Will move court against revision of electoral rolls: CM Mamata

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Monday said she would move court against the ECI’s SIR of electoral rolls, alleging that fear, harassment and administrative arbitrariness linked to the exercise had led to deaths and hospitalisations, as she sharpened her confrontation with the poll body ahead of the State Assembly polls.
Addressing a massive public gathering at Sagar Island in South 24 Parganas district, Banerjee alleged that technology was being “weaponised” to disenfranchise voters ahead of the 2026 Assembly polls, claiming that artificial intelligence and informal digital platforms were being used to arbitrarily delete names from electoral rolls, undermining democratic safeguards.
“We are moving court tomorrow against the inhumane treatment and the death of so many people due to the SIR,” she said, adding that she was prepared to escalate the legal battle if required. She, however, did not clarify whether the petition would be filed by her personally, the state Government or her party, the TMC.
Banerjee said she would seek permission to appear before the Supreme Court not as a lawyer but as an ordinary citizen. “If necessary, I will go to the Supreme Court and plead for the people. I will speak for the people,” she said, recalling that she is legally trained.
Alleging a “technological conspiracy” behind the SIR, the TMC supremo claimed that opaque digital processes had replaced due mechanism. “Artificial Intelligence has emerged now. Using images and voices, lies can be spread. Names are being removed using AI,” she said.
“AI is deciding whose surname has changed, who got married, which girl has gone to her in-laws’ house. Even a murderer gets a chance to defend himself. Here, people’s names are being removed,” Banerjee said, alleging that 5.4 million names had been dropped without adequate opportunity to respond through statutory forms. In a sharp swipe, she alleged that the poll body was being “run on WhatsApp”, warning that erosion of voting rights would have political consequences.
“If people’s rights are taken away, you too will vanish, you Vanish Kumar,” she said while referring to Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar, urging citizens to check their names on the draft rolls despite the hardship. “This is a struggle for survival and to protect rights,” she added.
The escalation comes a day after Banerjee wrote to the CEC, urging an immediate halt to what she termed an “arbitrary and flawed” SIR, warning that its continuation could trigger “mass disenfranchisement” and “strike at the foundations of democracy”.














