Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Officials blame ‘new rules’ for delay in vote counting

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com

The delay is because of the provision of a certificat­e to every candidate after every round of counting.

VL KANTHARAO, chief electoral officer, Madhya Pradesh This process will take some time and there will be some delay but [we] cannot tell how much delay will be there.

ANAND KUMAR, chief electoral officer, Rajasthan

BHOPAL/JAIPUR: In contrast to the speedy tallying of votes in Mizoram and Telangana, the slow pace of counting in Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgar­h and Rajasthan kept people in general and political parties in particular on tenterhook­s through the day, especially in the case of Madhya Pradesh where the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party were neck-and-neck for most part of the day.

Rajasthan’s chief electoral officer Anand Kumar explained the delay, saying votes in the electronic voting machine were being matched by randomly selecting a voter-verifiable paper audit trail from a polling centre in each assembly constituen­cy.

“This process will take some time and there will be some delay but [we] cannot tell how much delay will be there,” he added. Kumar’s counterpar­t in Madhya Pradesh, VL Kantharao, said: “The delay is because of the pro- vision of a certificat­e to every candidate after every round of counting.” The process that was blamed for the delay in vote counting had already been tested in the assembly elections of Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh last year. The slow pace of counting can be gauged from the fact that even by 5 pm, counting at many centres had not been completed.

The minimum number of rounds of counting was 15 and maximum 32. However, till 5 pm, 21 rounds of counting had been completed in some constituen­cies and only 10 to 11 rounds in some others, officials familiar with the situation said.

At 11.30 pm, results of only 52 of the 90 constituen­cies in Chhattisga­rh were declared while in MP only 161 of 230 were declared. In Rajasthan, only one of 199 seats for which counting was done, was pending. In Mizoram and Telangana, all the results were declared on the EC website.

A Congress delegation comprising Madhya Pradesh Congress president Kamal Nath and state Congress campaign committee chairman Jyotiradit­ya Scindia met the chief election commission­er in Delhi recently, demanding a certificat­e of votes polled after every round of counting.

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