Letters to The Editor — March 16, 2026

Published - March 16, 2026 12:24 am IST

Poll bugle sounded

The announcement of the election dates for Assembly polls in West Bengal, Kerala/Keralam, Tamil Nadu, Assam and Puducherry, marks a key moment for democracy. It is important that these elections are conducted in a peaceful, transparent and fair manner so that every citizen can cast their vote without fear or pressure. The role of the Election Commission of India becomes extremely crucial in maintaining fairness and ensuring that all rules and regulations are properly followed. At the same time, political parties should focus on healthy debates, development issues and constructive policies instead of spreading hatred, misinformation or creating unnecessary conflict during their election campaigning. Responsible campaigning will help voters make better decisions and strengthen democratic values.

Aarchi Verma,

Rajpura, Punjab

Institutions, scrutiny

Our democracy confronts an unusual moment: challenges to two of its most consequential constitutional offices — the Speaker of the Lok Sabha and the Chief Election Commissioner — that prompts a reflection on the resilience and the vulnerabilities of our institutional design. Perhaps the very emergence of such challenges would testify to the robustness of democratic culture, when institutions are openly scrutinised and when public debate engages even the highest offices. That said, the frequency and intensity of such confrontations risk signalling a gradual erosion of trust in institutions that depend heavily on perceived and demonstrable neutrality. A question follows. Which lapse would inflict the greater injury on democracy — an election widely doubted for its fairness, or a legislature whose procedural guardrails weaken? Either scenario chips away at public confidence, though electoral credibility arguably forms the foundational pillar of the democratic order. The test for any democracy is not the absence of institutional strain but its capacity to confront such stress without corroding the public faith that sustains it.

R. Narayanan,

Navi Mumbai

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