The Supreme Court Electoral Bonds ruling (February 2024) reshaped India’s political funding ecosystem overnight. In a unanimous verdict, a five-judge Constitution Bench led by D. Y. Chandrachud struck down the Electoral Bonds Scheme as unconstitutional, holding that it violated citizens’ right to information under Article 19(1)(a).
- What Was the Electoral Bonds Scheme?
- Why Did the Supreme Court Strike It Down?
- Immediate Court Directives
- Who Benefited the Most? Data Snapshot
- Political Fallout: Narratives & Counter-Narratives
- Immediate Financial Impact (2024–25)
- Electoral Funding After 2024: What Changed?
- Impact on 2024–2026 Elections
- Unresolved Questions in 2026
- Larger Democratic Implications
- Campaign Strategy Shift in 2026
- Reform Proposals Under Discussion
- Voter Awareness & Behavioral Shift
- Long-Term Outlook: 2026 to 2029
Two years later, in 2026, the judgment continues to influence party finances, donor behavior, electoral transparency debates, and campaign strategy ahead of the 2029 General Elections.
This in-depth explainer breaks down:
- Why the scheme was struck down
- What the Court ordered
- Who benefited most from bonds
- How political funding changed post-verdict
- What reforms may come next
What Was the Electoral Bonds Scheme?
Introduced in 2018 via amendments in the Finance Act, the Electoral Bonds Scheme allowed individuals and companies to donate money to political parties anonymously through the State Bank of India.
How It Worked
- Bonds sold in denominations from ₹1,000 to ₹1 crore
- Purchasable during specified windows
- Redeemable only by political parties securing at least 1% votes in prior elections
- Donor identity shielded from public disclosure
The government argued the scheme would reduce black money in politics. Critics argued it legalized opaque, unlimited corporate funding.
Between 2018 and 2024, over ₹16,000 crore worth of electoral bonds were issued.
Why Did the Supreme Court Strike It Down?
In February 2024, the Supreme Court of India ruled the scheme unconstitutional on multiple grounds.
1. Violation of Right to Information
The Court held that voters have a fundamental right to know who funds political parties. Anonymous donations denied citizens the ability to evaluate potential quid pro quo arrangements.
2. Corporate Influence Concerns
Amendments to the Companies Act had removed caps on corporate donations and disclosure requirements. This enabled:
- Loss-making companies to donate unlimited amounts
- Shell companies potentially funneling funds
- Disproportionate corporate influence
The Court found this distorted the principle of political equality.
3. Amendments Invalidated
The judgment struck down related amendments to:
- Companies Act
- Income Tax Act
- Representation of the People Act
The bench emphasized that transparency is essential in a democracy.
Immediate Court Directives
The Court’s orders were swift and consequential:
- Immediate halt to bond issuance
- SBI directed to disclose full data on:
- Buyers
- Bond numbers
- Amounts
- Redemption dates
- Data to be submitted to the Election Commission of India
- ECI to publish information publicly
By April 2024, the data was online — triggering political shockwaves.
Unencashed bonds within the 15-day window were directed to the PM Relief Fund.
Who Benefited the Most? Data Snapshot
The disclosed data revealed stark disparities in political funding.
| Party | Bonds Received (₹ Crore) | % of Total |
|---|---|---|
| BJP | 6,986 | 57% |
| TMC | 1,397 | 12% |
| BRS | 1,322 | 11% |
| Congress | 652 | 5% |
The Bharatiya Janata Party emerged as the largest beneficiary by a significant margin.
Other major recipients included:
- All India Trinamool Congress
- Bharat Rashtra Samithi
- Indian National Congress
Several large corporate donors were identified, sparking debates over policy linkages.
Political Fallout: Narratives & Counter-Narratives
Opposition View
Opposition parties argued:
- The scheme disproportionately benefited the ruling party
- Corporate funding skewed democracy
- Transparency was intentionally diluted
The verdict became a campaign issue during the 2024 Lok Sabha elections.
BJP’s Defense
The BJP maintained:
- Electoral bonds were cleaner than cash donations
- Banking channels reduced black money
- Disclosure to regulators existed
However, the public data altered perception dynamics significantly.
Immediate Financial Impact (2024–25)
Following the ruling:
- Political donations reportedly dropped nearly 25% in FY 2024–25
- Corporate donors paused large contributions
- Electoral trusts saw increased activity
- Direct bank transfers under stricter disclosure norms rose
There was an initial “funding shock.”
However, by late 2025, alternative funding mechanisms stabilized party war chests.
Electoral Funding After 2024: What Changed?
1. Increased Scrutiny
Organizations like ADR (Association for Democratic Reforms) began actively tracking disclosed donations.
2. Corporate Caution
Large firms adopted:
- Split contributions across parties
- Greater legal vetting
- Reduced headline-making donations
3. Rise of Electoral Trusts
Electoral trusts became preferred channels, offering structured transparency while maintaining some discretion.
4. Smaller Party Leverage
Regional parties gained rhetorical advantage by demanding “level playing fields.”
Impact on 2024–2026 Elections
The ruling influenced:
- Campaign messaging
- Transparency demands
- Parliamentary debates
- Coalition positioning
Opposition leaders framed transparency as a democratic victory.
The 2024 General Election saw moderated campaign spending compared to prior cycles, although digital campaigning compensated partially.
Unresolved Questions in 2026
Despite the landmark ruling, several issues remain:
- No alternative funding framework finalized
- Debate over state funding of elections continues
- RTI queries on printing and administrative costs remain partially answered
- Cash donations persist informally
- Compliance mechanisms remain uneven
Political consensus on reform is still elusive.
Larger Democratic Implications
The ruling reasserted a foundational principle:
Transparency strengthens democracy.
It clarified that:
- Political funding cannot override citizens’ rights
- Corporate speech is not unlimited political speech
- Electoral fairness requires informational parity
The decision is frequently cited alongside other constitutional jurisprudence on democratic rights.
Campaign Strategy Shift in 2026
With transparency now central to public discourse:
- Opposition parties demand funding audits
- Ruling parties highlight compliance
- Social media amplifies donor-politician links
- Fact-checking platforms track funding trails
Transparency has become a political talking point, not just a legal principle.
Reform Proposals Under Discussion
The Election Commission of India has held consultations on:
- State funding of elections
- Real-time donation disclosure
- Corporate donation caps
- Digital political advertising regulation
However, political will remains divided.
Voter Awareness & Behavioral Shift
Post-judgment, voters gained unprecedented access to funding data.
This led to:
- Increased investigative journalism
- Data-driven election debates
- Greater skepticism toward large donors
- Amplified scrutiny of policy decisions
Urban, digitally active voters especially engaged with the disclosures.
Long-Term Outlook: 2026 to 2029
As India approaches the 2029 General Election cycle:
- Transparency will likely be a major campaign issue
- Funding reforms may become part of party manifestos
- Judicial oversight of political finance could expand
- Corporate funding strategies will evolve further
The electoral bonds verdict has permanently altered the conversation around money in Indian politics.
Final Analysis: A Watershed Moment in Indian Democracy
The Supreme Court’s 2024 Electoral Bonds ruling was not merely about one scheme — it was about the balance between transparency and political funding convenience.
By prioritizing citizens’ right to know, the Court reset democratic accountability standards.
Two years later, the impact is clear:
- Funding patterns shifted
- Public awareness increased
- Legal precedent strengthened transparency norms
- Political narratives evolved
Yet the core challenge remains: how to fund elections transparently in a country with massive campaign costs.
As 2026 unfolds, one thing is certain — the era of fully anonymous big-ticket political funding in India is over.

