
The Lok Sabha has passed the Unified Electoral Roll Bill by 309 votes to 147, ending years of debate over the reliability of India's multi-layered voter database. The bill now moves to the Rajya Sabha, where the treasury benches expect to secure passage within the fortnight.
At its core is a centralised, cloud-backed voter registry that replaces the dual-maintenance system under which the Election Commission of India and individual state bodies kept separate lists — a structure long blamed for duplicate and ghost entries.
Key Highlights
- The Lok Sabha passed the bill 309-147; it now goes to the Rajya Sabha.
- A single cloud-backed registry replaces separate central and state voter lists.
- Mobile-assisted verification targets an estimated 62 million internal migrants.
- Parties must disclose campaign spending above ₹50,000 weekly during campaigns.
- A challenge by regional parties on states' rights is expected in the Supreme Court.
What the Bill Does
The legislation eliminates parallel roll maintenance by the ECI and state election bodies, replacing it with one real-time registry. Election analysts have long flagged duplications, ghost entries and mismatched records across the two systems as risks to the integrity of the franchise.
A unified list is intended to make deletions, additions and address changes consistent nationwide, reducing the errors that surface when a voter moves between states.
Mobile Verification for Migrant Workers
The most debated provision introduces mobile-assisted verification for domestic migrant workers, letting them confirm active voter status and cast ballots at secure kiosks near their workplaces. The Ministry of Law and Justice projects that about 62 million internal migrants could benefit.
Opposition members questioned the cybersecurity design and the risk of coercion at workplace kiosks. The government tabled a technical specification promising an air-gapped, end-to-end encrypted platform with biometric secondary authentication.
Campaign Finance Transparency
A second strand tightens campaign finance rules. Candidates and parties must publicly disclose every expense above ₹50,000 on a weekly basis during the active campaign window, with the ECI hosting a searchable portal. Deliberate non-disclosure carries a minimum six-month disqualification.
Transparency groups broadly welcomed the move while cautioning that enforcement depends on the ECI's autonomy. The Commission itself welcomed the bill and promised swift implementation of the required infrastructure.
How a Bill Becomes Law
Passage in the Lok Sabha is one stage of the process. A bill must clear both Houses of Parliament and receive the President's assent before becoming law. The Rajya Sabha can suggest amendments, which return to the Lower House for consideration.
Electoral administration draws its authority from Article 324 of the Constitution, which vests superintendence of elections in the Election Commission — a framework the government says the bill preserves intact.
The bill at a glance
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Lok Sabha vote | 309 in favour, 147 against |
| Migrants covered | About 62 million |
| Disclosure threshold | Expenses above ₹50,000, weekly |
| Penalty for non-disclosure | Minimum six-month disqualification |
| Next stage | Rajya Sabha |
Opposition Demands and Legal Challenge
The main opposition parties sought a mandatory two-year pilot across five states before nationwide rollout of migrant voting. The amendment was defeated on a voice vote, though the government signalled openness to independent audits of the first cycle.
A coalition of regional parties has argued the bill encroaches on state jurisdiction and is expected to move the Supreme Court within two months. The dispute connects to wider federal-structure questions also visible in the standoff over governors' powers and the coming delimitation exercise.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Unified Electoral Roll Bill?
It merges separate central and state voter registries into a single cloud-backed database maintained in real time.
How did the Lok Sabha vote?
The bill passed 309 to 147 and now moves to the Rajya Sabha.
How does migrant voting work under the bill?
Migrant workers can verify their status by mobile and vote at secure kiosks near their workplaces, with biometric authentication.
What changes for campaign finance?
Parties and candidates must disclose expenses above ₹50,000 weekly during campaigns, with penalties for non-disclosure.
Can the bill be challenged in court?
Yes. Regional parties plan to challenge it on states'-rights grounds in the Supreme Court.
Sources
- Lok Sabha proceedings and division record
- Election Commission of India — official statement
- Ministry of Law and Justice — technical specifications
Abhijit Chowdhury
Staff Reporter
Editorial administrator for Eastern Times.
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