The review also identified 92,114 voters whose recorded age difference with their grandparents was less than 40 years. Udham Singh Nagar topped this category with 21,036 cases, followed by Haridwar with 14,071, Dehradun with 13,527 and Nainital with 11,875.
Bageshwar, Kapkot and Dwarahat constituencies each registered 11 percent of their flag voters in this category.
Another striking anomaly involved 2,39,566 voters whose records suggested a gap of less than nine months between two children in the same family. Khanpur reported 6,457 such cases and Haridwar Rural 6,187, while Vikasnagar recorded 3,236.
Large groups of six or more voters were also found registered under a single household head. These included 8,087 voters in Pirankaliyar, 6,964 in Manglaur and 4,799 in Laksar.
Errors in voter names and details of relatives were particularly prevalent in Dehradun and Haridwar. In Raipur, 23,555 voters – about 50 per cent of those examined – had discrepancies in their names, while 17,676 records contained mistakes in the names of relatives. Doiwala reported 20,805 such cases and Dharampur 23,048.
The commission also classified thousands of voters as “undecided.”
Rudrapur reported the highest number at 42,808, with discrepancies affecting 89 percent of the constituency’s voters. Raipur followed with 17,859 unenrolled voters, Vikasnagar with 10,536 and Jaspur with 6,222.
The data will now be subject to field verification. Voters who remain untraceable even after giving notices may face deletion from electoral rolls.





