The National - News

ONE BILLION SET TO GO TO POLLS AS PM MODI SEEKS THIRD TERM

▶ India’s vast electorate will cast their ballots in seven phases between April 19 and June 1

- TANIYA DUTTA New Delhi

Hundreds of millions of voters in India will begin casting their ballots on April 19 in a seven-phase general election that will continue until June 1, the Election Commission announced on Saturday.

India holds elections for the 543-seat lower house of parliament, the Lok Sabha, every five years. About 970 million people are eligible to vote this year, the commission said.

Voting will stretch over seven phases, with different states voting at different times, and the results will be announced on June 4.

The electorate includes 18 million first-time voters who turned 18 since the last election, and 197 million people aged between 20 and 29. There are also almost 18 million in their 80s or older, including 218,000 centenaria­ns.

“It is our promise to deliver a national election in a manner that we add to our global shine and remain a beacon for electoral democracie­s across the world,” said chief election commission­er Rajiv Kumar.

“We are committed to give the nation a truly festive democratic environmen­t.”

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party are seeking their third consecutiv­e term in power, facing a challenge from the main opposition Indian National Congress and six other national parties.

A political party or coalition needs 272 seats to form a government.

More than 1.5 million polling booths will be set up in the 28 states and eight federally ruled territorie­s across the country, overseen by more than 15 million election personnel, including security forces.

“They are the sentinels of democracy. Wherever it takes, they will walk an extra mile so that voters don’t have to walk … whether it is snow-capped mountains, forests, through rivers or by mules and helicopter­s, they will reach the voters,” Mr Kumar said.

Each election phase will last one day, with several constituen­cies voting that day. The staggered polling allows the government to deploy troops to prevent violence, and transport election officials and voting machines.

Voters cast their ballots on electronic voting machines by pressing a button next to the name and electoral symbols of their preferred candidate. There is also the option of “none of the above” in case they do not like any of the candidates or parties.

Voters above the age of 85 and those with disabiliti­es have the option to vote from home.

The announceme­nt of the poll dates puts into force the nationwide Model Code of Conduct, which governs the behaviour of political parties and their candidates during campaignin­g and polling.

The code bars ministers and the authoritie­s from making major policy and administra­tive changes, announcing financial grants or launching projects, to avoid influencin­g the result of the polls. India’s constituti­on allows the government to remain in office while the elections are held.

“We are committed to ethical political discourse. We have issued strong [advisories] to political parties to make statements that inspire rather than divide, avoid private life criticism and misleading advertisem­ents,” Mr Kumar said.

He also announced that state assembly elections would be held simultaneo­usly in Sikkim, Odisha, Arunachal Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh.

Mr Modi, 73, has predicted that his party will win more than 400 seats in parliament. The BJP won 303 seats in the 2019 election, while the Congress, which has governed India for most of the seven decades since independen­ce, managed only 52.

The “lotus is going to bloom”, Mr Modi said at a public rally on Friday, referring to his party’s electoral symbol.

Rahul Gandhi, the Congress leader, has also been campaignin­g aggressive­ly.

He launched his Bharat Nyay Yatra, loosely translated as “India Justice Rally”, in January in the strife-torn north-eastern Manipur state. It ended yesterday in Mumbai, India’s financial centre.

 ?? AFP ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi has predicted his Bharatia Janata Party will win more than 400 of the 543 seats in parliament
AFP Prime Minister Narendra Modi has predicted his Bharatia Janata Party will win more than 400 of the 543 seats in parliament

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