uttar pradesh sir
New Delhi/Lucknow, April 11 -- Uttar Pradesh's electorate expanded by 8.43 million between the draft roll in January and the final numbers released on Friday, the highest among the 13 states and Union Territories where the special intensive revision (SIR) has concluded.
India's most-populous state completed the controversial process with 13.2% deletions, second only to Gujarat, which saw 13.4% deletions. The state's total electorate stood at 133.98 million, 20.45 million fewer than on October 27, when the rolls were frozen for SIR.
The controversial process stretched across 157 days and an unprecedented four extensions, marking the longest time taken for SIR to be completed in a region. In contrast, West Bengal received one extension, while Kerala and Tamil Nadu each got two extensions.
Uttar Pradesh goes to the polls in early 2027.
"In the entire Special Intensive Revision, no deletion has been done without following the prescribed due process. No removal from the voter list has taken place without proper procedure. If any name present in the draft electoral roll published on January 6, 2026 is not in the final electoral roll, it has either been removed after submission of Form 7 or after a notice and hearing process, based on the decision of the ERO," chief electoral officer Navdeep Rinwa said
The draft roll, published on January 6, followed the first phase of SIR where all electors not found to be absent, shifted, dead, or duplicated were included in the rolls. The final roll saw a 6.7% expansion, the highest among all 13 states and UTs where SIR was concluded. The additions between the draft and final roll explain why the net deletion in Uttar Pradesh decreased from 18.7% at the draft stage (the highest among all states) to 13.2% in the final roll (second highest after Gujarat). During the first phase of SIR, chief minister Yogi Adityanath had expressed concern that many of those deleted were Bharatiya Janata Party voters.
Urban centres continue to lead in net deletions. The districts with the highest net deletions were Lucknow, Ghaziabad, Kanpur Nagar, Gautam Buddha Nagar, and Meerut, where the post-SIR roll had 22.9%, 20.2%, 19.4%, 19.3%, and 18.7% fewer electors, respectively, than the pre-SIR roll,. All these districts were among the top five even at the draft stage excluding Gautam Buddha Nagar, which was ranked seventh at that stage. Balrampur, a rural district that was ranked third at the draft stage, has moved down to the 11th spot.
The districts with the lowest deletions were Lalitpur, Hamirpur, Pilibhit, Mahoba, and Banda, where the rolls contracted by 6.7%, 6.9%, 8%, 8.5%, and 8.9% respectively. Pilibhit moved from the sixth spot in the draft roll in terms of deletions to the third spot and Amroha moved from the fifth spot to the seventh spot.
The district-wise deletion data didn't show a correlation with the share of Muslim population in a district. To be sure, Uttar Pradesh did not see a controversial and protracted adjudication process like West Bengal.
The SIR also witnessed the deletion of more women voters than men. In the draft roll, the names of 15.5 million women voters were deleted, compared to 13.4 million men, bringing the gender ratio down from 877 (in the pre-SIR voter list) to 824. In the final electoral roll, the gender ratio rose to 834. The CEO said 815,000 deleted voters in the final list included 350,000 who did not reply to ECI notices, 328,000 permanently shifted/ absent voters, 79,076 duplicate voters, 55,865 deceased voters and 2,269 voters who were not Indian citizens or under age....
To read the full article or to get the complete feed from this publication, please
Contact Us.