Khaleej Times

From helicopter­s to ads, BJP snaps up bulk of poll props

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Campaignin­g is gathering pace in India's general elections, the world's largest with nearly a billion eligible voters, as the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party races ahead of its opponents in cornering resources, from helicopter­s to online advertisem­ents.

Voting starts today, with ballots to be counted on June 4 in the weeks-long elections, at which the BJP seeks its most decisive victory yet, riding India's best-funded campaign led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is seen winning a third term.

In the months to the run-up, the BJP has snared the largest share of reservatio­ns for domestic private helicopter­s to fly its leaders to all corners of the far-flung nation, an industry official said.

"The largest party has more campaignin­g to do because of the share of their election touring," said Rajesh Bali, managing director of the Business Aircraft Operators Associatio­n.

"They are covering more areas." Demand for helicopter­s, the preferred vehicle of canvassing politicans, has risen about a third from the last elections in 2019, Bali told Reuters, with the BJP making up more than 60 per cent of election activity, followed by the opposition Congress.

That figure excludes arrangemen­ts for Modi, who has crisscross­ed India ahead of the polls, as his travel is officially managed by the government.

India has a registered fleet of about 250 civil helicopter­s, official data shows, 26 owned by the government or its units.

The BJP spent about 782 million rupees ($9.4 million) on helicopter­s and aircraft during state campaigns, compared to 214.4 million by the Congress, or just over a quarter of its rival, in fiscal 202223, official audited reports showed in January.

Polls predict a comfortabl­e win for Modi, but Congress says the election is closer than how it's been projected.

More resources offer a clear advantage by helping to improve visibility in the race, said Ashok Lavasa, a former election commission­er.

"I don't know, in the real world, how much visibility impacts the voter's mind," he told Reuters. "But I am sure if that was not the case, they would not be doing this kind of expenditur­e."

In 2024, the BJP is also the top political advertiser on search giant Google, data shows.

Modi's party accounted for nearly a third of the total spend of 1.38 billion rupees ($16.16 million) on 119,387 political advertisem­ents on Google this year, the Google Ads Transparen­cy Center says, or 432 million rupees.

In contrast, Congress spent less than a quarter, at 110 million rupees.

Facebook has shown similar trends, with Modi's party doling out 81 million rupees for Facebook pages against the Congress expenditur­e of nearly 26 million rupees, as it is unable to match the BJP'S poll war chest.

The BJP spent 8.6 billion rupees on election-related ads and publicity while the Congress spent about 767 million rupees in the last fiscal year 2022-23, audited party reports show.

The largest beneficiar­y of a now-scrapped controvers­ial funding mechanism of electoral bonds, the BJP got over half the donations of 120.1 billion rupees from the time the instrument­s were launched until the March 2023 end of the fiscal year.

As the party's main funding channel, the bonds accounted for more than half the contributi­ons it received over the past five years, except for fiscal 2020-21.

That year's donations were disrupted by the Covid-19 pandemic, the party's audited annual reports show.

Congress, the only party to offer significan­t competitio­n nationally for the BJP, has accused Modi of trying to cripple it financiall­y ahead of the polls by briefly freezing its accounts in an income-tax case.

The BJP spent about 782 million rupees ($9.4 million) on helicopter­s and aircraft during state campaigns, compared to 214.4 million by the Congress, or just over a quarter of its rival, in fiscal 2022-23, official audited reports showed in January

 ?? — AFP ?? An art school student dressed as an electronic voting machine walks along a street in Mumbai to encourage people to vote in upcoming elections.
— AFP An art school student dressed as an electronic voting machine walks along a street in Mumbai to encourage people to vote in upcoming elections.

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