The Hindu (Bangalore)

Candidates’ expenditur­e will be in public domain after every inspection, says CEO

Earlier, expenditur­e details used to be posted online after candidates submitted their records within 30 days after the elections

- Afshan Yasmeen

Intensifyi­ng its election expenses monitoring activities, the Election Commission will now post expenditur­e details of individual candidates on the public domain after every inspection.

Revealing this to The Hindu in an interview, Manoj Kumar Meena, Chief Electoral Officer for Karnataka, said for the first time expenditur­e details would be available for the public to see and challenge during the elections itself. “Earlier, these details were available for the public after candidates submitted their expenditur­e statement to the commission within 30 days of completion of an election,” Mr. Meena said.

“The 42 election expenditur­e observers deployed for the Lok Sabha polls in Karnataka will inspect and tally the shadow registers maintained by the Returning Officers and the records maintained by the respective candidates. The inspection­s by the expenditur­e observers will be done three times after the filing of nomination­s till the day of the election. After every such inspection, the expenditur­e details will be scanned and posted on the District Election Officer’s website and a link to this will be provided on the CEO Karnataka website for public viewing. If anyone finds that the candidate has provided false informatio­n, he/she can report the issue to the commission,” Mr. Meena said, asserting that such a violation by the candidate can even result in disqualification.

While there is no cap on how much parties can spend, candidates’ expenses are limited to ₹95 lakh for Lok Sabha constituen­cies. The expenditur­e limit refers to the amount a candidate is allowed to legally spend on election campaignin­g, including public meetings, rallies, advertisem­ents (including through social media and influencers), posters, banners, and vehicles.

Asserting that the commission is rigorously monitoring suspicious bank transactio­ns and digital

payments, Mr. Meena said: “Repeated payments of similar amounts from digital payment wallets to multiple recipients will be analysed daily at the district level.”

On urban apathy

Admitting that urban apathy is another huge challenge apart from money power, Mr. Meena elaborated on the various strategies being adopted. “Apart from printing QR codes on voter slips to help

voters navigate their way to the polling station, we are also planning voter facilitati­on centres in cluster polling booths and introducin­g a token system at the booths,” he said.

The voter facilitati­on centre will be like a help desk for people to locate their booth in the cluster, and if tokens are issued, it will be a hasslefree voting experience. “People tend to go away after seeing huge queues at the booths. Our boothlevel officers will guide them to their room,” he said.

Voter turnout

“The lowest voter turnout in the State in the past elections has been from the IT hub of Bengaluru. Apathy in the urban electorate is a trend observed across the country. We have learnt some lessons from the previous elections. We are roping in resident welfare associatio­ns to create awareness and step up our voter slip distributi­on, especially in gated communitie­s, where our personnel find it difficult to go. We are hoping to see voter slip distributi­on to touch at least 85%,” Mr. Meena said.

He said awareness activities were already being carried out in garment factories. “We have to make sure that they will get a holiday on the polling day. We will also reach out to IT profession­als through their employers,” he said. Pointing out that midweek polling day had not shown any major change in the voting pattern during the Assembly polls, the CEO said: “It all depends on people’s will. If they want to vote they will.”

After every inspection, the expenditur­e details will be scanned and posted on the District Election Officer’s website and a link to this will be provided on the CEO Karnataka website for public viewing.

MANOJ KUMAR MEENA,

Chief Electoral Officer for Karnataka

 ?? BHAGYA PRAKASH K. ?? Manoj Kumar Meena, Chief Electoral Officer for Karnataka.
BHAGYA PRAKASH K. Manoj Kumar Meena, Chief Electoral Officer for Karnataka.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India