Indians vote in huge election dominated by jobs, Hindu pride and Modi
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[April 19, 2024]
By Krishn Kaushik, Praveen Paramasivam and YP Rajesh
KAIRANA/CHENNAI, India (Reuters) -A substantial number of Indians voted
on Friday in the first phase of the world's largest election,
authorities said, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeks a historic third
term on the back of issues such as growth, welfare and Hindu
nationalism.
The vote pits Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) against an alliance of
two dozen opposition parties that promise greater affirmative action and
more handouts while stressing what they call the need to save democratic
institutions.
Three hours before polls closed, figures from the Election Commission
showed voter turnout ranged between 40% in the sprawling northern state
of Bihar and 68% in the small northeastern state of Tripura.
"Voters show great enthusiasm as polling reaches halfway mark," an
election panel spokesperson had posted earlier on X. "Substantial voter
turnout reported."
The first of seven phases, Friday's vote covered 166 million voters in
102 constituencies across 21 states and territories, from Tamil Nadu in
the south to Arunachal Pradesh on the Himalayan frontier with China.
Almost a billion people in the world's most populous nation are eligible
to vote in the entire exercise running through the peak of summer until
June 1, with results set for June 4.
"Modi will come back to power, because apart from the religious push,
his other work, in areas such as safety and security, is good," said
Abdul Sattar, 32, a Muslim voter in the city of Kairana in the most
populous state of Uttar Pradesh.
Surveys suggest the BJP will easily win a majority, even though voters
worry about unemployment, inflation and rural distress in the world's
fastest growing major economy.
Jobs were the chief concern for Mohammed Shabbir, another Muslim voter
in Kairana. None of his eight children had regular employment, the
60-year-old driver said.
"Even the Hindus are affected by a lack of jobs," he said, adding that
the problem outweighed the appeal of Hindu nationalism in the
Hindu-majority nation.
Especially after Modi's January consecration of a grand temple to Lord
Ram on a site in Uttar Pradesh believed to be his birthplace, Hindu
nationalism is a key election theme.
Critics accuse Modi's government and party of targeting India's 200
million minority Muslims to please their hardline Hindu base - charges
both deny.
Modi aims to win 370 of parliament's 543 seats, up from 303 in 2019,
hoping for a two-thirds majority that some analysts and opposition
members fear could let his party usher in far-reaching constitutional
changes.
STRONG SOUTHERN PUSH
But in Tamil Nadu, one of India's most developed states where the BJP is
weak, voters seemed divided on whether Modi's strong push this time
round would benefit his party.
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Voters line up outside a polling station to vote during the first
phase of the general election in Kairana, in the northern Indian
state of Uttar Pradesh, India, April 19, 2024. REUTERS/Anushree
Fadnavis
"Modi has made India a peaceful country, particularly for Hindus,"
said S. Rajagopal, a three-wheel taxi driver in the state capital of
Chennai.
"The BJP may not boost its vote share in Tamil Nadu but nationwide,
Modi will win hands down again."
However, V. Parasuraman, 55, a businessman in construction, said the
BJP had done little for Tamil Nadu, adding, "People here are
educated and ... won't fall for Modi's sugar-coated words."
The BJP campaign focuses on Modi’s guarantee to deliver on promises
to voters.
"This election is not just to choose a member of parliament," Modi
said on Friday. "It is an election to secure the future of
generations that come after you."
India needed a "strong" government at a time when "clouds of war are
hanging over the world", he added.
Victory for Modi would make him only the second Indian prime
minister to be elected three times in a row, after post-independence
leader Jawaharlal Nehru.
PROSPECT OF HEAT, VIOLENCE
Surveys show a big gap between BJP and the opposition but it was not
"necessarily unsurmountable", said political analyst Sandeep Shastri
of research firm Lokniti Network.
"Many voters say that we take our decision on who to vote for during
campaigning and many say we do it closer to the day of voting," he
said. "So there is also scope for campaigning to impact the nature
of the verdict."
But some BJP insiders and analysts say the party is worried about
complacency or overconfidence among voters and party members, and
needs to draw more people to vote.
Yet the opposition's INDIA alliance has struggled to forge unity. It
has accused the government of hobbling its efforts by arresting its
leaders in graft cases and making huge tax demands ahead of the vote
- a charge the government denies.
The election will decide the future of Indian democracy, Rahul
Gandhi, leader of the main opposition Congress party, said on X.
"Strengthen democracy by applying the balm of your vote to the
wounds inflicted on the soul of the nation in the last 10 years ...
defeat hatred," he said on Friday.
(Reporting by Krishn Kaushik in Kairana, Praveen Paramasivam in
Chennai and YP Rajesh in New Delhi; Additional reporting by Shivam
Patel, Sudipto Ganguly, Sakshi Dayal, Shivangi Acharya, Subrata Nag
Choudhury and Jatindra Dash; Writing by YP Rajesh; Editing by
Clarence Fernandez)
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