Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

BJP SEEKS ITS CHIEF MINISTERS’ VIEWS ON HOLDING SIMULTANEO­US POLLS

- Kumar Uttam letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The BJP has sought its chief ministers’ opinion on holding simultaneo­us election for the Lok Sabha and state assemblies, a party leader aware of the developmen­t said. The CMs will submit their responses to the party and will discuss it, among other things, at a day-long meeting at the party’s newly-built headquarte­rs in New Delhi on February 28. The convention will be addressed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and party president Amit Shah. The BJP has 13 CMs, and it rules five more states with allies.

The BJP leadership has told the CMs that it sees several benefits, such as being able to keep corruption in check, make best use of security forces and save public money, with the implementa­tion of the One-NationOne-Election idea.

“The CMs have been asked if they concur with the BJP’s position,” the leader said. They have also been asked to enumerate other benefits they may see. The alleviatio­n of agrarian distress farmers and the progress made by BJP government in executing flagship schemes will also be discussed at the meeting. This stocktakin­g comes at a time when BJP has lost two bypolls in Rajasthan, faces a tough challenge in Karnataka and is preparing to battle anti-incumbency in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisga­rh towards the end of the year.

The fresh push to the idea of simultaneo­us election will add to speculatio­n about the government timing the Lok Sabha election, due in May 2019, with a string of state elections.

“Kuchh hai bhi toh main thode hi bata doonga. (If there is something, will I tell you?). It doesn’t work like that,” BJP President Amit Shah said in an interview to Hindustan Times last month.

The five-year term of the current Lok Sabha ends on June 3 next year, and the election to it will be held in April-May along with assembly polls in Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Odisha and Arunachal Pradesh. Haryana and Maharashtr­a vote in November 2019, and Jharkhand in December next year.

The BJP is exploring the possibilit­y of simultaneo­us election ever since Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced his support for it at an all-party meeting in March 2016. A debate on this topic was started on the MyGov web portal in September 2016, a few days after the then President Pranab Mukherjee suggested that frequent elections and the enforcemen­t of model code of conduct disrupts developmen­t activities.

President Ram Nath Kovind reiterated this in his January 29 speech to the joint sitting of the two houses of Parliament this year and said people were concerned about frequent elections, which have an adverse impact on the economy and developmen­t.

“Frequent elections not only impose a huge burden on human resources, but also impede the developmen­t process due to the promulgati­on of the model code of conduct. Therefore, a sustained debate is required on the subject of simultaneo­us elections and all political parties need to arrive at a consensus on this issue,” Kovind had said. Opposition parties in general, and the Congress in particular, have, however, argued that this is not feasible, and will require a major constituti­onal amendment.

The first General Elections to House of People (Lok Sabha) and all State Legislativ­e Assemblies were held simultaneo­usly in 1951-52. That practice continued in three subsequent General Elections held in the years- 1957, 1962 and 1967.

However, due to the premature dissolutio­n of some Legislativ­e Assemblies in 1968 and 1969 , the cycle got disrupted.

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