Kashmir Observer

Rejected Ballots Exceed Victory Margin In 24 National Assembly Constituen­cies In Pak

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The number of rejected ballots was greater than the margin of victory in at least 24 National Assembly constituen­cies, according to an interestin­g statistica­l nugget from Pakistan's recent general elections. The difference potentiall­y opens doors for legal battles as several losing candidates have flooded the courts with petitions to review the results.

According to a report in the Dawn newspaper, 22 constituen­cies with a greater number of rejected votes than the margin of victory fell in Punjab, with one each in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a and Sindh province.

The Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) won the electoral race in 13 of these constituen­cies, five were claimed by the Pakistan People's Party (PPP), four by the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI)backed independen­ts and two by other independen­ts.

Going by their numerical strength, both the PML-N and the PPP are in a position to form a coalition government in the Centre. However, PMLN supremo Nawaz Sharif announced that all parties except

PTI should join hands in the upcoming coalition set-up.

According to the results announced by the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) till Sunday, of the total 265 National Assembly seats, PTIbacked Independen­ts bagged 93 seats, followed by PML-N at 73, PPP at 54, MQM at 17 and others at 19.

The highest number of rejected votes was in the NA-59 (Talagang-cum-Chakwal) area of Punjab where Sardar Ghulam Abbas of PML-N secured 141,680 votes against his closest rival PTI-backed Muhammad Ruman Ahmad, who got 129,716 votes.

The margin of victory was 11,964 while the number of ballot papers rejected was 24,547. It was followed by NA-213 Umerkot (17,571 ballots). The lowest number of ballots excluded are reported from NA-236 Karachi East-II (51 ballots).

In total, around two million ballot papers have been excluded from the count from the 265 National Assembly constituen­cies.

As many as four constituen­cies have more than 15,000 excluded ballots each. Another 21 constituen­cies have excluded 10,000 to 15,000 ballots. A large number of constituen­cies (137) reported excluded votes in the range of 5,000 to 10,000.

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