India Must Adopt Electoral Integrity with
Citizen-Friendly Procedures
Electoral Reforms Must Strengthen
Institutional Credibility
And Reinforce Citizens’ Confidence
(Need for Realistic Timelines, and
Permanent
Residence Certificate)
Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao
(The Hans India
July 12, 2026)
{Given
the wide disparities in digital literacy, economic circumstances and access to
documentation, millions of citizens, particularly senior citizens, migrant
workers and rural families, still depend heavily on personal assistance for
routine administrative procedures. The true measure of good governance,
therefore, lies not merely in administrative efficiency but in administrative
effectiveness, ensuring that every eligible citizen can access public services
and democratic rights with confidence and ease}- Editor’s Synoptic Note
Democracy
ultimately rests on a simple yet profound covenant of trust. Citizens trust
institutions to protect their constitutional rights. Institutions trust
citizens to participate responsibly in public life. Elections are the most
visible expression of this reciprocal trust. Every reform intended to
strengthen the electoral process carries a dual responsibility: safeguarding
institutional integrity while ensuring that no genuine citizen feels excluded
from democratic participation.
The
enduring strength of a Republic lies not merely in conducting elections
efficiently but in preserving every eligible citizen's confidence that
participation remains fair, accessible and meaningful. India's great democratic
journey offers one of the finest illustrations of this constitutional ideal.
Soon after Independence, when sceptics across the world doubted whether a vast,
poor and largely illiterate nation could successfully implement ‘Universal
Adult Franchise,’ India chose courage over caution. ‘Every Adult Citizen’
irrespective of literacy, wealth, caste, gender or social standing, was
entrusted with an equal vote.
Under
the stewardship of the country's first Chief Election Commissioner, Sukumar
Sen, the monumental 1951-52 General Elections became an unprecedented
democratic experiment that attracted worldwide attention. In successfully
conducting them, India established a democratic model that earned global
admiration. That achievement continues to inspire democratic institutions even
today.
As
the Election Commission itself observed in its All-Time Great Commemorative Publication:
‘Unfolding Indian Elections: Journey of the Living Democracy,’ elections
in India evolved into a festival of democracy, repeatedly renewing public faith
in Constitutional Governance.
Significantly,
for millions of Indians, casting a vote became the Republic's first practical
affirmation of equal citizenship, and the ballot transformed constitutional
promises into lived democratic experience. However, democracies cannot remain
static. Electoral rolls require periodic revision. Demographic changes,
migration, urbanisation, deaths, duplicate entries, technological advancements
etc. make continuous updating not merely desirable but indispensable. An
accurate electoral roll is not only a legitimate constitutional objective but
also an indispensable safeguard against malpractices and a prerequisite for
free and fair elections.
The
greatest challenge before constitutional democracies is to ensure that
electoral reforms strengthen the integrity of the voting process without
inadvertently making it more difficult for genuine citizens to participate. An
illuminating academic perspective draws a metaphor from ‘Sir Isaac Newton's Three
Laws of Motion.’ Stable systems ordinarily resist abrupt change. Significant
institutional interventions therefore carry an equally significant
responsibility to justify their necessity through transparency, proportionality
and public confidence. Newton's scientific insight thus offers an equally
valuable democratic reminder.
The
larger the administrative exercise, the greater the obligation to reassure
citizens that constitutional fairness remains uncompromised. Many of these
reflections evolved through continuing ‘Friday Evening Discussions at the Press
Club Hyderabad,’ among journalists and academics, an interaction with former
Supreme Court Judge Justice B Sudershan Reddy, and a thought-provoking public
lecture by political economist and public intellectual Dr Parakala Prabhakar on
the constitutional dimensions of electoral reform. Collectively, these
exchanges prompted broader reflections on democratic governance, institutional
credibility and civic responsibility.
A
recurring observation, of even greater significance than the electoral exercise
itself, is that democracies derive legitimacy not only from statutory authority
but also from public confidence. Institutions undoubtedly possess
constitutional powers, but their enduring strength ultimately depends upon the
confidence citizens repose in the manner those powers are exercised.
Transparency, consistency, accessibility and procedural fairness are therefore
not merely administrative virtues; they are constitutional necessities.
Equally
undeniable is the reality that governance is becoming increasingly
technology-driven. Digital platforms, electronic databases and online
verification systems have undoubtedly streamlined governance. Yet the digital
divide continues to limit their true public value. Speed and automation mean
little if genuine citizens are excluded from welfare delivery or democratic
participation because of technical glitches or procedural complexities.
