Montreal Gazette

India’s challengin­g vote looms

WORLD’S LARGEST DEMOCRACy features caste politics, armed rebels and 815 million eligible voters

- NIRMALA GEORGE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

In a country where men have long told their wives who to vote for, Sheila Kumar says she has no intention of letting her husband dictate her vote in next month’s national election.

“Never again,” Kumar said as she waited to collect a bucket of drinking water from the communal tap in a south Delhi slum.

She sounds every bit the modern Indian woman, a reflection of a country with many of the outward signs of modernity: the glitzy shopping malls, the tech-savvy billionair­es and the burgeoning focus on women’s rights.

But it’s not so simple. Because even if she won’t allow her husband to choose her candidate, there is someone else who gets that power.

“The caste elders will decide who we should vote for,” said Kumar, 43, a member of the small, midlevel Kurmi caste. “We will vote for someone from our own caste. Why should we support anyone else?”

As the world’s largest democracy heads to the polls starting Monday, India’s often baffling contradict­ions are on full display, with ageold traditions of caste loyalty, patriarchy and nepotism often clashing with the values of a modern world.

But even though democracy is far from perfect here, it still lurches forward. Elections in India are gen- erally considered free and fair, and even the powerful often fall to defeat at the hands of voters.

A strong constituti­on, hammered out by political leaders who were veterans of India’s struggle for independen­ce from British colonial rule, laid the foundation­s for the democratic process. The politicall­y independen­t Election Commission, empowered by the constituti­on, has the last word on political wrangles.

“Politician­s know that they are accountabl­e to their electorate. If people have voted them into office, they can just as easily toss them out in the next election,” said Ajoy Bose, a political commentato­r in New Delhi.

Still, the challenges are rife. Voting patterns are heavily influenced by caste, the complex social ladder that mobilizes entire communitie­s. Although India’s constituti­on and laws forbid discrimina­tion on the basis of caste, the social division continues to dominate electoral politics. The former “untouchabl­es,” or Dalits, are a powerful vote bank and political parties make all manner of promises to woo them.

Family and community elders still hold enormous sway. Corruption, a longtime scourge in India, is impossible to ignore. And many Indians say the lack of election pri- maries prevents voters from ushering out the old guard.

In a large swath cutting across the vast hinterland of the Indian subcontine­nt, rebels inspired by Chinese revolution­ary leader Mao Zedong have called for a boycott of the polls. The armed guerrillas always threaten to disrupt national elections; this year is no different.

The rebels are active in 20 of India’s 28 states, from Bihar in the east through Central India, to the borders of the southernmo­st states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu. The rebels demand a greater share of wealth from the area’s natural resources and more jobs for farmers and the poor.

The massive size of the electorate is its own unique challenge.

The Election Commission has counted 815 million eligible voters. The increase in the number of eligible voters since 2009 elections is more than 100 million, or close to the population of the Philippine­s.

Many Indian States are so huge that elections have to be conducted in several phases to enable security forces to be moved around. In all, around three million paramilita­ry troops and police will be deployed to maintain law and order.

“The unique thing about Indian elections is that huge numbers of people are voting,” said Bose, the political commentato­r. “And it’s the poorest who will make it a point to go out and vote. For this one time, people feel a sense of power. They feel they are relevant.”

 ?? MANNISH SWARUP/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Congress party supporters wait to greet party president Sonia Gandhi on Wednesday. Gandhi was filing nomination papers for the upcoming vote.
MANNISH SWARUP/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Congress party supporters wait to greet party president Sonia Gandhi on Wednesday. Gandhi was filing nomination papers for the upcoming vote.
 ?? KEVIN FRAYER/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Voting decisions in next month’s Indian election can hinge on something as simple as a promise to deliver running water.
KEVIN FRAYER/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Voting decisions in next month’s Indian election can hinge on something as simple as a promise to deliver running water.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada