Question:

If corporate donations are unlimited and anonymous, does it violate the Right to Information (RTI)?

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In election law questions, always link political transparency to Article 19(1)(a). Any scheme that suppresses donor identity or funding information almost always fails the “voter’s right to know” test.
Updated On: Dec 7, 2025
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Solution and Explanation

Yes. Unlimited and anonymous corporate donations to political parties directly violate the Right to Information (RTI) under Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution. To understand why, we must examine (1) the constitutional doctrine of voters’ right to know, (2) the structure of the Electoral Bonds judgment, and (3) the special risks posed by corporate funding.
1. RTI under Article 19(1)(a) includes the “voter’s right to know”
The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that Article 19(1)(a) protects not only the right to speak, but also the right to receive information necessary for meaningful democratic participation. This was established in the following landmark cases:

Union of India v. ADR (2002) – Voters must know criminal, financial, and educational details of candidates.
PUCL v. Union of India (2003) – Right to know the background of electoral candidates flows from 19(1)(a).
State of U.P. v. Raj Narain (1975) – People have a right to know the acts of those who govern them.
The Court therefore sees transparency as an indispensable part of democratic choice.
2. Anonymous corporate funding creates a “black box” that denies voters essential information
If corporations donate:

without disclosure of donor identity,
without disclosure of amount,
without disclosure of which party received it,
then the public is deprived of information about:
Who influences political decision-making?
Which corporations have financial ties to ruling or opposition parties?
Whether quid pro quo arrangements exist.
The Supreme Court in the 2024 Electoral Bonds judgment explicitly held that:
“Political funding is directly connected to electoral outcomes.
A voter cannot make an informed choice without knowing who funds political parties.”
Hence anonymity itself becomes unconstitutional.
3. Unlimited corporate donations distort democracy and suppress voter information
The Electoral Bonds Scheme removed two long-standing safeguards:

The 7.5\% cap on corporate donations under Section 182 of the Companies Act.
The requirement that companies disclose political contributions in their profit-and-loss statements.
This created a situation where:

shell companies could funnel unlimited money into politics,
loss-making companies could donate huge sums,
voters had no way of knowing which political party was being financially influenced.
The Supreme Court held that this violates the proportionality requirement under Article 19(2) because:

the restriction on transparency was excessive,
the objective (protecting donors from retaliation) could be achieved by narrower alternatives.
Thus, unlimited + anonymous funding fails constitutional scrutiny.
4. Violation of RTI = Violation of Free and Fair Elections (Basic Structure)
The Court connected corporate secrecy to the Basic Structure Doctrine: \[ \text{Free and Fair Elections} \in \text{Basic Structure} \] If voters are denied crucial information about political finances, then:
“Their ability to exercise meaningful democratic choice is impaired.”
This means anonymous money does not merely violate RTI — it undermines the basic structure of the Constitution.
Final Conclusion:
\[ \boxed{\text{Unlimited and anonymous corporate donations violate the RTI under Article 19(1)(a).}} \]
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