Given
the wide disparities in digital literacy, economic circumstances and access to
documentation, millions of citizens: particularly senior citizens, migrant
workers and rural families, still depend heavily on personal assistance for
routine administrative procedures. The true measure of good governance,
therefore, lies not merely in administrative efficiency but in administrative
effectiveness, ensuring that every eligible citizen can access public services
and democratic rights with confidence and ease.
This
reality deserves careful consideration. Technology should become an instrument
of inclusion, not an unintended source of exclusion. Consider a citizen whose
name disappeared from the electoral rolls after repeated changes of residence
over many years. When informed about the procedure for restoring the vote, the
citizen may wonder not how to recover it, but whether the effort itself is
worthwhile. Such a response raises concerns that goes far beyond the
technicalities of electoral administration. It reflects a deeper challenge:
preserving every citizen's confidence that democratic participation remains
both accessible and worthwhile.
Democracies
are weakened when citizens begin to undervalue their participation. The issue
therefore extends well beyond electoral rolls. It concerns the relationship
between administrative efficiency, effectiveness and civic engagement.
Electoral reforms must strengthen institutional credibility while reinforcing
citizens' confidence that democratic participation remains simple, accessible
and worthwhile. Public awareness, civic education and administrative
transparency must accompany procedural reform.
Electoral
integrity and democratic inclusion should never be viewed as competing
objectives. They are complementary constitutional responsibilities.
Institutions discharge their obligations through impartial administration, and
citizens through informed participation. Between them lies a shared space of
dialogue, trust and mutual responsibility that ultimately determines the
vitality of democratic governance. Against this backdrop, the way forward lies
less in questioning the objective than in refining the process, without
compromising either of them.
Strengthening
electoral integrity through simpler procedures, realistic timelines and the
introduction of a ‘Permanent Residence Certificate’ deserves serious national
consideration. A carefully designed ‘Permanent Residence Certificate,’ at least
for electoral purposes, with appropriate safeguards and intended exclusively to
facilitate electoral verification, could substantially reduce procedural
hardship while helping electoral authorities maintain accurate records.
Equally
important is the question of time. Large-scale electoral exercises involving
millions of citizens should recognise India's extraordinary social and
technological diversity. Adequate time enables institutions to verify records
more thoroughly while allowing genuine voters, particularly senior citizens,
migrant workers, rural residents and the digitally less-equipped, to comply
without anxiety or disadvantage. ‘Reasonably Extended Timelines’ are therefore
not administrative concessions but democratic safeguards.
The
third imperative is ‘Procedural Simplicity.’ The true measure of administrative
excellence lies not in the complexity of its systems but in the ease with which
ordinary citizens can navigate them. As governance becomes increasingly
technology-driven, public procedures should become progressively simpler.
Democratic participation should never appear burdensome to those whom the
Constitution seeks to empower. Citizens must experience government as an
enabler rather than disabler: with maze of documentation and verification.
Ultimately,
preserving democracy is a shared constitutional enterprise. Institutions bear
the responsibility of ensuring integrity. Citizens, of participating with
awareness and commitment. Universities, the media, civil society organisations,
legal professionals and public intellectuals likewise have an enduring role in
nurturing constitutional literacy and informed democratic engagement. Electoral
reforms should therefore be viewed not merely as administrative exercises but
as opportunities to strengthen the civic culture that sustains the Republic.
Every
subsequent reform should aspire to reinforce that same faith. The ballot
remains far more than an instrument of political choice. It is the Republic's
continuing affirmation of equality, dignity and citizenship. The lasting
strength of Indian Democracy will be measured not merely by the precision of
its electoral rolls but by the confidence with which every eligible citizen
approaches the polling booth.
The First General Election earned worldwide admiration because it demonstrated extraordinary faith in citizens. Democracy flourishes when voters choose their representatives, not when electoral processes inadvertently determine who cannot vote. Electoral integrity and democratic inclusion are complementary constitutional responsibilities. Implementing Citizen-Friendly Procedures, Realistic Timelines, and the Permanent Residence Certificate framework to safeguard the voting rights of every eligible adult citizen will renew the enduring covenant of trust between citizens and institutions.


I have voted with enthusiasm like many till last elections for 3 decades. Now, I have lost interest to vote as no party or leader is interested or helpful to GC Hindus.
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