Why should the Election Commission involve private businesses to force their workers to vote?

 election commission of india

To

Shri Rajiv Kumar

Chief Election Commissioner

Shri A C Pandey

Election Commissioner

Dear S/Shri Rajiv Kumar and Pandey,

I have come across a disturbing news report (https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/ahmedabad/gujarat-firms-sign-mou-with-election-commission-to-name-shame-workers-who-dont-vote-8214689/) thatfor the first time, over 1,000 corporate houses in Gujarat have signed agreements with the Election Commission (EC), undertaking to monitor ‘electoral participation of their workforce’ and publish the names of those who don’t vote on their websites or office notice boards……The MoUs have been signed with individual units as well as industry bodies, and the attempt to get more on board will continue till polling day. Assembly elections are due in the state later this year“.

Why should the Election Commission of India (ECI) involve the corporate sector to adopt coercive action to compel their voters to participate in elections?

There are enough concerns about the role of corporate agencies in India funding the political parties in several non-transparent ways, including giving funds through the contentious vehicle of the Electoral Bonds, providing logistic support for political rallies at a great cost, and so on. It is therefore somewhat bizarre on the part of the ECI to rely on the same corporate agencies to persuade workers to cast their votes! The existing provisions of the Companies Act and the Foreign Contributions Regulation Act,  which permit political parties to seek and receive funds from the corporates, disturb the level-playing ground between the ordinary citizen-voter and the private companies, as the use of such money power tends to adversely affect the integrity of the electoral process.

In view of complaints that many private companies are not inclined to allow their workers to skip work to cast their votes. Section 135B of the Representation of the People Act has imposed an obligation on private businesses to grant a paid holiday for their workers as follows:

Grant of paid holiday to employees on the day of poll.— (1) Every person employed in any business, trade, industrial undertaking or any other establishment and entitled to vote at an election to the House of the People or the Legislative Assembly of a State shall, on the day of poll, be granted a holiday”

If at all there is any need for monitoring enforcement of this obligation, such monitoring needs to be only in respect of the private companies and their promoters, not in respect of the workers.

Considering this particular news report in question, one is constrained to entertain the fear that involving the private companies in coercing the workers to cast their votes could even result in their coercing the workers to vote for a particular political party, which in fact would amount to a corrupt practice.

I appeal to the ECI not to involve private businesses in forcing the voters to cast their votes, as it could lead to benefitting a particular political party to the disadvantage of the others.

I am afraid that the EC, of late, has been venturing into areas that could erode its credibility as an independent Constitutional authority entrusted with the responsibility of conducting elections in a free and fair manner.

Regards,

Yours sincerely,

E A S Sarma

Former Secretary to Government of India

Visakhapatnam

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