The Hindu (Bangalore)

Nearly 12 lakh people eligible to vote from home in State

- Afshan Yasmeen

Over 5.7 lakh senior citizens aged 85 and above and 6.13 lakh people with disabiliti­es (PwD) in the State can opt to vote from home (VfH) during the Lok Sabha election.

Officials from the Election Commission have started the process of distributi­ng Form 12D through which eligible votefromho­me electors can inform the Assistant Returning Officer that he or she is not in a position to go to the polling station to vote. Interested electors can give their consent in the form within five days after the poll notification is issued. Notification was issued on March 28 for the first phase of polls in Karnataka. People can also download the form from the EC’s website (https:// www.eci,gov,in), fill it up and submit it to their jurisdicti­onal Returning Officer’s office within the prescribed window.

The Election Commission of India (EC) for the first time made available the facility of VfH for those aged above 80 and certified persons with disabiliti­es (whose disability is not less than 40% of the prescribed handicap) during the pandemic in the 2020 Bihar Assembly elections.

Assembly elections

In the 2023 Assembly elections in Karnataka, around one lakh people voted from home. Nearly 95% (76,120) of the 80,251 senior citizens (who had opted) and over 97% (18,811) of the 19,280 PwDs (who had opted) voted from home.

According to data from the Election Commission, Dakshina Kannada had recorded the highest number of senior citizens who voted from home (10,280) followed by Belagavi (6,975) and Tumakuru (6,333). In the PwD category, Tumakuru recorded the highest (2,788) followed by Dakshina Kannada (1,926) and Belagavi (1,661).

Manoj Kumar Meena, Chief Electoral Officer for Karnataka, said it is an optional facility for those who cannot go to the polling booth and vote. “It will always be good to vote at polling stations and take part in the festival of democracy but if a person is not in a position to walk or he she choose to vote from home then this facility has been provided,” he said.

He said two polling officials, accompanie­d by a videograph­er and a security person, would visit the electors’ home and enable them to vote in a postal ballot. The electors would be informed in advance about the date and approximat­e time of the visit of election officials by an SMS to the mobile number mentioned in the applicatio­n, he said. “If they prefer to go to the polling booths, the officials will also make necessary arrangemen­ts for them to vote in person,” he said.

If the elector is not present at the given address during the first visit under VfH, the polling team will inform about the schedule of their second visit. If they are not present even on the second visit, a further visit will not be entertaine­d.

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