‘Sipping tea with dead’: Rahul’s dig at Election Commission

Update: 2025-08-13 18:42 GMT

New Delhi: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Wednesday said he had a unique experience of having tea with some “dead” voters from Bihar and thanked the Election Commission for it.

A group of seven voters from Bihar met the Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha at his residence and shared their experience of how they were declared “dead” by the EC and their names removed from the electoral rolls.

“There have been many interesting experiences in life, but I never got the chance to have tea with ‘dead people’. For this unique experience, thank you Election Commission!” Gandhi said in a post in Hindi on X.

He also shared a video of his meeting with the “dead” voters. In it, Gandhi is heard telling them to move around and see Delhi as the “dead” cannot even be charged tickets.

In the video, some of them told Gandhi that they came to know that they were “declared dead” by the EC during the special intensive revision (SIR), and were among the 65 lakh voters whose names have been removed from the electoral rolls of poll-bound Bihar.

The group also told Gandhi that they appeared before the Supreme Court on Wednesday to get their voting rights back. The apex court is hearing petitions against the special intensive revision of electoral rolls in Bihar.

In a statement, the party later said that seven voters from Bihar, all very much alive, shared tea with Rahul Gandhi today, even as the Election Commission’s SIR list

had them as “dead”.

Ramikbal Ray, Harendra Ray, Lalmuni Devi, Vachiya Devi, Lalwati Devi, Punam Kumari, and Munna Kumar all belong to Tejashwi Yadav’s constituency, Raghopur.

“They have been removed from the electoral rolls despite having completed the requisite paperwork for the SIR.

“The Election Commission has not openly published lists of the people whom it has declared dead, migrated, etc. Our teams on the ground were able to identify these people only because they managed to informally get EC’s internal report in two to three polling booths,” the Congress said.

These seven represent only a fraction of “unjustly” deleted voters in two to three polling booths in the

constituency, it added.

“This is not a clerical error — it is political disenfranchisement in plain sight. 

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