ECI Not Targetting Bengal, More Officers Transferred In Other Poll-Bound States: Calcutta High Court
The Calcutta High Court has dismissed a Public Interest Litigation filed by Advocate Arka Kumar Nag challenging the Election Commission of India's large-scale transfers of IAS and IPS officers following the March 15 election announcement, holding that the challenge was fundamentally flawed because the “existence of power with ECI to transfer/shift the officers after issuance of election notification to ensure free and fair election” was never disputed in the petition itself.
Chief Justice Sujoy Paul, speaking for the Bench, noted that the petitioner's own pleadings expressly stated that “the power to transfer officers, though vested in the Election Commission of India… must be exercised with caution and responsibility,” which, the Court said, “leaves no room for any doubt” that the petitioner accepted the ECI's authority and therefore could not later argue lack of jurisdiction.
The Court emphasised: “A careful reading of the petition… leaves no room for any doubt that petitioner has not disputed the existence of power with ECI to transfer/shift the officers after issuance of election notification to ensure free and fair election.”
It further said that courts cannot micro-manage or second-guess the Commission's administrative decisions, observing: “It is not the domain of this Court to sit in appeal over administrative wisdom of ECI unless clear arbitrariness, mala fide or violation of statutory provisions is established.”
No mala fides in transfer of officers by Election Commission
The Court observed that allegations of mala fide were wholly unsubstantiated, remarking that “mere assertions of mala fide without any foundational facts or material cannot be the basis for interfering with election-related administrative steps,” and emphasised that “election administration is a specialised exercise” in which courts must display restraint.
Rejecting the State Government's argument that the transfers created administrative paralysis, the Bench held that no such “numb” condition existed because each transferred officer was immediately replaced, noting that “it cannot be said that administrative numb has been created and Government will paralyse” merely because the ECI reorganised officers for the limited duration of elections.
West Bengal not singled out, higher numbers of officers transferred in other states
The Court also addressed the claim that West Bengal was being singled out, concluding that the allegation was factually incorrect after examining ECI's nationwide data showing that “the number of officers shifted in other States is much higher than the number of officers shifted in West Bengal.” This, the Court held, rebutted any charge of vindictiveness or discriminatory treatment.
The judges also raised concern about the petitioner relying on confidential internal communications between the State and the ECI, commenting that “how the petitioner could lay his hands on these confidential documents is a big question,” and observed that the PIL appeared to “canvass political interest rather than espouse public interest.”
Addressing the extensive statutory arguments advanced by the petitioner and supported by the Advocate General, the Court declined to enter into an academic analysis of sections 13CC, 20A, 20B or 28A of the Representation of People Acts, pointing out that the petition contained no foundational pleadings challenging ECI's statutory authority.
Merely transferring large numbers of officers not 'arbitrary' under Article 324
It reiterated that Article 324 is a constitutional reservoir of plenary power, recalling the principle from Mohinder Singh Gill that “when Parliament has not spoken, Article 324 operates with full vigour to ensure free and fair elections,” and stressing that “Merely because the ECI had transferred a sizable number of officers, it cannot be said that action is arbitrary, capricious or mala fide.”
On the maintainability of the PIL itself, the Court invoked the seven-judge bench decision in S.P. Gupta, stating that only a demonstrated “public injury” can justify a public-interest proceeding.
No public injury caused by transfer of officers ahead of Elections by ECI
It concluded that the petitioner, being a practising advocate with no personal grievance, failed to establish that the transfers caused any such injury, observing that “the writ petitioner could not establish that because of transfer of officers, any public injury is caused.”
Transfers, the Court reiterated, are “an incident of service,” and aggrieved officers are free to challenge them individually, noting that “this judgment will not come in the way of the individual aggrieved officers to challenge their transfer order.”
Ultimately, finding the PIL “sans substance”, the Bench dismissed it, reiterating that the independence of the Election Commission must be protected during the conduct of elections and that courts cannot second-guess its administrative choices “in the context of conducting free and fair election.”
Appearing for the petitioner were Mr. Kalyan Bandopadhyay, Senior Advocate, assisted by Mr. Rahul Kumar Singh, Ms. Shrobana Sengupta, and Mr. Kaushik Bandyopadhyay, Advocates.
The Election Commission of India was represented by Mr. Dama Seshadri Naidu and Mr. Soumya Mazumdar, Senior Advocates, along with Ms. Anamika Pandey, Mr. Abhinav Thakur, Mr. Surjaneel Das, Mr. Kumar Utsav, and Mr. Ghanshyam Pandey.
The State of West Bengal was represented by Mr. Kishore Datta, Advocate General, assisted by Mr. Swapan Banerjee, Ms. Sumita Shaw, Mr. Diptendu Narayan Banerjee, and Mr. Soumen Chatterjee.
Case: Arka Kumar Nag vs. Election Commission of India and others
Case No: WPA (P) 141 of 2026