
South Central Why ECI is pushing SIR, Yogendra Yadav explains | What the Bumble & Ranjith cases reveal about consent
38 snips
Oct 31, 2025 Yogendra Yadav, a renowned psephologist and activist, critiques the Election Commission's Special Intensive Revision (SIR), highlighting flaws and risks of disenfranchising voters through faulty processes. He argues for better methods like house-to-house checks. Sukanya Shaji, a former lawyer and journalist, discusses recent High Court rulings on sexual harassment, revealing how these decisions often undermine justice by quashing complaints at early stages. They emphasize the complexities of consent and the need for a deeper understanding of power dynamics in such cases.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Prefer House Visits Over Mass Enumeration
- Use old-style intensive revision with BLO house visits, on-the-spot checks, and signatures rather than mass enumeration forms.
- Supplement this with IT deduplication rather than SIR's document-heavy process.
Onus Shift From State To Individual
- SIR shifts the burden of voter-list accuracy from the state to individuals, creating a de facto self-registration model.
- Yadav warns this change typically causes a 5–10% drop in listed voters based on global comparisons.
Citizenship Checks Make Revision Exclusionary
- For the first time SIR links routine voter-roll revision with citizenship checks, using documentary proof that many lack.
- Yadav says the exercise is exclusionary because most requested documents don't reliably prove citizenship and many people won't possess them.



