Gulf Today

Indian election begins on April 11 and ends on May 19

-

Lok Sabha elections will be held in seven phases from April 11 to May 19, the Election Commission announced on Sunday seting a twoand-half month-long process for people to either vote in the Narendra Modi-led dispensati­on once again or choose an alternativ­e.

Counting of votes in 543 constituen­cies will be taken up on May 23, Chief Election Commission­er Sunil Arora told a press conference, formally beginning the election process and declaring that the Model Code of Conduct for parties and government­s has come into force with immediate effect.

Once the Model Code of Conduct comes into force, government­s cannot take policy decisions or announce new projects in the run-up to the elections.

Assembly elections will also be simultaneo­usly held in Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Odisha and Sikkim while the demand of parties for Assembly polls in Jammu and Kashmir has not been accepted due to security considerat­ions, Arora said at the media conference flanked by ECS Ashok Lavasa and Sushil Chandra.

The Assembly elections in these four states will be held on the day the states choose their Lok Sabha representa­tives.

By-elections to 34 Assembly seats in 12 states, including 18 constituen­cies in Tamil Nadu, which could decide the fortunes of the ruling AIADMK, will be held simultaneo­usly.

In the last Lok Sabha polls, held over nine phases, the BJP under Modi got a single-party majority of 282 seats for the first time, which was also the first for any party in 30 years.

The 17th Lok Sabha polls will be held on April 11, April 18, April 23, April 29, May 6, May 12 and May 19.

In the first phase, 91 seats spread across 20 states and union territorie­s - Andhra Pradesh (25), Arunachal Pradesh (2), Assam (5), Bihar (4), Chhatisgar­h (1), Jammu and Kashmir (2), Maharashtr­a (7), Manipur (1), Meghalaya (2) Mizoram (1), Nagaland (1) Odisha (4), Sikkim (1) Telangana (17), Tripura (1), Utar Pradesh (8), Utarkhand (5), West Bengal (2), Andaman and Nicobar (1) and Lakshadwee­p (1).

A total of 97 seats in 13 states and a union territory will go to polls in the second phase on April 18 - Assam (5), Bihar (5), Chhatisgar­h (3), Jammu and Kashmir (2), Karnataka (14), Maharashtr­a (10), Manipur (1), Odisha (5), Tamil Nadu (39), Tripura (1), Utar Pradesh (8), West Bengal (3) and Puducherry (1).

Phase three on April 23 will see polling in 115 seats across 14 states and union territorie­s - Assam (4), Bihar (5), Chhatisgar­h (7), Gujarat (26), Goa (2), Jammu and Kashmir (1), Karnataka (14), Kerala (20), Maharashtr­a (14), Odisha (6), Utar Pradesh 10, West Bengal (5), Dadra and Nagar Haveli (1) and Daman and Diu (1).

Elections in phase four on April 29 will be held in 71 seats across nine states - Bihar (5), Jammu and Kashmir (1), Jharkhand (3), Madhya Pradesh (6), Maharashtr­a (17), Odisha (6), Rajasthan (13), Utar Pradesh (13) and West Bengal (8).

Phase five on May 6 will witness polling in 51 seats in seven states - Bihar (5), Jammu and Kashmir (2), Jammu and Kashmir (2), Jharkhand (4), Madhya Pradesh (7), Rajasthan (12), Utar Pradesh (14) and West Bengal (7).

On May 12, in the sixth phase of polling covering 59 seats in seven states - Bihar (8), Haryana (10), Jharkhand (4), Madhya Pradesh (8), Utar Pradesh (14), West Bengal (8) and Delhi (7).

In the final phase of polling on May, elections will be held in 59 seats in eight states - Bihar (8), Jharkhand (3), Madhya Pradesh (8), Rajasthan (13), Punjab (13), West Bengal (9), Chandigarh (1), Utar Pradesh 13 and Himachal Pradesh (4).

Andhra Pradesh, Arunachal Pradesh, Goa, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Kerala, Mizoram, Nagaland, Punjab, Sikkim, Telangana, Tamil Nadu, Utarakhand, Andaman and Nicobar, Daman and Diu, Lakshadwee­p, Delhi and Chandigarh will have a single-day polling.

Karnataka, Manipur, Rajasthan and Tripura will have a two-phased, while Assam and Chhatisgar­h will have three-phased elections. Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtr­a and Odisha will have four phases while Jammu and Kashmir will have five phases.

No state has six-phased polling. Bihar, Utar Pradesh and West Bengal will have polling in seven phases.

Arora said the phases have been decided due to several factors including the availabili­ty of central paramilita­ry forces, who move by trains from state to state.

On simultaneo­us Assembly polls in Jammu and Kashmir, which has been demanded by the mainstream parties during the tour of the state by the Commission, the CEC said that they were making an announceme­nt only about the parliament­ary polls due to factors such as constraint­s of requiremen­t of forces for security of candidates.

“Keeping the totality of factors in mind, the schedule of only parliament­ary polls in the state of Jammu and Kashmir is being announced,” he said.

With January 1 this year as the cut off date, the total number of voters in this elections are likely to be around 900 million, which is over 83 million compared to the last polls in 2014. There are about 15 million voters in the age group of 18 to 19.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain