India votes in second election phase as Modi vs Gandhi contest heats up
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[April 26, 2024]
By Haripriya Suresh and Tanvi Mehta
BENGALURU/NOIDA, India (Reuters) -India voted on Friday in the second
phase of the world's biggest election, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi
and his rivals raise the pitch of the campaign by focusing on hot-button
issues such as religious discrimination, affirmative action and taxes.
Almost one billion people are eligible to vote in the seven-phase
general elections that began on April 19 and concludes on June 1, with
votes set to be counted on June 4.
Modi is seeking a record-equaling third straight term on the back of his
economic record, welfare measures, national pride, Hindu nationalism and
personal popularity. Surveys suggest he will easily win a comfortable
majority.
His challengers have formed an alliance of more than two dozen parties
and are promising greater affirmative action, more handouts and an end
to what they call Modi's autocratic rule.
A total of 88 seats out of the 543 in the lower house of parliament went
to the polls on Friday, with 160 million people eligible to vote across
13 states and federal territories.
Voter turnout around the halfway mark was 39%, an Election Commission
(EC) spokesperson said. The EC and political parties were concerned that
unseasonably hot weather, and weddings in some parts of the country,
would affect turnout.
HEATED CAMPAIGN
More than half of the seats in Friday's contests were in the southern
states of Kerala and Karnataka and the northwestern state of Rajasthan.
The campaign has become more heated since the first phase of voting on
April 19 as Modi and the main opposition Congress party have faced off
on communal issues with Modi accusing Congress of favoring minority
Muslims, aiming to dilute affirmative action and planning to impose an
inheritance tax.
Congress has denied the charges and said Modi fears losing and was using
divisive language to distract voters from real issues such as
unemployment, the price rise and rural distress.
But some voters were responding to the BJP.
"I will vote for BJP. Muslims will get a lot of benefits if Congress
comes to power and I don't want taxpayers' money to go for the benefit
of any one community," said Shree Hari S.S., 23, who voted in the tech
hub of Bengaluru.
Other voters were not happy with what they said was a sectarian shift in
politics.
"The religious divide is very stark. As a member of the religious
majority, I want to exercise my power to do something about it," said
Vinesha T., 26, brand manager at a Bengaluru liquor company.
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Election officials work at a polling station during the second phase
of the general elections, in Barmer, Rajasthan, India, April 26,
2024. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
However, the BJP remained on a strong footing. Vibha Chugh, a
resident of the Delhi suburb of Noida who runs a non-profit
organization that employs women, said she was confident Modi would
win again because "Modi is thinking of the big picture and that is
good".
RAHUL GANDHI IN THE FRAY
Rahul Gandhi, former Congress president and the face of the party,
was among the 1,200 candidates in the fray on Friday.
"This election is not a regular election...because for the first
time in the history of India, one party and one person is trying to
finish the constitution and democracy of India," Gandhi said at an
election rally in a region of Karnataka which votes next week.
Gandhi is seeking re-election from Wayanad in Kerala and faces Annie
Raja of the Communist Party of India (CPI) and BJP's K. Surendran,
among others, in the Left Front-ruled state.
In 2019, Gandhi defeated the CPI candidate by more than 400,000
votes, the highest margin in Kerala, although he lost his second
seat to BJP in the family bastion of Amethi in north India. India
allows a candidate to contest from more than one seat but they can
retain only one if they win from more.
Congress slumped to a historic low when it was swept out of power by
BJP in 2014 and won its second-lowest number of 52 seats in 2019,
with Kerala contributing the highest tally of 15.
The party is expected to do better in Karnataka this year where it
won just one of 28 seats in 2019 but gained strength and defeated
BJP in state elections last year.
It is still seen to be struggling nationally as bickering within the
opposition alliance it leads and graft cases against some leaders
has hobbled its challenge to Modi.
On Friday, the Supreme Court declined to order any change to the
vote-counting process, rejecting petitions seeking a return to the
ballot system or to tally all slips generated as proof of voting via
electronic machines.
(Reporting by Haripriya Suresh, Dhanya Skariachan and Hritam
Mukherjee in Bengaluru, Chris Thomas in Kottayam, Tanvi Mehta in
Noida, Sakshi Dayal, Shivam Patel and Shivangi Acharya in Delhi;
Writing by YP Rajesh; Editing by Stephen Coates and Raju
Gopalakrishnan and Miral Fahmy)
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