SIR: SC asks ECI, Kerala poll panel to file counters on 1 December

Election Commission of India tells Supreme Court that Kerala's request to postpone the Special Intensive Revision of electoral rolls has no legal merit.

Published Nov 26, 2025 | 2:20 PMUpdated Nov 26, 2025 | 2:20 PM

Supreme Court

Synopsis: Kerala had sought a postponement, arguing that holding the SIR alongside local elections would strain the administration and trigger a governance crisis.

The Election Commission of India has told the Supreme Court that Kerala’s request to immediately postpone the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls has no legal merit.

In an affidavit, the Election Commission said it can seek the court’s intervention if any hurdle arises during the election process, stressing that election matters fell solely under its authority.

The ECI also noted that SIR was not disrupting preparations for the local body polls and that district collectors were cooperating fully.

The Commission urged the court not to stop the SIR under any circumstances.

A Bench of CJI Surya Kant directed the ECI and Kerala State Election Commission to file counters by Monday, 1 December.

Kerala moved the Supreme Court seeking a postponement of the SIR till the local body elections, scheduled for 9 and 11 December, are over.

However, the CPI(M), CPI and IUML’s PK Kunhalikutty sought the scrapping of the SIR.

The court will continue hearing after lunch break.

Also Read: A deadline, a death and a deepening crisis

Kerala’s argument

Kerala had sought a postponement, arguing that holding the SIR alongside local elections would strain the administration and trigger a governance crisis.

While requesting the deferring of SIR, Kerala cited a potential administrative breakdown if the process continued alongside the local body elections currently underway in the state.

Chief Secretary Dr A Jayathilak, representing the state government, filed a writ petition before the apex court, arguing that the simultaneous deployment of personnel for both exercises would cripple the routine functioning of the administration.

In the petition, the government pointed out that conducting the SIR at this juncture would strain the government machinery.

According to the plea, 1,76,000 officials have already been deployed for the conduct of local body elections. An additional 68,000 police personnel are involved in ensuring security. The SIR process requires 25,668 more officials, creating a situation that the government warned would lead to “administrative gridlock.”

The petition stressed that the constitutional mandate requires newly elected local body governing bodies to assume office by 21 December, making the election process non-negotiable and resource-intensive.

Deploying government staff simultaneously for SIR would, the state argued, disrupt essential services.

The Chief Secretary also informed the Supreme Court that hurriedly undertaking the SIR could result in widespread errors in the voters’ roll, defeating the very purpose of the review. The state government had earlier moved the Kerala High Court, challenging the timing of the SIR.

Justice VG Arun, after hearing both the state government and the Election Commission of India (ECI), observed that it would be more appropriate for the government to seek relief from the Supreme Court.

Following this, Chief Secretary Jayathilak submitted the plea before the apex court seeking a direction to temporarily suspend the SIR process until the completion of local body elections.

(This is a developing story).

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