Electoral bond data: Future Gaming and Megha Engineering top donors to political parties
The data release provides details of electoral bonds worth over Rs 12,000 crore. The information was provided by State Bank of India (SBI), the sole seller of the bonds, and published by the ECI.
The data release provides details of electoral bonds worth over Rs 12,000 crore. The information was provided by State Bank of India (SBI), the sole seller of the bonds, and published by the ECI.
Other donor names include the Bharti Group and Vedanta. The information clearly shows the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) got the lion’s share over the years, something that’s also clear from the party’s own annual audit reports.
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Future Gaming and Megha Engineering have had encounters with controversy. Future Gaming has been under the Enforcement Directorate’s scrutiny.

Megha Engineering is under fire over the Kaleshwaram lift irrigation project and was also involved with the Silkyara tunnel project in Uttarakhand where several workers were trapped for days last year.
Other prominent donors include Essel Mining (an arm of Aditya Birla Group), Haldia Energy of the Goenka group, Jindal Steel, the Mahindra Group and the Dhariwals.
READ MORE: Electoral bond data released: Here's a complete list of donors who contributed Rs 10 crore or more
Some of India’s largest conglomerates don’t find a mention in the data set, but the entities listed may have connections to them, analysts said. Establishing these links could be a challenging task, they added.
Individuals such as Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw also bought electoral bonds besides the likes of liquor distributor Mardi Gras, the Western UP Power Transmission Company and the Keventers group.
After the BJP, trailing far behind are the Trinamool Congress and the Indian National Congress followed by the Bharat Rashtra Samithi, Biju Janata Dal and the DMK.
More data on electoral bonds, as submitted by political parties to the ECI, is also likely to be published soon, once the apex court releases the documents to the poll panel. The ECI has moved an application in the Supreme Court seeking this, ET has learnt.
It is also expected that petitioners will move the apex court once again to seek that SBI reveal the ‘unique code’ data on electoral bonds to conclusively establish donor and recipient details.
SBI has shared two data sets with EC — the list of electoral bond purchasers and amounts of bond purchased and a separate list of political parties who received them.
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