Civil rights groups in Rajasthan have demanded an extension of the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls by at least six months. They also want the removal of conditions that exclude people. A public hearing was held in Jaipur on November 27, 2025, to listen to those facing trouble with the SIR. People testified that filling and submitting SIR forms was difficult. Many said the SIR was used to evict vulnerable residents. Booth Level Officers (BLOs) cancelled forms if names could not be found in the 2002 voter list. Former Chief Electoral Officer Sudhir Verma led the panel. Panellists included former civil servants and leaders from civil rights groups like the People’s Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL). Around 200 participants from districts such as Dungarpur, Udaipur, and Jaipur shared their experiences. They said large-scale voter exclusion was happening. The process was called “an exercise in disenfranchisement.” Many affected voters live in tribal areas where 56% migrate for work and can't meet BLOs. Migrant labour colonies and Muslim-majority areas saw mass deletions. PUCL-Rajasthan president Bhanwar Meghwanshi said, “The current design of SIR was not to enrol voters but to exclude them from the electoral rolls, contrary to Article 326 of the Constitution.” He added that this process wrongly acts as citizenship verification, which the Supreme Court forbids. The demand to show names in the 2002 voter list risks disenfranchising women who changed names after marriage, nomadic tribes, transgender persons, single women, sex workers, and migrant workers. Panellists urged accepting Aadhaar as a valid document and recognizing voter cards from 1995. They called for public posting of draft voter lists and a social audit starting December 9. The resolution pushed the Election Commission to make the SIR process inclusive and fair.