The Hindu (Erode)

Little correlatio­n between higher temperatur­es and lower turnout

Many seats had lower turnouts despite lower temperatur­es while some saw high voting despite more heat

- Srinivasan Ramani

So far, 189 out of 543 constituen­cies have voted in two phases in the Lok Sabha elections. We do not have the overall turnouts in phase 1 and phase 2 as the Election Commission of India (ECI) has not provided updated šgures or electors’ informatio­n for all the seats that went to the polls in these two phases. But the ECI has provided seat-by-seat voter turnout data. The numbers suggest that turnout has fallen somewhat in both phases compared to the 2019 elections. Overall, voter participat­ion or the turnout rate increased or stayed the same in only 32 of these 189 seats compared to the 2019 elections; the rest have seen a decrease in turnout. In the 2014 elections, 60 seats saw an increased turnout and 129 saw a decreased turnout (Table 1).

One of the key reasons propounded for the lower turnout is the ongoing heat wave across many States. The ECI has taken note of the heatwave and is trying to šnd ways of tackling it. India is a predominan­tly tropical country with many States, including in the Gangetic plains, the central, western, eastern plains, and the peninsular regions, experienci­ng a relatively hot summer this year.

Did higher day temperatur­es result in subdued voting across constituen­cies in India? A look at constituen­cies in the aforementi­oned regions (172 seats overall) show that there was an increase in temperatur­e in 118 seats compared to 2019 and a decrease only in 54 seats. In 2014, there was an increase in temperatur­e in 142 seats and a decrease in 30 seats compared to the previous elections.

Did the turnout fall because of an increase in temperatur­e across these constituen­cies? Not necessaril­y. The correlatio­n between the change in temperatur­e and that of the turnout compared to the 2019 election is almost negligent (0.016) for the seats in the aforementi­oned region. So is the correlatio­n (-0.048) for correspond­ing šgures in comparison with the 2014 elections (Table 3).

The reasons are not di•cult to fathom. In some States such as Chhattisga­rh, and to some extent Karnataka, turnouts increased despite the increase in temperatur­e, while in some States such as Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh, the turnouts decreased despite a decrease in temperatur­e in a number of seats. The lack of uniformity in decrease in turnouts correspond­ing to increases in temperatur­e and vice-versa has led to little correlatio­n in these two variables (change in temperatur­e versus change in turnout).

When we look at semi-urban and urban seats (largely metropolit­an areas), there is a slightly higher and non-zero negative relationsh­ip. This means an increase in temperatur­e has coincided marginally with a decrease in turnout. These šgures hold true for changes from both the 2014 and 2019 elections. When we consider only urban (metropolit­an) seats that have gone to the polls, the relationsh­ip gets a bit stronger between higher temperatur­es and lower turnouts but even then, the correlatio­n coe•cient is only -0.3 in the case of diªerences between the 2014 and 2024 elections and -0.16 correspond­ing to changes from the šgures in 2019.

It is su•ce to say that for a section of voters, rising mercury is not the sole reason to stay away from elections. The answers for the relative increase in voting apathy can only emerge from postpoll surveys. But it must be said that both the 2014 and the 2019 elections saw relatively higher voter turnouts compared to earlier elections. That was a consequenc­e of both greater awareness due to the work by the ECI and the fact that a large chunk of the voters turned up to favour the BJP.

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