New Delhi, In a significant acknowledgement of India’s growing influence in global electoral governance, Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar has been unanimously elected as the next President of International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (International IDEA) for the year 2026. He will formally assume the role at the organisation’s Council of Member States meeting in Stockholm on 3 December.
Mr Kumar, who took charge as CEC earlier this year, will become the first serving Chief Election Commissioner of India to lead the Stockholm-based intergovernmental body. Established in 1995, International IDEA counts 35 member states—including France, Germany, Brazil, Sweden and India—while the United States and Japan hold observer status. India has been a founding member since its inception.
The appointment comes at a time when India’s Election Commission is implementing an intensive Special Summary Revision (SSR) of electoral rolls ahead of several state assembly elections and the 2029 Lok Sabha polls, alongside defending its processes against allegations of irregularities from opposition parties.
A statement from the Election Commission of India described the development as reflective of the “global recognition of India’s robust electoral management practices”. Officials noted that the presidency will enable Mr Kumar to showcase Indian innovations—such as the use of EVM-VVPAT systems, systematic voters’ education programmes, and technology-driven voter list management—to other democracies.
International IDEA and the Election Commission of India’s own training arm, the India International Institute of Democracy and Election Management (IIIDEM), have collaborated for over a decade on capacity-building programmes for election management bodies across Asia, Africa and Latin America.
The organisation’s rotating presidency is held for one calendar year. Mr Kumar will succeed the current president, Kevin Casas-Zamora, former Vice-President of Costa Rica.
Analysts see the election of an Indian CEC to the helm of International IDEA as further evidence of New Delhi’s expanding soft power in democratic institution-building, particularly in the Global South, at a time when several established democracies grapple with declining trust in electoral processes.

