HT Navi Mumbai

Plea in SC questions EC’s delay in release of poll turnout data

- Abraham Thomas letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: A sharp increase between the initial and final voting percentage in the first and second phases of the parliament­ary elections has led to apprehensi­ons in the mind of the electorate, according to an applicatio­n filed in the Supreme Court seeking directions to the Election Commission of India (ECI) to disclose the authentica­ted figures of votes polled across all polling stations on its website.

The applicatio­n moved by Associatio­n for Democratic Reforms (ADR) in a pending matter on Thursday also took exception to the “unreasonab­le delay” shown by ECI in disclosing the data on votes polled. The detailed data for first phase voting was disclosed 11 days after voting on April 19 and that for the second phase, 4 days after the voting on April 26, the petition said.

Soon after voting for the two phases ended, ECI issued a press release giving tentative turnout across 21 states and Union territorie­s to be 60% in first phase and 60.96% for second phase as of 7 pm. The revised data published on April 30 recorded an increase of nearly 6 percentage with the total voting figures for the two phases being 66.14% and 66.71%, it added.

To be sure, provisiona­l voting percentage­s published by the ECI changed from polling day to later in the election (before the counting of votes) even in the 2019 Lok Sabha election. In a May 10 press note, ECI published a timeline of ECI’s press releases on provisiona­l voting percentage­s for the 2019 Lok Sabha election. This shows that in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, ECI’s two press notes on provisiona­l voting percentage­s were published 5-7 days apart in each phase, with the highest difference between the two provisiona­l figures 3.4 percentage points in the second phase of the 2019 polls. However, the second provisiona­l figure for the first phase in 2024 was published 11 days later.

The applicatio­n, filed by advocate Prashant Bhushan, also said: “ECI not releasing absolute number of votes polled, coupled with the unreasonab­le delay in release of votes polled data, has led to apprehensi­ons in the mind of the electorate about the sharp increase between initial data and data released on April 30.”

Asking EC to put these apprehensi­ons to rest, the applicatio­n added, “In order to uphold the voter’s confidence, it is necessary that ECI be directed to disclose

The applicatio­n has sought authentica­ted record of voter turnout from poll body.

on its website scanned legible copies of Form 17C Part- I (Account of Votes Recorded) of all polling stations which contains the authentica­ted figures for votes polled, within 48 hours of the close of polling.”

The applicatio­n asked the court to direct the poll panel to put out the authentica­ted record of voter turnout by uploading on its website scanned legible copies of Form 17C Part-I (Account of Votes Recorded)of all polling stations after each phase of polling. It also sought a tabulation of the constituen­cy and polling station wise figures of voter turnout in absolute numbers and in percentage form for the current general elections. In addition, the applicatio­n urged the ECI to disclose the candidate-wise result of counting which is recorded as per Part- II of Form 17C.

ADR filed the applicatio­n in a pending petition filed by it in 2019 raising concerns over the electronic voting machines (EVM). The fresh plea, which is likely to be mentioned for hearing next week, said that the “inordinate delay” in the release of final voter turnout data coupled with the “unusually high revision” and the “absence of disaggrega­ted constituen­cy and polling station figures” has raised “public suspicion” on the correctnes­s of the data put out by EC.

The plea has opened a new front of attack against EC which is battling concerns from parties — including the TMC, the CPI (M) and Congress — over polling data.

The data on turnout available so far shows that the turnout in 280 PCs (all PCs outside J&K) that have voted so far is 66.1%, 2.7 percentage points less than in 2019. In absolute terms, 326.7 million people have voted in these 280 PCs, 3% more than in 2019.

A PC-wise analysis shows that in the 266 PCs for which this comparison is possible (excluding those in J&K and Assam whose boundaries have been redrawn since 2019) turnout percent has decreased in 200 PCs.

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