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In its earlier notices, the Opposition had accused the CEC of a "failure to maintain independence and constitutional fidelity" and of acting under the "thumb of the executive". | File photo

Opposition plans fresh bid to remove CEC after defeat of women’s quota amendment bill

Buoyed by recent legislative success, Opposition parties move to draft a second notice seeking removal of CEC Gyanesh Kumar, alleging executive bias and electoral misconduct


Buoyed by the success in defeating the women's quota amendment bill, Opposition parties are now planning a fresh move to seek the removal of Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar, according to agency reports.

Highly-placed sources told PTI on Saturday (April 18), leaders from several Opposition parties are in talks, and at least five senior MPs from different parties -- including the Congress, the Trinamool Congress, the Samajwadi Party and the DMK -- are working on drafting a new notice to initiate removal proceedings.

It has, however, not yet been decided which House the notice would be moved in, or whether it would be introduced in both Houses as was done last time, the source added.

'Thumb of the executive'

After the defeat of The Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026 in Lok Sabha on Friday, and undeterred by the rejection of their earlier notices, Opposition leaders are aiming to secure more MPs' signatures on the notice and are looking at garnering at least 200, PTI report said quoting the source.

"We want to make a statement. We first need to prove that the number last time was underestimated," the source added.

Also read: Women's quota: Opposition has not averted delimitation danger, only deferred it

In its earlier notices, the Opposition had accused CEC Kumar of a "failure to maintain independence and constitutional fidelity" and of acting under the "thumb of the executive".

Large-scale disenfranchisement

The notices levelled sweeping charges against the CEC, alleging “proved misbehaviour” on grounds including a compromised and executive-influenced appointment, partisan functioning -- such as the alleged “graded response” doctrine targeting Opposition leaders -- obstruction of electoral fraud investigations, and erosion of transparency through refusal to share data and materials.

They further accused him of enabling large-scale disenfranchisement via Special Intensive Revision (SIR) exercises in Bihar and elsewhere, defying or delaying compliance with Supreme Court directions, and acting in alignment with the political executive, thereby undermining the independence of the Election Commission.

Notices rejected

However, in almost similar responses, Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla and Rajya Sabha Chairman C P Radhakrishnan rejected the notices, holding that even if the allegations were assumed to be true, they did not meet the high constitutional threshold of “misbehaviour” required for removal.

They reasoned that appointment-related issues or prior government service do not constitute misconduct; differences in public statements or administrative decisions lack evidence of wilful abuse of authority; and actions like data-sharing or electoral roll revisions fall within the commission’s constitutional mandate and are subject to judicial review.

Also read: In TN, Rahul hails opposition over blocking 'hidden agenda' in women's bill

The responses also stressed that many issues cited were either speculative, politically interpretative, or sub judice, and that removal proceedings cannot be based on disagreement or perceived political consequences but require clear, specific, and provable misconduct, which, they concluded, was absent in this case.

(With agency inputs)

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