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Enabling voting rights for migrants

Context: Bihar, Migration, and Low Turnout

  • Bihars Out-Migration Profile:
    • One of the highest out-migration states in India.
    • Over 50% of households experience migration, mostly for work.
  • Voter Turnout Concerns:
    • Bihar’s voter turnout in 2024 Lok Sabha elections was 56%, significantly below the national average of 66%.
    • Migration is cited as a key factor reducing electoral participation.

Relevance : GS 2(Elections ,Social Issues)

Patterns and Complexity of Migration

  • India-wide Migration Stats (2021):
    • 28.9% overall migration rate.
    • Majority of women migrate for marriage, while 10% migrate for work, especially in Bihar and eastern India.
  • Types of Migrants:
    • Intra-State Migrants (≈85%): Often in informal sectors and travel within state boundaries.
    • Inter-State Migrants: Harder to reach due to geographic and logistical barriers.

Challenges in Voting Access for Migrants

  • Disenfranchisement Risks:
    • Migrants often cant travel home during elections due to distance, cost, or employment conditions.
    • Lack of suitable voting mechanisms effectively denies many their right to vote.

Proposed Mechanisms and Their Prospects

Statutory Holiday + Transport for Intra-State Migrants

  • Mechanism: Enforce paid holiday on polling day + arrange special buses.
  • Benefit: Enables short-distance travel to home constituencies.
  • Challenge: Needs coordination with employers, especially in the informal sector.

Postal Ballot System

  • Inspired by: Armed forces voting system.
  • Mechanism: Migrants pre-register, ECI issues and collects ballots.
  • Benefit: Could be efficient for inter-state migrants if managed well.
  • Challenge: Requires extensive advance planning and bureaucratic capacity.

Shifting Constituencies

  • Mechanism: Long-term migrants register at place of current residence.
  • Benefit: Empowers migrants as local political stakeholders.
  • Challenge: May face local opposition; needs clear proof of residence.

Remote Voting Machines (RVMs)

  • ECI pilot (2023): RVMs capable of handling votes for up to 72 constituencies.
  • Political Concerns:
    • Transparency and credibility issues raised.
    • Code of Conduct enforcement where migrants reside remains a grey area.
  • Operational Difficulty:
    • ECI would need to install multiple RVMs per city, especially for states like Bihar with 243 Assembly constituencies.
    • Data collection and coordination must begin months in advance.

Women Migrants: A Special Case

  • Women migrating after marriage often don’t re-register in new constituencies.
  • Targeted voter awareness and registration drives needed to include them in local electoral rolls.

Why a Mixed Approach is Needed

  • Heterogeneity of migrants demands multi-pronged solutions.
    • Temporary vs permanent, intra- vs inter-state, skilled vs unskilled.
  • No one-size-fits-all mechanism; ECI needs to combine:
    • Postal ballots
    • RVMs (long-term solution with fine-tuning)
    • Transport/logistical support
    • Flexible re-registration norms

Policy Implications & the Way Forward

  • Strengthen migrant inclusivity to uphold democratic ideals.
  • Empower migrant workers politically, helping demand better living/work conditions.
  • More research and pilot studies needed on:
    • Voting behaviours of migrants
    • Feasibility of tech-based interventions (RVMs, e-postal ballots)
  • Build stakeholder consensus — ECI, political parties, civil society, and employers — to implement any voting reform successfully.

June 2025
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