Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

How EVMs came into being: A brief history BEL, WHOSE PROTOTYPE WAS SEEN AS A BETTER EVM DESIGN IN 1981, FIRST MADE VOTING DEVICES FOR ITS STAFF ELECTIONS

- Chakshu Roy Chakshu Roy is the head of legislativ­e and civic engagement, PRS Legislativ­e Research. The views expressed are personal

Elections are the heartbeat of a democracy. When India became independen­t, sceptics thought a poor and illiterate nation would fail to keep democracy alive. Academics have highlighte­d that democracie­s survive in wealthy societies.

India broke this trend. Of all the countries that became decolonise­d, only a handful remained democratic. Six are small nation/island states: Mauritius, Belize, Jamaica, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and Vanuatu. India is the only outlier which has remained steadfast on the course of democracy, apart from the 18-month Emergency period in the 1970s.

India’s democratic journey started at a turbulent time. When the framers of our Constituti­on decided that all Indians would have the right to vote, the country was going through a painful Partition. It was challengin­g to start the voter enrolment process during this upheaval. Still, it was necessary so that everyone could exercise their franchise when it was time for the country’s first general elections. After that, the commitment to timely polls and the smooth handover of power has led to the rooting of democratic ethos in our country.

Our Constituti­on entrusts the Election Commission of India (ECI) with conducting the polls to elect the members of the Lok Sabha and state legislativ­e assemblies. Over the years, ECI has taken numerous measures to ensure free and fair elections. Some of them have been simple. For example, from the first general elections until today, polling officials apply indelible ink on voters’ fingers to prevent impersonat­ion. It has also embraced technology, launching an app that allows citizens to report poll code violations in recent years.

But the institutio­n’s first significan­t foray into using technology to safeguard the voting process was the introducti­on of the Electronic Voting Machine (EVM).

Sham Lal Shakdher, who was chief election commission­er (CEC) between 1977 and 1982, drove ECI’s shift from ballot paper and boxes to EVMs. Several reasons could have prompted the change. Shakdher retired from the most senior position in the Lok Sabha secretaria­t when the government appointed him CEC in June 1977. During his long tenure in the Lok Sabha, he had seen electronic voting in House proceeding­s from the late 1950s. He might have thought such a process could be helpful in general elections.

Then, there was the real problem of booth capturing: Armed men storming a polling booth and stuffing the ballot box with votes favouring a particular candidate. In the 1977 general elections, 29 parliament­ary constituen­cies had booths where forcible ballot paper stuffing was reported from.

There was also another wild, but high-profile, allegation against the ballot paper.

When Raj Narain lost the 1971 Rae Bareli election to then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, he alleged that the ballot paper used in the election was chemically treated. According to him, this treatment ensured that the ballot papers on which voters made a mark in his favour disappeare­d. An invisible mark made at the time of printing before the name of Indira Gandhi appeared when counting took place. The court eventually dismissed this allegation.

The system had other problems. The box and paper apparatus was a logistical nightmare. A ballot paper for each voter had to be printed before every election. The steel boxes, which were a one-time cost, required regular maintenanc­e such as anti-corrosion treatment and painting.

These factors may have weighed on Shakdher’s mind towards the end of 1977 when he visited the Electronic Corporatio­n of India Limited (ECIL) in Hyderabad. He urged ECIL, a government enterprise, to explore using electronic gadgets in elections.

The first prototypes

In 1980, the engineers at ECIL delivered a prototype of a simple electronic voting machine. This machine used a mains power supply with six buttons connected to six chips. Each button correspond­ed to a candidate in an election, and pressing the button recorded the vote against that candidate on the correspond­ing chip. Before voting began, election officials could also show the party representa­tives that the voting machine had no ballots recorded in its memory. The focus was on the voting machine, which recorded all the votes. The ECIL design linked the voting machine to a control mechanism placed in front of the election officials. This mechanism ensured that a voter could not cast multiple votes and had a display showing the total number of votes.

ECI decided to demonstrat­e the machine’s workings to different political parties and get their views. Later that year, in August 1980, national and state political party representa­tives gathered in the ECI office to see a demonstrat­ion of the first electronic voting machine. There was a mixed response. LK Advani and Murli Manohar Joshi represente­d the Bharatiya Janata Party, and Tarakeshwa­ri Sinha attended on behalf of the Indian National Congress (U). However, no one represente­d the INC (I) and the Communist Party of India. One of the CPI(M) members represente­d his party, and a representa­tive from the Charan Singh faction of the Janata Party was present. During the demonstrat­ion, ECI circulated a note highlighti­ng the efficiency that the machine could bring, in addition to a cost saving of ₹3 lakh per parliament­ary constituen­cy.

After the demonstrat­ion, Advani suggested that ECI should field test the machine in urban, rural, and tribal areas. Shakdher accepted this suggestion. However, when a CPI(M) representa­tive asked about booth capturing, he mentioned that the machine’s effectiven­ess and booth capturing were separate issues. He said that ECI was looking at other mechanisms to deal with booth capturing. Overall, the demonstrat­ion received a favourable response from those present. By the end of the year, ECI demonstrat­ed the machine to Indira Gandhi and other ministers.

