West Bengal's ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR) has brought down the total logical discrepancies in voter lists by around 41.51 lakh since the draft roll was published in December. As of January 2, 2025, officials say about 94.49 lakh discrepancies remain. The Chief Electoral Officer’s (CEO) office shared these details. Logical discrepancies refer to mismatches in parent names or abnormal age gaps. For example, some electors have less than 15 or more than 50 years difference with their parents, or less than 40 years difference with grandparents. Others are linked to more than six successors. When the draft roll came out on December 16, there were about 1.67 crore such cases. Reverification by election officials has helped reduce this number. Currently, there are 51 lakh mismatches in parents' names, 23 lakh cases with electors linked to over six progenies, 4.74 lakh with less than 15 years age difference with parents, 8.41 lakh with over 50 years difference, and nearly 3 lakh with less than 40 years difference with grandparents. In addition, about 30 lakh voters could not link their family ties with the 2002 voters list and 58 lakh names were deleted for being Absent, Shifted, Dead, or Duplicate (ASDD). The total number of electors before SIR began stood at roughly 7.66 crore as of October 27, 2025. Trinamool Congress leaders, including Abhishek Banerjee, have criticized the Election Commission of India for not publicly sharing the list of voters with logical discrepancies.