Politics
SIR: Citizens, citizenship, and Right to Vote
The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, an exercise by the Election Commission of India to prepare an accurate voter list, begins
Key takeaways
- The door-to-door survey for Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls begins in Karnataka on June 30.
- Nearly 6 crore names have been deleted in the first year of SIR of electoral rolls.
- A Bengaluru survey flags that 61% of people haven't heard of SIR and 34% rely on Aadhaar.
- The Election Commission cannot itself decide whether a person is an Indian citizen.
- The reliance on the 2002 electoral roll is one of the biggest sources of confusion.
The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls, an exercise by the Election Commission of India to prepare an accurate voter list, begins its door-to-door enumeration phase in Karnataka on June 30, 2026. The process relies on comparing current records with the 2002 electoral roll, which has triggered public anxiety and political debate over documentation requirements, citizenship verification, and potential disenfranchisement of vulnerable groups such as women, transgender individuals, and migrant tribal laborers.
By the numbers
- 61%
- Bengaluru survey respondents who have not heard of SIR
- 34%
- Bengaluru survey respondents relying on Aadhaar for verification
- 2002
- The year of the last Karnataka SIR electoral roll
- 2025
- The starting point electoral roll for the current exercise
- ~60,000,000
- Names deleted in the first year of SIR
How it unfolded
- Last time Karnataka underwent a Special Intensive Revision
- Door-to-door survey for Karnataka SIR begins
- Deadline for upcoming Greater Bengaluru Authority elections
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Common questions
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- The door-to-door survey for Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls begins in Karnataka on June 30.
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