
ONOE proposes synchronizing elections for the Lok Sabha (national), State Legislative Assemblies (state), and local bodies (municipalities/panchayats) into a unified cycle, though not necessarily on the same day. This aims to streamline India’s electoral process, historically fragmented due to frequent elections.
Key Benefits

- Governance Efficiency
- Reduces disruptions caused by the Model Code of Conduct (MCC), enabling continuous policy implementation and development projects.
- Prevents policy paralysis during prolonged election periods.
- Economic Savings
- Lowers costs by consolidating logistics (EVM deployment, security, personnel) for multiple elections.
- Estimated savings: ₹10,000–12,000 crore per election cycle (as per NITI Aayog).
- Judicial Relief
- Reduces election-related litigation (e.g., disputes over campaigning, candidate eligibility).
- Political Stability
- Limits voter fatigue from frequent elections and curbs divisive identity-based campaigning.
- Encourages holistic governance over short-term populism.
Major Challenges

- Federalism Concerns
- Threatens state autonomy by centralizing election schedules, undermining India’s federal structure.
- Regional parties argue national issues could overshadow local priorities (e.g., agrarian crises, water disputes).
- Logistical Hurdles
- Requires doubling EVM availability (from 1.5 million to 3 million) and mobilizing 10–12 million personnel.
- Security forces (CAPF, state police) would face strain managing simultaneous elections.
- Mid-Term Dissolutions
- Handling premature assembly dissolutions (e.g., no-confidence motions) without disrupting the cycle.
- Proposed solution: Impose President’s Rule until the next synchronized election.
- Impact on Smaller Parties
- Favors national parties with greater resources, marginalizing regional and grassroots voices.
- Risk of homogenized political discourse.
Recommendations

- Two-Phase Implementation
- Phase 1:Â Synchronize Lok Sabha and State Assembly elections.
- Phase 2:Â Align local body elections separately to address grassroots issues distinctly.
- Constitutional Amendments
- Introduce Article 82A (fixing Lok Sabha/Assembly terms) and Article 324A (empowering ECI to synchronize elections).
- Amend Article 83(2) and Article 172 to align tenure extensions with ONOE cycles.
- Legal Framework
- Pass a Constitutional Amendment Bill requiring ratification by 50% of states.
- Amend the Representation of the People Act, 1951 to enforce synchronized cycles.
- Logistical Preparations
- Augment EVM production and establish a National Election Logistics Committee for resource allocation.
- Leverage technology (e.g., blockchain for voter rolls) to enhance efficiency.
Global Context

- Sweden, South Africa, and Germany hold synchronized national and regional elections, but India’s scale and diversity pose unique challenges.
- The EU Parliament elections are synchronized, but member states retain autonomy over national polls.
Historical Precedent

- India practiced synchronized elections until 1967. The cycle broke due to premature dissolutions and coalition politics.
- The 170th Law Commission Report (1999) recommended ONOE to stabilize governance.
Conclusion
ONOE offers a transformative vision for India’s democracy, balancing efficiency with accountability. However, its success hinges on:
- Consensus-building among national and regional parties.
- Robust legal and logistical frameworks.
- Safeguarding federalism and grassroots representation.
