The election commission of India: Guardian of democracy

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Abstract

This chapter tells the story of how the Election Commission of India (ECI) became one of the most awe-inspiring electoral regulatory bodies in the world. One of the most widely celebrated and trusted public institutions in India, it has ensured the integrity-free and fair-of 17 national and more than 370 state elections since 1947, in what is not only the most populous but also one of the most potentially fractious democracies in the world. Ever under pressure from the executive branch and governing parties to bow to demands fed by their desire for electoral windfalls, the ECI managed to strengthen its autonomy through assertive leadership by a series of Chief Electoral Commissioners following the decline of the Congress Party's political dominance. The rise of the Hindu Nationalist BJP as the new dominant force in Indian politics provides a crucial test for the endurance of the ECI's role as India's guardian of electoral integrity.

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APA

Ahuja, A., & Ostermann, S. (2020). The election commission of India: Guardian of democracy. In Guardians of Public Value: How Public Organisations Become and Remain Institutions (pp. 37–62). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51701-4_2

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