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'If votes were stolen, it was Cong that did it: Giriraj Singh backs Supriya Sule on EVM issue

By IANS | Updated: December 16, 2025 11:50 IST

New Delhi, Dec 16 Union Minister Giriraj Singh on Tuesday backed NCP(SP) MP Supriya Sule for dismissing the ...

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New Delhi, Dec 16 Union Minister Giriraj Singh on Tuesday backed NCP(SP) MP Supriya Sule for dismissing the opposition’s allegations of Electronic Voting Machine (EVM) rigging, asserting that if there had ever been vote theft in the country, it was carried out by the Congress in the era of ballot papers.

Speaking to reporters outside Parliament, Giriraj Singh said that accusations of rigging were being raised without evidence.

“If votes were stolen, it was Congress that did it; they used to snatch ballots. That is why Supriya Sule is speaking correctly,” the Union Minister said, endorsing her remarks.

Supriya Sule, a senior leader of the Nationalist Congress Party (Sharadchandra Pawar) and an ally of the Congress-led INDIA bloc, had rejected claims that EVMs were manipulated. She said she would not question the credibility of the voting system, having herself been elected multiple times through the same mechanism.

“I have been elected on the same machine, so I will not question the EVMs or VVPATs. I am not speaking against the machine. I am making a very limited point, and I am saying this with great expectations from the Bharatiya Janata Party, which has received such a big mandate in Maharashtra,” Sule said while participating in a debate on electoral reforms. She is a four-time Lok Sabha MP from the Baramati constituency in Maharashtra.

Sule’s remarks came days after Congress leader Rahul Gandhi once again targeted the Centre, alleging poll rigging and questioning the impartiality of the Election Commission. Such allegations have been repeatedly raised by the Opposition over the years.

Earlier, Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah had also cautioned against selectively questioning EVMs, stating that it was 'wrong' to raise doubts about the machines only when election results failed to meet expectations. Omar Abdullah on Monday distanced himself from the 'vote chori' issue raised by the Congress, asserting that the "INDIA bloc has got nothing to do with it".

Responding to questions on Monday on the Congress' 'vote chor, gaddi chhod' campaign and allegations of electoral irregularities, Abdullah said, "The INDIA bloc has got nothing to do with it. Every political party is at liberty to set its own agenda. The Congress has made 'vote chori' and SIR as its main issues. Who are we to tell them otherwise?"

During the debate, Rahul Gandhi reiterated his charge that the BJP was “directing and using” the Election Commission to undermine India’s democratic institutions. He also questioned the decision to remove the Chief Justice of India from the selection panel responsible for appointing Election Commissioners.

The Congress leader demanded several reforms, including the provision of a machine-readable voter list to all political parties at least one month before elections, scrapping the law that permits the destruction of CCTV footage after 45 days, granting greater access to EVMs, and amending laws that, according to him, allow Election Commissioners “to get away with whatever they want to do.”

Responding sharply, Union Home Minister Amit Shah countered Rahul Gandhi’s claims, pointing out that EVMs were introduced in India during the tenure of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi. He said it was ironic that the Congress party now opposes a system it had itself implemented.

Shah further noted that the Congress had won the first election conducted using EVMs. “This was in 2004, when Manmohan Singh became the Prime Minister. Ten years later, when we won in 2014, they began raising doubts,” he said.

Rahul Gandhi has repeatedly alleged EVM manipulation and vote theft in recent years. Echoing these claims, senior Congress leader and former Haryana Chief Minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda recently endorsed Gandhi’s position, alleging that the Election Commission was no longer neutral.

Addressing the Congress party’s 'vote chor, gaddi chhod' rally at Ramlila Maidan in the national capital, Hooda claimed that recent elections, including those in Maharashtra, Haryana and Karnataka, had exposed serious flaws in the electoral process. “The Constitution gave every citizen the right to vote after Independence. Today, that very right is being manipulated,” Hooda alleged, accusing authorities of large-scale interference in the voting process.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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