New Straits Times

MONEY FACTOR IN INDIAN POLLS

Tycoons playing big role in elections, from funding campaigns to tacit endorsemen­ts

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TYCOONS are playing a pivotal role in the Asian giant’s most expensive election ever, from funding campaigns and tacit endorsemen­ts to being hot-button issues themselves.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s re-election bid has received huge financial backing from corporate India, raising fears about the integrity of the world’s largest democratic process, experts say.

Meanwhile, Congress party opponent Rahul Gandhi is trying to exploit a fighter jet deal involving industrial­ist Anil Ambani while fugitive tycoons Vijay Mallya and Nirav Modi loom over the vote from London.

Contesting polls is getting costlier in India and analysts say parties are becoming more reliant on donations from anonymous businessme­n, leading to a lack of transparen­cy and worrying conflicts of interest.

“There’s a trend towards plutocracy,” Niranjan Sahoo, of the Observer Research Foundation

think-tank, said.

“Unbridled corporate influence can have a serious impact on policies,” he added.

The New Delhi-based Centre for Media Studies estimates that around US$5 billion (RM20.5 billion) was spent during the 2014 election that swept Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to power — up from US$2 billion in 2009.

The group thinks this year’s contest could top US$7 billion, making it one of the priciest elections globally.

“Elections are getting more expensive for many structural reasons,” Milan Vaishnav, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace think-tank, said.

“(There is a) growing population, increasing political competitio­n, voter expectatio­ns of handouts in the form of cash and other inducement­s, and technologi­cal change, which means greater outlays for media and digital outreach,” he added.

Analysts said traditiona­l funding streams were declining so parties increasing­ly relied on wealthy donors to fund campaigns.

Data compiled by the Associatio­n for Democratic Reforms, an election watchdog, showed that in financial year 2017-18 corporates and individual­s contribute­d 12 times more to the BJP than to six other national parties, including Congress, combined.

 ?? EPA PIC ?? Supporters attending the Bharatiya Janata Party election rally in Bengaluru on Saturday.
EPA PIC Supporters attending the Bharatiya Janata Party election rally in Bengaluru on Saturday.

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