Election Commission of India
Constitutional Basis and Nature
The Election Commission of India (ECI) is a permanent, independent constitutional body established directly under the Constitution to oversee free and fair elections across the country. Its authority flows from Article 324, which vests in the Commission the power of superintendence, direction, and control over elections to:
- Both Houses of Parliament
- State Legislatures
- The office of the President of India
- The office of the Vice-President of India
Because it serves both the Union and the States, the ECI is considered an all-India body — it is not a body of just the Central Government.
Critical Distinction: The Election Commission does not oversee elections to Panchayats and Municipalities. For local self-government elections, the Constitution mandates a separate State Election Commission — established under the 73rd and 74th Constitutional Amendment Acts of 1992.
Composition
Article 324 provides a flexible framework for the composition of the Election Commission:
- The Commission shall consist of the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) and such number of other Election Commissioners as the President may determine from time to time.
- Both the CEC and other Election Commissioners are appointed by the President.
- When other Election Commissioners are appointed, the CEC acts as the Chairman of the Commission.
- The President may also appoint Regional Commissioners after consulting the Election Commission, to assist it as needed.
- The service conditions and tenure of all Election Commissioners and Regional Commissioners are determined by the President.
Salary and Status
The CEC and the two other Election Commissioners enjoy equal powers, equal salary, allowances, and perquisites — equivalent to those of a Judge of the Supreme Court.
In cases of disagreement among the three commissioners, decisions are taken by majority vote.
Tenure
All Election Commissioners hold office for a term of six years or until they reach the age of 65 years, whichever comes earlier. They may resign at any time or be removed before completing their term.
Evolution: From Single-Member to Multi-Member Body
| Period | Structure |
|---|---|
| 1950 – 15 Oct 1989 | Single-member body (only the CEC) |
| 16 Oct 1989 – Jan 1990 | Three-member body (two additional ECs appointed to handle increased workload after voting age lowered from 21 to 18 by the 61st Constitutional Amendment Act, 1988) |
| Jan 1990 – Oct 1993 | Reverted to single-member body |
| Oct 1993 – present | Three-member body (CEC + 2 Election Commissioners) |
The 61st Constitutional Amendment Act of 1988 reduced the voting age from 21 to 18, significantly expanding the electorate and prompting the expansion of the Commission.
Independence of the Election Commission
The Constitution builds several safeguards to protect the ECI's independence and impartiality:
Constitutional Protections
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Security of Tenure for the CEC: The Chief Election Commissioner can be removed from office only in the same manner and on the same grounds as a Judge of the Supreme Court — that is, by the President acting on a resolution passed by both Houses of Parliament with special majority, on grounds of proved misbehaviour or incapacity. The CEC does not hold office at the pleasure of the President.
-
Protection of Service Conditions: After appointment, the service conditions of the CEC cannot be varied to his disadvantage.
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Protection for Other Commissioners: Other Election Commissioners and Regional Commissioners cannot be removed except on the recommendation of the CEC — this gives the CEC a protective role over fellow commissioners.
Constitutional Gaps and Criticisms
Despite these safeguards, the Constitution has notable omissions:
- It does not prescribe qualifications (legal, educational, administrative, or judicial) for appointment to the Commission.
- It does not specify a fixed tenure for Election Commissioners (the six-year/65-year rule is statutory, not constitutional).
- It does not bar retiring Election Commissioners from accepting further government appointments — a potential threat to post-retirement independence.
Powers and Functions
The Election Commission's functions cover three broad categories:
1. Administrative Functions
- Determine the territorial boundaries of electoral constituencies based on the Delimitation Commission Act (Parliament has enacted Delimitation Acts in 1952, 1962, 1972, and 2002).
- Prepare and periodically revise electoral rolls; register all eligible voters.
- Notify election dates and schedules; scrutinise nomination papers.
- Grant recognition to political parties and allot election symbols.
- Register political parties and grant them national or state party status based on poll performance.
- Prepare a roster for political parties to broadcast their policies on radio and television during elections.
- Determine the Model Code of Conduct for parties and candidates.
- Request the President or Governor to requisition staff for election purposes.
- Appoint officers to inquire into disputes related to electoral arrangements.
- Supervise the entire election machinery to ensure free and fair elections.
- Cancel polls in instances of rigging, booth capturing, violence, or other serious irregularities.
2. Advisory Functions
- Advise the President on questions of disqualification of Members of Parliament.
- Advise the Governor on questions of disqualification of Members of State Legislatures.
- Advise the President on whether elections can be held in a State under President's Rule — relevant when extending Emergency beyond one year.
3. Quasi-Judicial Functions
- Act as a court for settling disputes related to recognition of political parties and allotment of election symbols.
Organisational Structure
At the Central Level:
- The Commission is assisted by Deputy Election Commissioners drawn from the civil services, appointed by the Commission on a tenure basis.
- They are supported by Secretaries, Joint Secretaries, Deputy Secretaries, and Under Secretaries in the Commission's secretariat.
At the State Level:
- The Chief Electoral Officer assists the Commission; appointed by the CEC in consultation with the State Government.
At the District Level:
- The District Collector functions as the District Returning Officer.
- He appoints a Returning Officer for each constituency in the district.
- He appoints a Presiding Officer for every polling booth in each constituency.
Vision, Mission and Guiding Principles
The Election Commission has articulated its institutional identity through its Strategic Plan 2016–2025.
Vision: To be an institution of excellence by deepening and strengthening electoral democracy in India and globally through active engagement and participation.
Mission: To maintain independence, integrity, and autonomy; ensure accessibility, inclusiveness, and ethical participation; and deliver free, fair, and transparent elections to the highest professional standards.
Key Guiding Principles:
- Uphold constitutional values: equality, equity, impartiality, independence, and rule of law.
- Conduct elections with credibility, transparency, and accountability.
- Ensure inclusive participation of all eligible citizens.
- Promote electoral awareness among voters, parties, candidates, and functionaries.
- Adopt technology and innovative practices to improve electoral processes.
- Reinforce public trust and confidence in the electoral system.
Exam Focus
- Article 324 is the foundational article — know its scope precisely.
- The ECI covers Parliament, State Legislatures, President, and Vice-President — not Panchayats/Municipalities.
- The CEC's removal process mirrors that of a Supreme Court judge — special majority in both Houses.
- Other ECs can only be removed on the recommendation of the CEC — a key distinction.
- The ECI became a three-member body in October 1993 — this date is frequently tested.
- The three categories of ECI functions — Administrative, Advisory, Quasi-Judicial — are frequently tested as statement-based questions.
- Constitutional gaps (no prescribed qualifications, no post-retirement bar) are important for critical-reasoning questions.
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