 Census, 13.9 million Biharis lived outside Bihar.
  • The current estimated number of out-migrants is around 17–18 million.
  • Bihar also reports the highest rate of internal migration in India — 36% of households have at least one migrant, and over 20% of working-age citizens live outside the state.
  • This demographic shift underscores the disconnect between electoral rules and lived realities of citizens.

Understanding the Legal Framework: Citizenship vs. Residency

  • The Representation of the People Act, 1950 and 1951 ties voter registration to “ordinary residence”.
  • This creates a fundamental tension:
    • Citizenship is a juridical and constitutional status under the Constitution and Citizenship Act.
    • Residency is a contextual condition that determines constituency enrollment.
  • Migrants who maintain emotional, cultural, and familial ties with their home states are often excluded from voter rolls due to temporary absence.

Migrants: Neither Here Nor There

  • Many workers migrate seasonally or semi-permanently and live in a “liminal space”.
  • For such individuals, disenfranchisement is not only administrative but also existential — a silent signal that they do not belong anywhere.
  • The current legal model privileges fixity over fluidity, ignoring the modern reality of mobility-based livelihoods.

A Colonial Legacy: Laws for a Static Population

  • The Representation of the People Act was drafted in 1950, when:
    • 82% of India was rural.
    • Migration was limited (less than 8%).
  • The assumption was that people vote where they live and live where they are born.
  • That assumption no longer holds true. Today, India has over 450 million internal migrants, 37% of the population.

Comparative International Models: Learning from Global Democracies

Several global democracies have reconciled voter mobility with electoral inclusion more effectively:

United States

  • Over 30–35 million Americans live outside their registered precincts.
  • Use of absentee and mail-in ballots allows people to vote without being physically present.

Philippines

  • Facilitates absentee voting for over 1.8 million overseas Filipino workers (OFWs).
  • Turnout rates are over 60% — showcasing effective outreach.

Australia

  • Uses mobile polling stations for transient and remote communities.
  • Over 90% voter participation is achieved.

These examples debunk the myth that there must be a trade-off between roll integrity and inclusiveness. It is a design choice, not a natural limitation.

Political Apathy and Voter Disempowerment

  • Political actors across the spectrum have failed to educate or assist migrant voters.
  • Instead, disenfranchisement is used as a political tool to mobilize support or sow discontent.
  • Though draft rolls are open to public scrutiny, this process is:
    • Ineffective due to low literacy.Inaccessible due to poor awareness and communication.
    • Inconvenient for migrants burdened by livelihood constraints.

Survey Data

  • In Bihar:
    • Over 60% of voters are unaware of the claims and objections process.
    • Among migrants, this number drops below 25%.

ECI’s Institutional Role: Between the Law and Reality

  • The ECI cannot change the law unilaterally — this power rests with the legislature.
  • However, it can and should push for reforms, using its:
    • Operational experience in states like Bihar.
    • Moral authority as an independent constitutional body.
  • Instead, the ECI has adopted a model of administrative minimalism, merely executing outdated laws rather than questioning them.

The Problem with “Cleaning the Rolls”

  • The ECI’s insistence on procedural cleanliness risks becoming exclusionary.
  • The current model of voter verification penalizes mobility, instead of adapting to it.
  • “Neutrality” in administration becomes problematic when it ignores structural disadvantage — neutrality without equity only reinforces status quo.

The Call for Reform: Piloting Alternative Models

Reforms do not require a total legal overhaul overnight. Instead, the ECI can:

1.Pilot New Approaches

  • Test mobile registration booths in migrant-heavy districts.
  • Enable online voter verification and claims submission.
  • Implement seasonal roll-updates to reflect temporary migration trends.

2.Legislative Advocacy

  • Push for amendments to allow remote or absentee voting for internal migrants.
  • Advocate for legal recognition of dual residency, at least for electoral purposes.

Breaking the Fixity Bias: Envisioning a Mobile Democracy

  • Indian democracy was designed for a sedentary society, but the nation is now marked by high mobility.
  • There must be institutional imagination to design an electoral system that serves today’s citizens.
  • A mobile democracy demands:
    • Flexible laws.Innovative administration.
    • Political will to prioritize inclusion.

Policy Recommendations: What Can Be Done?

Short-Term Measures

  • Improve awareness campaigns during roll revision exercises.
  • Set up helplines and support centers in migrant source districts.
  • Use Aadhaar and migration databases to trace seasonal patterns for voter registration.

Medium-Term Measures

  • Introduce Remote Voting Mechanisms (as proposed by ECI earlier for migrant workers).
  • Conduct pilot studies in states like Bihar, UP, and Odisha with high migration.

Long-Term Measures

  • Amend Representation of People Act to:
    • Allow absentee voting for internal migrants.
    • Recognize dual registration or temporary voting rights based on work location.

Conclusion: Towards a More Inclusive Electoral Future

  • The Bihar case is a symptom of a deeper malaise — a static electoral system operating in a dynamic, mobile society.
  • Disenfranchisement of migrants is not accidental — it is structurally embedded and needs legislative correction.
  • Electoral democracy in India must prioritize inclusion, even as it maintains integrity.
  • A rights-based approach, coupled with institutional innovation and political courage, can transform India into a truly participatory democracy for all.

MAINS PRACTICE QUESTION

Q. The disenfranchisement of migrant populations during electoral roll revisions highlights a structural incongruity between Indian electoral laws and the realities of a mobile society. Critically examine the legal, administrative, and political challenges involved and suggest viable reforms for inclusive electoral participation. (250 words)