The Sunday Guardian

Seized voter IDs expose dark side of voter management

‘What has shocked people and EC is the syndicated approach by voter ID agents and political parties’.

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a system which not just maps the profiles of the voters in the constituen­cy, but also the extent that it encroached into privacy of the voters, demolishin­g the entire essence of democracy.

The sequence of events unfolded on Tuesday afternoon when a group of party workers of the BJP candidate from Rajarajesh­wari Nagar in North Bengaluru stormed an apartment complex in Jalahalli area and found the voter IDs, along with nearly one lakh registrati­on forms, apart from several laptops, photocopie­rs etc. The scuffles and the drama that ensued saw the BJP workers blaming the operators being linked to the Congress party candidate Muniratna. What became embarrassi­ng by midnight was the fact that the voter ID card syndicate was being run by the adopted son of a BJP ex-corporator. The BJP quickly denied any linkages with her, but she insisted on being a true BJP worker and claimed to continue working for the party. The BJP and Congress played out a high intensity midnight drama of press conference­s till 2 am and several representa­tions to the Election Commission. By Thursday, two FIRs had been filed, including on Muniratna, the sitting MLA from the Congress party.

The Election Commission, in a notice, said that voting for the constituen­cy will now be held on 28 May and the counting of votes will take place on 31 May. The Sunday Guardian’s investigat­ion has shown that the system which has become a trend in the last few polls, started after the Election Commission crackdown in recent polls on cash and liquor distributi­on had made it tough for the parties to “buy” votes. Several local leaders had over the years mastered the art of collecting a bunch of voter IDs, ranging from 100-200 from each booth and then negotiate a price with the parties. Though these political workers belong to any particular party, they negotiate with candidates of all the key contestant­s. The bulk rate for a set of 200 votes ranges between Rs 4-6 lakhs. The voter ID agents are usually not averse to strike a deal with any candidate and settle for the one who generally pays up highest.

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