Good if they win, bad if they lose: Scindia on opposition's stand on SIR – ‘are they afraid of losing?’

Union Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia argues that opposition parties only oppose the Special Intensive Review (SIR) when they face electoral defeat. He emphasises the importance of the people's decision, while opposition leaders claim voter manipulation during the SIR process.

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Updated14 Jan 2026, 08:41 PM IST
Shivpuri, Jan 10 (ANI): Union Minister Jyotiraditya M. Scindia flags off and inaugurates a renovated sub-post office and lays the foundation for a new  <span class='webrupee'>₹</span>1.11 crore facility to enhance local access to banking, e-services and digital connectivity at Pichhore, in Shivpuri on Saturday. (@JM_Scindia X/ANI Photo)
Shivpuri, Jan 10 (ANI): Union Minister Jyotiraditya M. Scindia flags off and inaugurates a renovated sub-post office and lays the foundation for a new ₹1.11 crore facility to enhance local access to banking, e-services and digital connectivity at Pichhore, in Shivpuri on Saturday. (@JM_Scindia X/ANI Photo) (@JM_Scindia X)

Union minister Jyotiraditya Scindia on Wednesday said Special Intensive Review (SIR) has been conducted by every government, but the opposition finds it objectionable only when they lose an election.

This is not the first time an SIR is being conducted in the country, the BJP leader said, speaking to reporters.

Also Read | Bengal SIR: Summons to Amartya Sen, Shami part of routine: EC

"Do they (opposition parties) have objections to the cleansing (of voter lists) or the proper voting process? In other words, are they afraid of losing?" Scindia said.

'People's decision is paramount for all of us'

"Now, where they win, SIR is very good, and if they lose, it is bad. This is a democracy, and the people's decision is paramount for all of us," he added.

Scindia's remarks come amid a row over SIR exercise in many states, mostly where opposition is in power. In Trinamool Congress-ruled West Bengal, for example, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee a strongly-worded letter to Chief Election Commissioner, Gyanesh Kumar on Thursday, asking him to immediately halt the exercise that she claimed was "chaotic, coercive and dangerous".

The TMC chief mentioned that she has "time and again" raised concerns over the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of the electoral rolls in the state and is now "compelled to write" to the chief election commissioner because the situation has reached a "deeply alarming stage".

4.5 crore names removed in UP, alleges AAP

Elsewhere, the Aam Aadmi Party on Wednesday claimed that over 4.5 crore names have been removed from Uttar Pradesh's voter list in a month, as it alleged that the electoral rolls have been manipulated and demanded the Supreme Court order a probe into the matter.

Senior AAP leader and Rajya Sabha MP Sanjay Singh accused the state government and Election Commission officials of orchestrating "the largest electoral fraud in UP's history under the name of SIR".

The state's voter count dropped from 17 crore in December 2025 to 12.55 crore after the "so-called thorough revision," effectively making over 4.5 crore voters disappear, he claimed. "This is a direct attack on democracy and the Constitution."

In Rajasthan, state Congress chief Govind Singh Dotasra on Wednesday said a pen drive with constituency-wise data was issued from the chief minister's residence with the aim of deleting 4,000 to 5,000 Congress-leaning voters in each assembly segment.

Also Read | Mamata fires 5th letter to CEC, flags ‘AI-driven’ digitisation errors in SIR

The Bharatiya Janata Party refuted the allegation, saying Dotasra was making "baseless" claims.

Alleging a "large-scale conspiracy" to cut the Congress vote bank in the state, the Congress state chief said the data was provided after Union Home Minister Amit Shah's recent visit to Jaipur and circulated among BJP leaders.

(With agency inputs)

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