Overview
On July 3, 2026, opposition leaders in Karnataka intensified criticism of the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls. Union Minister H.D. Kumaraswamy of the JD(S) and Leader of the Opposition R. Ashok of the BJP alleged that the process was being steered by the ruling Congress and that the Election Commission of India (ECI) guidelines were being flouted.
Key Developments
- Kumaraswamy claimed that BLOs were not conducting door‑to‑door verification in constituencies such as Yeshwantpur, Ramanagara, Kunigal, Pavagada, Arkalgud and Indi. He released videos he said showed officials acting on directions of local MLAs and announced he would approach the ECI with evidence.
- R. Ashok alleged that enumeration forms were being handed out in public places like in front of mosques and Haj Bhavans in Mahadevapura and Byatarayanapura, rather than at voters’ homes. He warned that the SIR could be used to enrol around 20 lakh "Bangla" residents across Karnataka, linking the exercise to the Congress government’s guarantee schemes.
- Both leaders demanded immediate intervention by the ECI and called for action against the Deputy Commissioners of Bengaluru South and Bengaluru Urban districts, whom they accused of facilitating the alleged violations.
Important Facts
The opposition’s accusations centre on two main procedural breaches: (i) failure of door‑to‑door verification, and (ii) distribution of enumeration forms in communal or public venues, which could enable mass enrolment without proper scrutiny. Video evidence released by the JD(S) purportedly shows officials collecting forms under the direction of a local MLA in Yeshwantpur. The BJP’s claim of a large Bangla population being added to rolls raises concerns about demographic manipulation.
Exam Relevance
Understanding the SIR process is essential for GS Paper II (Polity) as it illustrates the functioning of the