National
Coordinator of
VOTEINDIA movement
|
Elections
and Voters Lists
29-Dec-2001
Elections
to MCH are round the corner. After a long gap of 15 years,
blatant violation of the Constitution and a judicial directive,
elections have been finally announced!
Elections
are vital to democracy. Unfortunately our electoral process
is severely flawed. I am not talking merely of inducements,
impersonation, intimidation, and myriad other things we talk
of in our drawing rooms - but of flaws in the electoral rolls.
Electoral rolls are the heart of an election and if they are
flawed the whole process is perverted. Our survey conducted
in 2000 revealed that in Hyderabad there were 40% errors in
the electoral rolls and in general the errors are 44.8% in
urban areas and 14.3% in the rural areas. What do these defects
really mean? To give an illustration - in the recent US Presidential
election, George Bush won by only a margin of 500 votes (0.0005%)
in an election where 100 million voted.
|
Before
every election the Election Commission (EC) announces a revision
of voter rolls, when additions and deletions are made. Apart
from being the time when citizens enroll, it is also the opportune
time when zealous party workers enroll a number of fictitious
names and delete many an inconvenient name. A few years ago
when Mr Krishnamurthy, the then Election Commission went to
cast his vote, he could not find his name in the voters' list!
There are 13% such names missing in Hyderabad! But the lists
also contain at least 26% that need to be deleted. No wonder
we have such large-scale impersonation. In the recent Assembly
elections in W Bengal, 35% of the callers to the Lok Satta
Help Line complained that somebody already voted in their
name.
The
present voter registration and correction process is extremely
complicated and inaccessible. Go to any developed democracy
and a voter can enroll his/her name or remove a dead person's
name at the local post office or similar agency. All you need
is some simple form of identification! It is important that
voter rolls be available in the neighborhood post office for
easy verification. Lok Satta has succeeded in persuading the
EC to make the post office the nodal agency for verification
and registering of names. This makes great practical sense
especially in rural areas where everybody knows everybody
and wrong entries can be immediately identified. A post office
is generally a citizen-friendly, honest institution with a
culture of across-the-counter service. It is an ideal center
for voter registration. It wouldn't require the massive effort
of an organization like Lok Satta to discover the inclusion
of a person who died 50 years ago! The residents would be
able to immediately identify the ineligible, the non-resident
and unqualified persons.
This
is a very simple change but will have far-reaching implications
in cleansing and transforming our electoral process. Many
far-reaching changes often result from seemingly simple innovations.
For instance, the bi-forked needle made smallpox immunization
far more effective and acceptable, and helped eradicate the
dreaded disease. But then any such change to be effective
requires active civic participation and cooperation. The recent
drive in Hyderabad to cleanse the electoral rolls was only
a moderate success. We, the citizens, should get together
and work towards effecting the change.
***
|