BJP plans 200 call centres for voter outreach
NEWDELHI: Each call centre will have 1215 trained professionals, who are being hired for the job... There will be a couple of party workers, too, for each of the call centres.
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) will set up over 200 call centres to monitor and amplify its voter outreach programme ahead of the 2019 Lok Sabha election, two leaders familiar with the plan said.
The 543 parliamentary constituencies will be divided into clusters with each comprising two to three Lok Sabha segments as part of the plan, one of the leaders said. Each of these clusters will have a dedicated call centre from where professionals and party workers will seek feedback about the party’s programmes, events, and probable candidates. They will reach out to the beneficiaries of the government schemes to secure their support and address possible grievances.
The leader said 20 such call centres have come into existence at the level of various states. Rajya Sabha member and BJP national general secretary Bhupendra Yadav has been made the in-charge of the outreach.
“Each call centre will have 12-15 trained professionals, who are being hired for the job,” a second leader said.
“There will be a couple of party workers, too, for each of the call centres.”
A third leader said that feedback from the beneficiaries of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s schemes will be passed on to the party’s district units, which will share it with the booth level units for follow up. Each of these beneficiaries will be approached personally before the election, he added. A BJP LEADER
The BJP polled 171.7 million votes in 2014, when it won a majority on its own with 282 seats.
It is trying to reach out to 330 million-plus voters this time. They include an estimated 220 million beneficiaries of the government schemes, 90 million verified BJP members and about 20 million new voters.
“Five other national parties polled 177.5 million votes, which was only a little more than our tally. If we can ensure support from even 70% of these 330 million voters, we will return to power with a majority probably greater than 2014,” the second leader said.
The call centre exercise is also to supplement a ‘booth action plan’ that BJP chief Amit Shah has chalked out to reach out to voters for the 2019 general elections.
The plan includes compiling a list of voters with smartphones, deploying at least five motorbike-riding party workers at each polling station besides contacting temples and mutts priests and heads and poaching workers from rival parties.