The Star Early Edition

BJP favourite tipped to clinch India poll

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NEW DELHI: India’s parliament began voting yesterday for a new president in an election likely to be won by a candidate backed by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), tightening its grip over top political positions.

Ram Nath Kovind’s ascent to the highest public office would be the first by a leader who started out with the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh, or National Volunteers’ Associatio­n, a Hindu nationalis­t mentor of the BJP and its affiliates.

The president’s role is largely ceremonial but as the custodian of the constituti­on, the president has played an important role in times of uncertaint­y, such as when a general election is inconclusi­ve and a decision has to be made about which party is best placed to form a government.

Kovind, 72, who is from the lowcaste Dalit community, is facing Meira Kumar, a former parliament­ary speaker and a fellow-Dalit backed by the opposition Congress party.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, among the first to cast his vote in parliament, said he looked forward to working with Kovind.

“My government will offer full co-operation to him,” he told MPs from the ruling coalition.

Members of both houses of parliament and state assemblies were due to vote yesterday and ballots will be counted on Thursday. The BJP commands the most votes in parliament and in the states.

Some presidents, such as outgoing President Pranab Mukherjee, have tried to act as conscience-keepers, using their constituti­onal authority as the head of state to defend India’s founding principles as a secular, diverse democracy.

Modi’s rivals say minority Muslims have feared for their wellbeing and have been targeted by fringe Hindu groups since he took office in 2014.

Sonia Gandhi, the head of the Congress party, appealed to members of parliament to vote for Kumar to protect India’s secular values. “We cannot and must not let India be hostage to those who wish to impose upon it a narrow-minded, divisive and communal vision,” she said.

 ?? PICTURE: EPA ?? Congress president Sonia Gandhi, centre right, and her son congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi, centre, leave after casting their votes at the parliament in New Delhi, yesterday, when lawmakers began voting to elect a new president.
PICTURE: EPA Congress president Sonia Gandhi, centre right, and her son congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi, centre, leave after casting their votes at the parliament in New Delhi, yesterday, when lawmakers began voting to elect a new president.

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