What unfolded inside the Supreme Court today was not just a legal hearing but a charged political moment with national implications. West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee appeared before a bench led by Chief Justice Surya Kant to challenge the Election Commission’s Special Intensive Revision of voter rolls, accusing the poll body of shutting its doors on her state. Declaring that “justice is crying behind closed doors,” Banerjee alleged that repeated letters to the EC went unanswered while voter deletions accelerated ahead of elections. The Supreme Court acknowledged the gravity of her concerns, issued notice to the EC, and cautioned officials to act with sensitivity. Banerjee flagged deletions over spelling mistakes, language mismatches, and post-marriage surname changes, warning that ordinary voters were being disenfranchised. She also alleged selective targeting of Bengal, rejection of Aadhaar despite court directions, and questioned the rush of the exercise after decades. With the matter listed for further hearing, the case now raises wider questions about electoral fairness, voter rights, and institutional accountability in India’s democracy.