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Thiruvananthapuram Dispatch: ECI Begins the “Great Audit” for Kerala 2026

Townhall Times, New Delhi

Reporter: Bhavika Kalra

Thiruvananthapuram | Tuesday, February 24, 2026, By: Regional Bureau (Election Desk)

The countdown has officially begun. A high-level delegation from the Election Commission of India (ECI), led by Senior Deputy Election Commissioner Maneesh Garg, concluded a two-day marathon of review meetings in the capital today. This isn’t just a routine check-up; it is the formal activation of the state’s election machinery for what promises to be a high-voltage triangular battle this April.

While the “official” schedule is expected in mid-March, the atmosphere in Thiruvananthapuram is already thick with pre-poll maneuvering.

The Numbers Game: 2.69 Crore and Counting

The most critical takeaway from the ECI’s visit is the publication of the Final Electoral Roll. Following a massive “Special Intensive Revision” (SIR), the data reveals a leaner, more scrutinized electorate.   

  • Total Voters: 2,69,53,644   

  • The Gender Gap: Women continue to outnumber men (1.38 crore vs 1.31 crore).  

  • The Clean-up: Nearly 9 lakh names (8,97,211) were purged from the rolls due to death, migration, or duplication.   

  • First-Timers: Over 4.24 lakh young voters (18–19 age group) have been added, a demographic that every major party is currently hyper-targeting.  

The “Keralam” Factor: Identity as an Election Plank

In a rare moment of bipartisan unity that smells of election-year optics, the Union Cabinet is reportedly set to clear the proposal to officially rename the state as “Keralam.” * The Intent: Aligning the English name with the Malayalam linguistic roots.

  • The Politics: While Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan pushed the resolution, state BJP chief Rajeev Chandrasekhar has publicly backed the move. It’s a battle over who gets to claim the “custodian of culture” title before the first vote is cast.

Security and “Green” Protocols

The ECI has issued a stern “Zero Tolerance” warning regarding electoral violence and illegal inducements.   

  • Seizure Management: For the first time, all seizures (cash, liquor, freebies) must be uploaded in real-time on the ESMS portal to ensure absolute transparency.   

  • The Green Mandate: Kerala is doubling down on its eco-friendly reputation. The commission has banned PVC flex and non-recyclable plastic for campaigning. Only 100% cotton or government-approved recyclable materials are allowed.   

The Political Battlefield: A Three-Way Split?

The 2026 landscape looks markedly different from the 2021 LDF landslide.

  1. LDF (Left Democratic Front): Facing the “incumbency of a decade,” the Left is struggling with internal questions of “Who after Vijayan?” and a recent adjournment of the Assembly sine die amid opposition protests over the Sabarimala gold theft allegations.   

  2. UDF (United Democratic Front): Sensing a comeback, the Congress-led front is aggressively courting the Christian vote bank in central Kerala—a demographic that has traditionally been their backbone but has shown signs of fracturing toward the BJP.

  3. NDA (National Democratic Alliance): With Rajeev Chandrasekhar at the helm of the state unit, the BJP is moving away from purely ideological rhetoric to a “Secure Kerala” (Surakshitha Keralam) platform, potentially fielding high-profile “anti-corruption” faces like former DGP Jacob Thomas.

The Logistics of Democracy

To manage the April surge, the state is prepping:

  • 30,471 Polling Stations across the state.   

  • 41 Counting Centers (an increase from previous years).   

  • Home-Voting: Extended provisions for the elderly and PWD voters to ensure high turnout without the physical strain of booths.

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