Section 49P popularised by Vijay’s ‘Sarkar’: What it’s about
Movie-goers began to Google Section 49P of the election rules in India after a scene in ‘Sarkar’ showed Vijay’s character Sundar Ramasamy using the law to cast his vote.
Google searches for a little-known election rule peaked in India after AR Murugadoss’s Deepavali release, Sarkar. Movie-goers began to Google Section 49P of the election rules in India after a scene in Sarkar showed Vijay’s character Sundar Ramasamy using the law to cast his vote. Sundar, who is an NRI and CEO of a top American company, comes to his home country to cast his vote for the state elections only to find out that someone else has cast his vote under his name.
Sundar moves court under Section 49P of the election rules, which then sets the premise for the movie as Sundar ends up locking horns with three-time Chief Minister Masilamani (Pala Karuppiah), his second in command Malarvannan (Radha Ravi), and Masilamani’s daughter Komalavalli (Varalaxmi Sarathkumar).
Here’s what the law Section 49P is all about:
According to The Conduct of Elections Rules, 1961, Section 49P states – “If a person representing himself to be a particular elector seeks to vote after another person has already voted as such elector, he shall, on satisfactorily answering such questions relating to his identity as the presiding officer may ask, be, instead of being allowed to vote through the balloting unit, supplied with a tendered ballot paper which shall be of such design, and the particulars of which shall be in such language or languages as the Election Commission may specify.”
In simpler terms, if a voter realises that someone else has already voted using his/her name, he/she can approach the presiding officer at the booth and flag the issue. Under 49P, the voter will be allowed to register his/her own vote as per their constitutional right. After satisfactorily answering questions ascertaining his identity to the presiding officer, the said voter is allowed to cast his/her vote on a ‘tendered’ ballot paper, which is then locked and sealed away. Such votes are called ‘tender votes’ and are usually useful when the margin of votes between two candidates is thin and the margin of victory is less than the tendered votes. However, if a candidate secures victory by a large number of votes, these tendered votes are not usually considered since they cannot tip the scales in any manner.