Why in News?
A recent case from Dadra and Nagar Haveli municipal council elections (2025) highlighted arbitrary rejection of a candidate’s nomination without a hearing or verification, exposing flaws in India’s nomination scrutiny system under the Representation of the People Act (RPA), 1951.
Relevance
GS-2 (Polity & Governance):
- Issues in electoral process under Representation of the People Act, 1951.
- Arbitrary powers of Returning Officers — violation of Article 14 and 326.
- Highlights procedural opacity and need for digital reforms (ENCORE Portal).
- Supports recommendations of Law Commission and ECI for transparent scrutiny.
- Comparative perspective: Canada, UK models of error correction and reasoned scrutiny.
The Nomination Process
- Legal Basis:
Governed by Sections 33–36 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 and the Conduct of Elections Rules, 1961.- Section 33: Filing of nomination papers.
- Section 34: Security deposit.
- Section 35: Notice of nominations.
- Section 36: Scrutiny of nominations — Returning Officer (RO) empowered to accept or reject.
- Key Clause — Section 36(2):
Authorises RO to reject a nomination for “defects of a substantial character.”
However, the Act does not define what constitutes “substantial.” - Judicial Bar:
Under Article 329(b), courts cannot intervene during elections, so rejections can only be challenged after results, rendering remedies ineffective.
Core Issue
- Excessive discretionary power of Returning Officers (ROs).
- No uniform guidelines on what constitutes a “substantial defect.”
- Opaque, unreviewable process — enables political exclusion before voting even begins.
Recent Examples of Nomination Rejection
| Year | Case | Reason for Rejection | Impact |
| 2025 | Dadra & Nagar Haveli | No hearing given to candidate | Violation of natural justice |
| 2024 | Surat LS election | Opposition candidates’ proposers denied signatures | Seat won unopposed |
| 2019 | Varanasi | Tej Bahadur Yadav (ex-BSF) lacked EC certificate | Prevented independent challenge to PM |
| 2023 | Birbhum | Debasish Dhar delayed no-dues certificate | Eliminated from ballot |
| 2025 | Bihar (RJD) | Blank fields in form | Technical rejection |
Legal & Constitutional Angle
- Constitutional Safeguard:
- Article 326: Right to vote.
- Article 19(1)(a) & 19(1)(c): Freedom of expression and association (linked to political participation).
- Article 14: Equality before law.
Arbitrary nomination rejection undermines both the candidate’s right to contest and voters’ right to choose.
- Key Case Laws:
- Resurgence India v. Election Commission (2013):
False declarations invite prosecution but do not invalidate nomination; incomplete forms do.
⇒ Honest errors punished more than deliberate lies. - K. Venkatachalam v. A. Swamickan (1999):
Courts can step in post-election if process violates constitutional principles. - PUCL v. Union of India (2003):
Established voters’ right to know candidates’ background — basis of affidavit filing.
- Resurgence India v. Election Commission (2013):
Structural Weaknesses (“Procedural Traps”)
- Oath Trap:
Oath must be taken before a specified officer after nomination but before scrutiny; early/late timing = invalid. - Notarisation Trap:
Affidavit (Form 26) not notarised by specified authority = automatic rejection. - Certificate Trap:
“No-dues” or clearance certificates missing/delayed = rejection, often due to bureaucratic delay. - Checklist Illusion:
ROs provide checklists but are not legally binding. Even defect-free forms can later be rejected.
Global Best Practices
| Country | Safeguard Measure |
| UK | RO assists candidates to correct errors before deadlines. |
| Canada | 48-hour correction window for technical defects. |
| Germany | Written notice + appeal layers for errors. |
| Australia | Early submission encouraged to enable corrections. |
⇒ India treats RO as gatekeeper, while others treat them as facilitators.
Reforms Suggested
- Digital-by-Default Nomination System:
- Online filing, validation via electoral roll, auto-verification of voter ID, age, constituency.
- Real-time public dashboard showing nomination status, timestamps, and reasons for acceptance/rejection.
- Categorisation of Defects:
- (1) Technical/paperwork: should not lead to rejection.
- (2) Authenticity disputes: require verification.
- (3) Constitutional/Statutory disqualifications: valid grounds for rejection.
- Guaranteed 48-hour Correction Window:
Similar to Canada’s model, for candidates to fix errors. - Mandatory Reasoned Orders:
Each rejection must specify: violated clause, evidence, and why defect is “substantial.”
Broader Democratic Implications
- Democratic Legitimacy:
Without fair nomination scrutiny, the right to vote is hollow. - Political Competition:
Arbitrary rejections can skew contests — e.g., unopposed seats like Surat (2024). - Citizen Trust:
Opacity erodes confidence in ECI’s neutrality.
Data & Facts
- India had 8,000+ candidates rejected in 2019 Lok Sabha elections (ECI data; ~12% of total nominations).
- Average 4 candidates per constituency rejected for technical grounds.
- Lok Sabha 2024: Over 200 nominations rejected in first scrutiny day in Gujarat and Bihar.
- ECI Digital Reforms: ENCORE Portal currently digitises election management but not nomination scrutiny.