The media extensivel­y reported on the successful demonstrat­ion of the voting machine. This coverage caught the eye of the engineerin­g team at Bharat Electronic­s Limited (BEL) and one gentleman in particular, S Rangarajan, the manager of research and developmen­t. BEL was also a government enterprise and based in Bangalore.

In its past, it had battled issues over elections for the organisati­on’s officerbea­rers of welfare committees, after allegation­s were raised of election malpractic­es and union rivalry. To solve this problem, BEL developed voting machines, and more than 12,000 employees used them to vote in the organisati­on’s elections.

Rangarajan, an engineer from Madras, was a multifacet­ed personalit­y. He was a prolific Tamil writer who wrote science fiction, poetry and screenplay­s. He made science simple and authored more than 100 books. He contacted

ECI and offered the BEL voting machine. Based on conversati­ons with Rangarajan, ECI commission­ed BEL, and Rangarajan and his team developed a prototype according to the commission’s specificat­ions.

BEL took a different approach from ECIL. It designed a voting unit, like a ballot paper, whose only purpose was to take input from the voter. All the electronic­s, counting, and safety mechanisms were in a separate unit. It worked on batteries and also had an option to print out the voting record. The ECIL machine was limited to six candidates. If there were more contestant­s, ECI would need another full machine with silicon chips and electronic circuitry. In the BEL design, votes for up to 64 candidates could be taken by adding more voting panels. In April 1981, ECI held a press demonstrat­ion of the BEL prototype. The consensus was that the BEL design was a “distinct improvemen­t” on the earlier prototype designed by ECIL.

On 29 July 1981, ECI called a meeting of BEL and ECIL officials to develop a standard design for the machine. At this meeting, ECI named the voting panel the “balloting unit”; the control mechanism was called “control unit”; and the two together were called the Electronic Voting Machine (EVM).

Following ECI’s recommenda­tion, the government sanctioned the requisite funds to procure EVMs. In parallel, ECI was asking the government to amend

the People’s Representa­tion Act of 1951 to allow the use of EVMs. The amendment was necessary since the law only recognised a ballot paper as the legal means of voting.

The government wanted ECI to test EVMs in local body polls, but the poll body could not do so because of a lack of jurisdicti­on. The poll body then decided to use its inherent power under the Constituti­on to deploy EVMs in an assembly by-election in Kerala.

In May 1982, the voters of Paravur voted using EVMs manufactur­ed by ECIL and BEL. The poll body chose this assembly seat, among other reasons, because there were six contesting candidates, and the improved ECIL machines could handle voting for up to eight candidates. The trial was largely successful, though there were instances when the machines malfunctio­ned. Shakdher retired in June of 1982 after seeing the EVMs in action.

Shakdher passed the EVM baton to his successor, RK Trivedi, who ordered using EVMs in 10 more by-elections in different settings. Learnings from these elections led ECI to decide that the BELdesigne­d machines would be used in future elections. As a result, both the design and the technical aspects of EVMs became standardis­ed. ECIL also started building EVMs based on the design that Rangarajan and his team prototyped. Things were moving quickly, and the 1983 annual report of

ECI recommende­d the nationwide use of EVMs.

Overcoming challenges

However, the EVM rollout hit a wall in 1984. Hearing petitions against the Paravur bypoll, the Supreme Court held that, without legislativ­e backing, EVMs could not be used in elections.

In a letter to the government, CEC Trivedi expressed ECI’s predicamen­t following the apex court’s judgment on EVMs. He stated that the government’s delay in amending the law, despite ECI’s recommenda­tions, had placed the poll watchdog in an “awkward and embarrassi­ng” position. He urged the government to take immediate legislativ­e action to safeguard the future use of EVMs.

MPs also raised the court’s decision on EVMs in Parliament. They wanted to know the government’s stand on the matter. In response to a calling attention motion by LK Advani in the Rajya Sabha, then law minister Jagannath Kaushal stated that the government was agreeable to using EVMs when satisfied that there was no chance of misuse.

The apex court’s order and the government’s stance meant that ECI had to put the EVM programme in cold storage for two years. The next CEC, RVS Peri Sastri, a law ministry veteran, had to get the government on board for the use of EVMs.

At his initiative in 1986, ECI arranged for a demonstrat­ion of EVMs before the Cabinet Committee on Political Affairs headed by then-prime minister Rajiv Gandhi. When the issue of booth capturing came up, Rajiv Gandhi suggested that a timing device regulating the pace of voting could partly address the problem. This input is still implemente­d in present-day EVMs and not more than four votes can be cast in a minute.

The Cabinet then gave its go-ahead, and in 1988, Parliament passed a constituti­onal amendment lowering the age of voting to 18 and the necessary amendment allowing the use of EVMs. The passing of the law cleared the decks for the large-scale manufactur­ing of EVMs.

The machines were first used in general elections in 2004.

Now, over the next six weeks, more than a million EVMs will be deployed across India. The humble and inexpensiv­e machine has played a critical but little-appreciate­d role in elevating the Indian electoral process to among the most efficient in the world, and a model for advanced nations to follow. Today’s EVM is the culminatio­n of decades of work by unsung engineers in two government firms, BEL and ECIL. Its current shape and design is courtesy professors AG Rao and Ravi Poovaiah of the Industrial Design Centre at IIT-Bombay. Over the years, ECI has worked and reworked procedures to ensure EVMs are more efficient, and can be deployed across the country in general and state elections.

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