Why in news?
- Ahead of Assembly elections (April–May 2026), the Supreme Court raised questions on feasibility of compulsory voting, reviving a long-standing debate on electoral reforms.
- Issue gains relevance due to:
- Concerns over low voter turnout in urban areas.
- Questions on representativeness of electoral mandates.
Relevance
- GS II (Polity & Governance): Electoral reforms, Representation of People Act, constitutional debates
- GS IV (Ethics): Civic duty vs individual freedom
Practice Question
- Q. “Compulsory voting may enhance participation but undermine democratic freedom.” Critically examine its feasibility in India. (250 words)
Legal and constitutional position of voting in India
- Article 326:
- Provides for universal adult suffrage (18+ years) subject to disqualifications.
- Representation of the People Act, 1950 & 1951:
- Section 19 → eligibility for voter registration.
- Section 62 → right to vote for registered electors.
- Nature of right:
- Supreme Court has consistently held that right to vote is a statutory right, not a fundamental right.
- However:
- Voting choice (including NOTA) linked to freedom of expression under Article 19(1)(a).
Arguments in favour of compulsory voting
- Enhances democratic legitimacy:
- Higher turnout ensures governments reflect broader popular will, reducing “minority mandate” outcomes.
- Reduces voter apathy:
- Particularly in urban and middle-class segments where turnout is often lower.
- Promotes political equality:
- Prevents selective participation → ensures marginalised groups are equally represented.
- International experience:
- Countries like Australia, Brazil, Argentina have compulsory voting:
- Leads to 5–10% higher turnout (Law Commission 255th Report).
- Countries like Australia, Brazil, Argentina have compulsory voting:
Arguments against compulsory voting ?
Constitutional concerns
- Forcing citizens to vote may violate:
- Article 19(1)(a) → includes right not to express / not to vote.
- Compulsion contradicts:
- Democratic principle of voluntary political participation.
Practical challenges
- India’s scale:
- ~95+ crore voters → enforcement extremely difficult.
- High internal migration:
- Migrant workers often unable to vote → penalising them is unjust.
- Administrative burden:
- Monitoring non-voters, imposing penalties → costly and inefficient.
Ethical concerns
- Voting under compulsion may lead to:
- Uninformed or random voting, reducing electoral quality.
- Coercion undermines:
- Free and fair election ethos.
Socio-economic realities
- Barriers to voting:
- Distance, livelihood constraints, lack of awareness.
- Penal measures (fines, denial of services) would:
- Disproportionately affect poor and marginalised groups.
Committee and expert views
- Dinesh Goswami Committee (1990):
- Rejected compulsory voting → cited practical infeasibility.
- Law Commission (255th Report, 2015):
- Acknowledged modest turnout increase (~7%)
- Concluded:
- Not desirable or feasible in Indian context.
Key issues underlying low voter turnout
- Urban voter apathy and political disengagement.
- Migration and absence from place of registration.
- Lack of awareness and voter education.
- Inadequate accessibility:
- Transport, polling booth distance.
Way forward
- Behavioural approach:
- Large-scale awareness campaigns using:
- Social media
- Targeted voter education (SVEEP programme).
- Large-scale awareness campaigns using:
- Ease of voting:
- Remote voting mechanisms for migrants (ECI pilots).
- Better transport/logistics on polling day.
- Institutional measures:
- Strict enforcement of paid holiday on polling day.
- Technological reforms:
- Secure digital/remote voting systems (blockchain-based pilots).
- Incentive-based participation:
- Positive nudges instead of penalties (certificates, recognition).
Prelims pointers
- Article 326 → Universal adult suffrage.
- Voting right → Statutory, not fundamental.
- Law Commission 255th Report → Against compulsory voting.
- NOTA introduced → 2013 (PUCL case).


