Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) leader Tejashwi Yadav on Sunday accused the Narendra Modi-led central government of compromising the autonomy of constitutional bodies, particularly the Election Commission of India (ECI), claiming that the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) gains prior knowledge of election schedules before official announcements.
He also questioned the fairness of Bihar’s 2020 assembly elections and endorsed Congress leader Rahul Gandhi’s allegations of electoral irregularities in Maharashtra’s 2024 polls.
Addressing reporters in Patna, Yadav said, “Since the Modi-led NDA assumed power in 2014, constitutional institutions have been systematically undermined. It’s astonishing that the BJP’s IT Cell knows election dates before the ECI’s public disclosure. We’re closely monitoring these developments.”
He stressed the need for independent functioning of such bodies, questioning how justice could be served under external influence.
Reflecting on the 2020 Bihar assembly elections, Yadav alleged manipulation, stating, “Everyone knows what transpired. We were poised to form the government. The ECI held three press conferences to explain why counting halted in the evening, only to resume at night. Candidates from our Mahagathbandhan, initially declared winners, were later announced as losers.”
Yadav supported Rahul Gandhi’s recent claims of rigging in the 2024 Maharashtra assembly elections, won decisively by a BJP-led coalition.
In an article and X posts, Gandhi described the polls as a “blueprint for rigging democracy,” alleging a pattern of “match-fixing” that could extend to Bihar and other states where the BJP faces defeat. The ECI dismissed these accusations as “absurd.”
Following the ECI’s rebuttal, Gandhi questioned the poll body’s response, criticising its issuance of an “unsigned statement.” In an X post, he wrote, “As a constitutional body, the ECI should not resort to vague, unsigned notes via intermediaries to address serious concerns.”
He demanded transparency, urging the ECI to publish consolidated, digital voter rolls for recent Lok Sabha and state assembly elections, including Maharashtra, and release CCTV footage of voting after 5 PM from Maharashtra’s polling stations. “Truth, not evasion, will safeguard your credibility,” Gandhi asserted.
Congress leader Pawan Khera raised additional concerns, asking, “How did Maharashtra add 41 lakh new voters in five months, compared to 31 lakh over five years? Why did the provisional voter turnout of 58.22% jump to 66.05% in the final count, and where is the post-5 PM voting footage?”
He also sought clarification on the “targeted voter increase” in 12,000 booths across 85 constituencies where the BJP underperformed in the Lok Sabha elections but won in the state polls.