The Model Code of Conduct is a set of guidelines issued by the Election Commission of India to regulate the conduct of political parties, candidates, ministers and governments during elections. It aims to ensure that elections are conducted in a free, fair, peaceful and level-playing-field manner. The MCC comes into force immediately after the Election Commission announces the election schedule and remains in operation till the completion of the election process.
Nature
The Model Code of Conduct is not a law passed by Parliament. It does not have a separate statutory status like the Representation of the People Act, 1951.
However, it is enforced by the Election Commission using its powers under Article 324 of the Constitution, which gives the Commission the power of superintendence, direction and control over elections.
Some actions under the MCC may also overlap with legal provisions under:
- Representation of the People Act, 1951
- Indian Penal Code / Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita
- Code of Criminal Procedure / Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita
- election expenditure rules
- anti-defacement laws
- service conduct rules
So, MCC itself is mainly a code of conduct, but violations may attract legal action if they also violate statutory law.
Main Provisions
General Conduct
Political parties and candidates must avoid:
- speeches that create hatred between communities
- caste or religious appeals for votes
- personal attacks unrelated to public life
- bribery, intimidation or impersonation of voters
- use of places of worship for election propaganda
- criticism based on unverified allegations
The Election Commission’s official MCC text states that no party or candidate should indulge in activities that aggravate existing differences or create mutual hatred between castes, communities, religious or linguistic groups.
Meetings and Processions
Political parties must inform local police authorities about public meetings and processions so that arrangements can be made for traffic, security and public order.
They must avoid:
- obstructing rival party meetings
- carrying weapons in processions
- provocative slogans
- route clashes with other processions
- creating public disorder
Polling Day Conduct
On polling day, parties and candidates are expected to:
- cooperate with election officials
- avoid campaigning near polling booths
- not distribute voter slips with party symbols
- not create crowding or intimidation near polling stations
- not transport voters in violation of rules
The purpose is to allow voters to exercise their choice freely and without pressure.
Conduct of Party in Power
The ruling party has special restrictions because it controls government machinery.
Ministers and governments must not:
- announce new schemes or financial grants
- lay foundation stones for projects
- make ad hoc government appointments to influence voters
- use official machinery for campaign purposes
- combine official visits with election campaigning
- use government vehicles, aircraft or public funds for party benefit
- issue advertisements at public cost for political advantage
This is one of the most important parts of the MCC because elections must not become a contest between the ruling party’s state power and the opposition’s limited resources.
Election Manifestos
Election manifestos must not contain promises that disturb the level playing field or amount to corrupt inducement. The Election Commission expects parties to explain the rationale and financial implications of welfare promises.
This issue has become important due to debates around freebies, welfare promises and fiscal responsibility.
Applicability
For general elections to the Lok Sabha or State Legislative Assemblies, the MCC applies from the date of announcement of the election schedule.
For bye-elections, the MCC is usually applied in the concerned constituency or district, depending on the Election Commission’s instructions. Election Commission compendiums clarify that the MCC comes into force with the announcement of the election schedule and ceases after completion of the election process or declaration of results, depending on the type of election.
Significance
The MCC is important because it protects the fairness of elections.
It helps in:
- preventing misuse of official machinery
- maintaining a level playing field
- reducing hate speech and communal polarisation
- checking money and muscle power
- regulating campaign behaviour
- ensuring peaceful polling
- preserving public trust in elections
In a large democracy like India, where elections involve huge crowds, intense campaigns, identity politics and massive public resources, the MCC acts as a basic code of democratic discipline.
Limitations
- It does not have full statutory backing.
- Enforcement often depends on the Election Commission’s authority and moral pressure.
- Action may be delayed in fast-moving digital campaigns.
- Social media misinformation is difficult to monitor.
- Hate speech and dog-whistle politics are hard to prove.
- Ruling parties may still gain indirect advantage through publicity or welfare narratives.
- Transfers, advertisements and government announcements often create disputes.
- Repeated violations may attract notices, but punishment is sometimes seen as weak.
Current Relevance
The MCC has become more important due to new campaign methods such as:
- social media advertising
- deepfakes
- AI-generated misinformation
- targeted digital campaigning
- influencer-led political content
- surrogate advertisements
- communal and polarising online narratives
The Election Commission’s updated manuals and compendiums now increasingly deal with expenditure monitoring, digital publicity, government advertisements and use of official machinery. The ECI maintains official MCC guidelines and handbooks for election officials and political actors.
Way Forward
The MCC should be strengthened without converting every violation into criminal litigation.
Important steps include:
- faster enforcement during campaigns
- clearer rules for digital campaigning
- stronger monitoring of deepfakes and misinformation
- transparent action against hate speech
- better regulation of government advertisements
- time-bound disposal of MCC complaints
- stronger expenditure monitoring
- clearer rules on freebies and fiscal promises
The Election Commission should also publish more detailed reasoning in important MCC decisions to improve transparency and consistency.
Conclusion
The Model Code of Conduct is one of the most important instruments for ensuring free and fair elections in India. Though it is not a full statutory law, it derives authority from the Election Commission’s constitutional powers under Article 324.
Its real value lies in preventing misuse of power, maintaining campaign discipline and protecting voter freedom. In the age of digital misinformation, polarised politics and high-cost campaigns, the MCC needs stronger, faster and more transparent enforcement.



