The Asian Age

Govt plans bill to allow 2.5cr NRIs to vote

- J. VENKATESAN

In a far-reaching decision that will impact 2.5 crore NRIs, and to some extent the outcome of the 2019 elections, the government has decided to give them right to vote in their motherland through proxy or an e-postal ballot system by amending the law.

The non-resident Indians (NRIs), at present, have no voting rights. Proxy voting rights will allow them to authorise a nominee in their constituen­cy to cast the vote on their behalf. At present, only defence personnel are allowed to vote through a nominee or postal ballot.

The new provision is likely to include into the country’s voting exercise new electors numbering more than the population of Delhi (1.8 crore) or onethird of the population Gujarat (6.5 crore).

The Centre informed the Supreme Court on Friday that based on the

The non-resident Indians (NRIs), at present, have no voting rights. The government has decided to give them right to vote in their motherland through proxy or an e-postal ballot.

Election Commission’s suggestion­s a bill will be introduced in Parliament for paving the way for NRIs to cast their vote in elections through their nominees residing in their constituen­cy in India.

Making voting possible for NRIs requires an amendment to the Representa­tion of the People Act, which the government will table in the upcoming Winter Session, attorney general K.K. Venugopal said.

A bench, headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra, was hearing separate petitions by NRI groups which have been

continued from page 1 pending for three years. In July, the apex court had asked the Centre to submit a plan on how it intends to let NRIs vote in elections, after which the Cabinet cleared a proposal on the matter, to be taken forward through an amendment.

According to the EC, under the e-ballot procedure the NRI wishing to vote will have to send an applicatio­n either electronic­ally or physically to the returning officer six months before the expiry of the term of the House for which the elections are scheduled to be held.

The Returning Officer (RO) may verify the particular­s of the person and at the time of election and, on satisfacti­on, electronic­ally send the postal ballot which the NRI elector can access through a password allotted to him.

The elector will need to download the postal ballot paper, cast the vote and post it back to the RO after getting the declaratio­n attested, the EC said.

The EC had told the Centre that it can initiate the process of granting voting rights to NRIs within three months of the amendment to law.

Counsel for the Centre sought from the bench, which also included Justices A.M. Kanwilkar and D.Y. Chandrchud, an adjournmen­t for six months on the ground that the bill will be tabled in the Winter Session of Parliament. However, the bench deferred the hearing by 12 weeks.

The petitioner­s had submitted that crores of people would be entitled to cast their vote if NRIs were allowed to vote from overseas. It was argued that 114 countries, including 20 Asian countries, had adopted external voting.

The EC said that the e-postal ballot system has almost no risk of manipulati­on, rigging or violation of secrecy.

Initially, the system could be tried in “one or two constituen­cies in elections to the legislativ­e Assemblies”, it said.

The system could later be “scaled up to more Assembly elections and finally Parliament­ary elections if found feasible, practicabl­e and meeting the objectives of free and fair elections”, the EC said.

The poll panel said that it examined several suggestion­s to enable NRIs to cast their vote and rejected the idea of allowing them to cast their votes at diplomatic missions abroad.

It said that Internet voting is also not a feasible option until appropriat­e technology/informatio­n technology applicatio­ns are available and all other vulnerabil­ities are addressed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India