Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Come out and vote today if you want a better and cleaner Delhi

- Sweta Goswami sweta.goswami@hindustant­imes.com

VOTE POWER Brave the sun, exercise your right to vote. You have the power to fix what’s going wrong in your locality

It’s a Sunday and if you are reading this, know that you could be among the 1.32 crore Delhi residents who are going to vote for today’s municipal elections that also assume a lot of political significan­ce this time around.

Fed up of those garbage dumps in your colony, the stinking public toilets and the unkempt parks? Well, you could do more than just complainin­g and demand a solution to such civic problems.

But only if you go out and vote. Choosing your councillor is just as (or even more) important as choosing your prime minister and chief minister. Why? Because the 272 councillor­s are the ones who represent the 272 wards of Delhi and are responsibl­e for giving you a clean and healthy surroundin­g.

Remember last year’s dengue and chikunguny­a outbreak or the strikes by sanitation workers that left garbage mounds in your backyards for weeks? Covering an area of 1,397.3 square kilometers, the three municipal corporatio­ns of Delhi provide civic services to 1.32 crore people.

State election commission­er SK Srivastava told HT that he wanted to send across a message. “The MCDs cover almost 96% of the total span of the capital. From cradle to crematoriu­m, it is the MCD that you will always need, be it making birth or death certificat­es, getting kuda (garbage) removed or trade licence or building plans approved. So even if it is hot, please go out and vote on Sunday,” he said.

With 29 department­s such as engineerin­g, sanitation, primary education and horticultu­re among others, the civic bodies deal with most common problems that the citizens face -- cleanlines­s, potholed roads, encroachme­nts, broken pavements, poor condition of gardens, community centres, parking lots, approval of building plans, trade licences and registrati­on of birth and death.

The Delhi election commission is running a campaign with the tagline ‘Voter Dhakad Hai’ (Voters are awesome), which is inspired by a song in the Aamir Khan starrer Dangal.

Srivastava said the poll office is hoping to see a record turnout. “In the 2012 MCD elections, the percentage was 55% -- the highest for Delhi’s civic elections in 15 years. This time we are expecting 65-70% turnout,” he said.

With 2.24 lakh people added in just a span of three months from January to April 3, the chances of a better turnout are quite high this time around.

The youth could play a significan­t role in the MCD polls as more than 1.1 lakh people would be voting for the first time. Of this, 24,825 are those who have recently turned 18, while the rest are aged 19 and above.

According to Bharati Chaturvedi of Chintan, an NGO working in Delhi’s sanitation sector, a higher turnout this time would help build the “credibilit­y” of the MCDs that was lost over time. “More the people vote, more is their involvemen­t in civic issues and more would be the pressure on councillor­s to work. If you don’t vote, you alienate yourself from your surroundin­gs and won’t raise your voice to fix accountabi­lity. Simply put - no vote, no voice,” she said.

Explaining why it was important that people vote during the civic polls, Srikanth Viswanatha­n, CEO Janaagraha, said, “The country’s foreign policy may not affect my daily life but if there is a heap of garbage on the local street or the road is potholed, it will bother me.”

It is a battle of survival for us. We need to win the election to survive in Delhi and this is the best time for the Congress to bounce back.

 ?? ARUN SHARMA/HT PHOTO ?? A model polling booth at Delhi Gate on Saturday. On Sunday, Delhi will vote to elect its representa­tives to 272 municipal wards in a highoctane contest that holds a lot of significan­ce for the three major parties — AAP, BJP and the Congress.
ARUN SHARMA/HT PHOTO A model polling booth at Delhi Gate on Saturday. On Sunday, Delhi will vote to elect its representa­tives to 272 municipal wards in a highoctane contest that holds a lot of significan­ce for the three major parties — AAP, BJP and the Congress.
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