Dinesh Goswami Committee, 1990

Introduction

The Dinesh Goswami Committee was set up in 1990 to examine issues relating to electoral reforms in India. It is one of the most important committees in the history of election reform because it studied the structural weaknesses of India’s electoral process and suggested changes to make elections cleaner, fairer, and more credible.

It was chaired by Dinesh Goswami, who was then the Law Minister.

Background

By the late 1980s, concerns had become serious regarding:

• Booth capturing
• Money power in elections
• Misuse of official machinery
• Criminalization of politics
• Defections and instability
• Weaknesses in the electoral system

In this context, the committee was constituted to recommend practical electoral reforms.

Objective of the committee

The main purpose of the committee was to review the electoral system and suggest reforms to strengthen free and fair elections.

Its focus was on:

• Improving the conduct of elections
• Reducing electoral malpractices
• Strengthening the Election Commission
• Reforming campaign practices
• Making representation more meaningful and transparent

Major recommendations

Strengthening the Election Commission

The committee stressed the need to make the Election Commission more independent and effective.

Important suggestions included:

• Appointment of the Chief Election Commissioner in consultation with the Chief Justice of India and Leader of Opposition
• Similar consultative process for appointment of Election Commissioners
• Greater institutional autonomy for the Election Commission

This recommendation was aimed at insulating the Election Commission from executive dominance.

Rotation of reserved constituencies

The committee recommended rotation of constituencies reserved for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. The idea was to ensure broader representational fairness and avoid permanent reservation of the same constituencies.

Booth capturing and repoll

The committee took booth capturing very seriously and recommended that:

• Re-poll should be held in all areas affected by booth capturing
• Strict preventive and corrective measures should be adopted to control electoral violence and fraud

This was a major recommendation given the serious misuse of force in elections at the time.

Use of electronic voting machines

The committee supported the introduction of Electronic Voting Machines in a phased manner. This was a forward-looking recommendation because EVMs were seen as a way to reduce fraud, invalid votes, and manipulation in counting.

Delimitation

The committee recommended regular delimitation of constituencies on the basis of census data so that representation remains fair and population-based.

Bye-elections

The committee suggested that bye-elections should be held within a fixed time period, generally within six months, so that constituencies do not remain unrepresented for long.

Model Code and official machinery

The committee emphasized stricter control over the misuse of official machinery during elections.

This included concern over:

• Use of government vehicles
• Use of public funds for campaign advantage
• Abuse of state power by ruling parties

Election expenses

The committee recommended stricter monitoring of election expenditure and effective enforcement of spending limits to reduce the influence of money power.

Voter identity cards

It supported the issue of photo identity cards to voters to prevent impersonation and bogus voting. This later became one of the most important reforms in Indian elections.

Criminalization and disqualification

The committee expressed concern over increasing criminalization of politics and suggested stronger disqualification provisions and stricter legal standards, though later reforms in this area evolved through other committees and court judgments as well.

Need for cleaner politics

A central theme of the committee was that electoral reform is not merely technical. It is essential for democracy, legitimacy, and public trust in representative institutions.

Significance of the committee

The Dinesh Goswami Committee is important because it was among the earliest systematic post-independence efforts to address electoral corruption and institutional weaknesses in a comprehensive manner.

Its significance lies in:

• Bringing electoral reform into mainstream constitutional debate
• Strengthening focus on Election Commission independence
• Highlighting booth capturing and money power
• Supporting voter ID cards and EVMs
• Laying groundwork for future electoral reforms

Impact

Not all recommendations were implemented immediately, but several later reforms reflected the committee’s vision.

Its influence can be seen in:

• Greater strengthening of the Election Commission
• Wider use of EVMs
• Introduction of voter photo identity cards
• Greater concern with campaign expenditure and misuse of official machinery

Limitations

The committee’s recommendations were important, but many structural issues remained unresolved because:

• Political will for reform was limited
• Criminalization of politics continued
• Money power expanded further
• Institutional reforms moved slowly

So, the committee is best seen as a major reform milestone rather than a complete solution.

Conclusion

The Dinesh Goswami Committee, 1990 was a landmark committee on electoral reforms in India. It highlighted the need to protect elections from money power, muscle power, and executive misuse, and it made several important recommendations to strengthen the Election Commission and improve electoral integrity. It remains a key reference point in the study of Indian electoral reform.

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