Abstract In the digital age, core democratic rights- voting and freedom of expression- face growing threats from algorithmic disinformation, opaque platform governance, and transnational electoral interference. Although grounded in binding legal instruments such as the ICCPR and UDHR, protections for these rights in digitally mediated elections remain fragmented and inadequately enforced, particularly in jurisdictions where private tech companies mediate political discourse. This article explores how evolving UN soft law instruments-including General Comments No. 25 and 34, the 2020 Joint Declaration on Freedom of Expression and Elections in the Digital Age, and Report A/77/287- address these challenges. Employing a normative-analytical methodology, it combines interpretive legal analysis with comparative case studies from India and Kenya to evaluate the normative strength and practical limitations of soft law. The findings show that while lacking coercive force, UN soft law sets essential normative expectations on transparency, electoral integrity, and proportionate content moderation. The paper identifies persistent implementation gaps and proposes innovative soft-regulatory approaches to enhance the alignment of non-binding frameworks with real-world digital governance. Key contributions include a Model Law on Digital Electoral Integrity, a proposed UN Platform Accountability Charter, and Principles for Algorithmic Transparency, aiming to transform aspirational norms into operational standards and affirm digital electoral justice as a global democratic imperative.
ASM Mahmudul Hasan (Tue,) studied this question.