Muscat Daily

India’s marathon six-week national elections: All you need to know

-

New Delhi, India - India kicks off its parliament­ary elections this Friday, a marathon six-week undertakin­g that will be the world’s largest such democratic exercise.

Hundreds of millions of people will vote across the nation to elect lawmakers and determine who gets to rule the South Asian giant for the next five years.

Mammoth exercise

There are a total of 968.8mn eligible voters in the country of some 1.3bn - 497mn men and 471mn women.

According to the Election Commission of India, that marks an increase of 72.8mn from 896mn in the last elections in 2019.

Votes will be cast at 1.05mn polling stations through more than 5.5mn electronic voting machines. Voters will elect 543 lawmakers to the lower house of India’s Parliament, known as the Lok Sabha, while two more are nominated by the president.

A party or coalition needs to win a minimum of 272 seats to form a government, which will have a five-year term.

Seven-phase polls

Voting will be held in a total of seven phases, just as the last time in 2019.

The first phase on April 19 covers 102 parliament­ary constituen­cies in 21 states, while the second will be on April 26 for 89 seats in 13 states.

The next ones will be on May 7 for 94 seats in 12 states; May 13 - 96 seats in 10 states; May 20 for 49 seats in eight states; May 25 for 57 seats in seven states; and June 1 for 57 constituen­cies in eight states.

That will be followed by a vote count on June 4.

Main contenders

This election is primarily a battle between the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and the opposition alliance called INDIA, headed by the Indian National Congress.

Last time, the BJP swept the elections with 303 seats, while the Congress party ended with a paltry 52.

Modi, seeking a record-levelling third consecutiv­e term, has set a target of 370 seats for the BJP and over 400 for the NDA.

The opposition alliance has managed to put up a candidate in many constituen­cies, but faces challenges in keeping a united front.

One of its key members, the All-india Trinamool Congress that rules eastern West Bengal, has ruled out any seat sharing in the state.

As things stand, most surveys and opinion polls have the BJP as the clear favourite for the 2024 elections.

The BJP and its allies have based their campaign on the claim that Modi, in power since 2014, has changed India’s global image in the last decade.

Other strong points they have been highlighti­ng are increased income generation, keeping inflation in check during times of worldwide economic turmoil, and rapid infrastruc­tural developmen­t. The INDIA alliance, meanwhile, has countered with criticism focusing on rising unemployme­nt and corruption in the country, while also challengin­g the government’s claims on inflation data.

There are a total of 968.8mn eligible voters among 1.3bn - 497mn men and 471mn women. Votes will be cast at 1.05mn polling stations

 ?? (ANI) ?? A vendor sells flags and umbrellas printed with symbols of different policital parties, in Kolkata, India on Monday
(ANI) A vendor sells flags and umbrellas printed with symbols of different policital parties, in Kolkata, India on Monday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman