The Sentinel-Record

India’s mammoth election more than halfway done

- SHEIKH SAALIQ

SAMASTIPUR, India — Millions of Indians across 96 constituen­cies began casting their ballots on Monday as the country’s gigantic, six-week-long election edges past its halfway mark. Prime Minister Narendra Modi is seeking a third straight term with an eye on winning a supermajor­ity in Parliament.

Monday’s polling in the fourth round of multi-phase national elections across nine states and one union territory will be pivotal for Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party, as it includes some of its stronghold­s in states like Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh.

Crucial seats in Maharashtr­a and Bihar states, where the BJP governs in alliances with regional parties, are also up for grabs in this phase.

In Bihar’s Samastipur city, hundreds of voters lined up at a polling station that opened at 7 a.m. amid tight security arrangemen­ts. Voters said they were concerned about rising food prices, lack of employment and economic developmen­t in the state.

Most polls predict a win for Modi and his BJP, which is up against a broad opposition alliance led by the Indian National Congress and powerful regional parties.

The staggered election will run until June 1 and nearly 970 million voters, more than 10% of the world’s population, will elect 543 members to the lower house of Parliament for five years. The votes are scheduled to be counted on June 4.

Monday will also see the end of polling in the country’s five southern states, a region that has mostly rejected Modi’s BJP since it first came to power in 2014 but where winning more seats is crucial for the party’s campaign goal of securing a two-thirds majority in Parliament.

Kashmir’s largest city, Srinagar, will also vote Monday in the first polls since Modi’s government stripped the disputed region of its semi-autonomy and took direct control of it in 2019. Despite hailing the move as a success that would bring economic developmen­t and peace to the restive region, the BJP is not contesting the polls in the Muslim-majority Kashmir valley, where anti-India sentiment runs deep, for the first time since 1996.

Instead, two regional parties — the National Conference and the People’s Democratic Party — are the main contenders for the three seats in the valley and both are opposed to the BJP.

Opposition parties say the BJP’s decision not to contest the election is in contrast to its claims and that poll results may contradict the government’s narrative of success in Kashmir, which is now run by unelected government officials and bureaucrat­s.

Waheed-Ur-Rehman Para, a leader of the People’s Democratic Party who is seeking to represent Srinagar, said the election there was about “a referendum against the government’s decisions and policies that were implemente­d without any public consent.”

While Modi began his campaign with a focus on India’s developmen­t in his 10 years in power, he has since doubled down on the BJP’s Hindu nationalis­m pitch in recent weeks.

In campaign rallies, Modi has called Muslims “infiltrato­rs” and accused the main opposition Congress Party of scheming to redistribu­te wealth from the country’s Hindus to Muslims, who comprise 14% of the country’s more than 1.4 billion people.

 ?? (AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A.) ?? A woman shows the indelible ink mark on her index finger after casting vote in a polling station during the fourth phase of general election in Hyderabad, India, on Monday.
(AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A.) A woman shows the indelible ink mark on her index finger after casting vote in a polling station during the fourth phase of general election in Hyderabad, India, on Monday.

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