To seek amendments to RP Act

The Election Commission will soon ask the government to disqualify for up to five years candidates listed in charge sheets for bribing voters, a move which comes after it found that “innovative ways” were used for luring electors in a Tamil Nadu byelection.

The poll watchdog has decided to write to the Law Ministry seeking changes in the Representation of the People Act to ensure that candidates contesting Lok Sabha and Assembly polls are disqualified once they are charge-sheeted by a court, sourcespanel said.

R.K. Nagar bypoll

Earlier this month, the commission had indefinitely cancelled the R.K. Nagar Assembly bypoll after it found that money power was used to influence voters. The by-poll was to be held on April 12. It was necessitated following the death of former Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J. Jayalalithaa.

In its lengthy order, the panel had pointed out that political parties and their top leaders used “innovative ways” in bribing voters in the Assembly seat to outwit law enforcement authorities mandated with keeping an eye on poll expenditure.

Many complaints were received by the panel on possibilities of inducement of electors by distributing cash and gifts in innovative forms like tokens, prepaid phone recharge coupons, newspaper subscription, milk tokens, money transfer in no-frill accounts in banks and even mobile wallet payment to mobile numbers.

Earlier, the panel had asked the government to give it power under the election law to countermand an election where money power is used. At present, the EC can countermand an election for use of muscle power.

It can use its constitutional powers under Article 324 to countermand a poll over use of money power, but it wants the power to be vested to it under law. The logic is that it does not want to use its constitutional powers too frequently.