Posts Tagged election commission

Repoll in Rajasthan – 67% Polling in 59 Booths Across State

About 67% of polling was reported in the 59 booths where repolling was held on Sunday. The Election Commission has ordered repoll in 60 booths spreading across 10 Lok Sabha Constituencies of Rajasthan.

Repolling Facts

The Lok Sabha constituencies where repolling was held includes Jaipur Rural (2), Sawai Madhopur-Tonk (21), Dausa (14), Bharatpur (2), Karauli-Dholpur (3), Alwar (6), Pali (8), Rajsamandh (1), Barmer (1) and Jhalawar-Baran (2).

Repolling was ordered after complaints of large scale booth capturing and damage to EVMs during voting on May 7.

Repolling Mishaps

Polling could not be held in one booth as one person was killed and four others injured when police opened fire to disperse a mob which was allegedly trying to capture a booth at Gotada in Dausa.

According to reports, Rajesh Kumar Mishra, the poll observer, arrived at booth number 15 in Gotada village under Sikrai assembly constituency on Sunday morning only to find fake votes being cast. Mishra immediately suspended four officials on duty and stopped the polling, which upset the members of a particular community.

Soon, Mishra and other government officials were attacked by a mob, forcing police to open fire on the crowd. While 18-year-old Jaikishan Meena was killed on the spot, four others were injured. This is the second death in police firing during polling, the first being at Sawai Madhopur on Thursday.

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Rajasthan State Elections Announced

About Elections

Election can not be viewed as an isolated event, but is a part of a holistic process for promoting democratic governance. Greater public information & outreach capacity, transparency, capacity building and empowerment of the citizens are the key areas which are being emphasized by the  Election  Department. Upgrading and cleaning of Electoral Rolls is a continuous  process

Election Commission has announced to hold crucial assembly election in five states including Chattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh (MP), Rajasthan, Mizoram and Delhi next month. The assembly elections in these five states are prelude to general elections that are set to be held next year.

Bhartiya Janta Party (BJP) is the ruling party in three out of the five state assemblies that are going to polls. These are bigger and populous state that may decide the fate of the two parties in the forthcoming Parliamentary elections later next year. BJP has won several assembly elections in a row including in Karnataka where BJP came to power for the fist time.

For the Congress party winning these assembly elections would be very crucial as it will reflect as to whether Congress party can hope of returning to power in the parliamentary election and also how it is able to bargain with its alliance partners in UPA.

Elections in Rajasthan

The polls in Rajasthan will be held on  December 4. According to sources as per the final polls, there are  3,62,19,481 eligible voters in Rajasthan.

The state of Rajasthan will go to the polls in 2008 to elect 200 legislators, as declared by the Election Commission of India. The voting and vote counting dates have not been finalized yet. The last Rajasthan assembly elections were held in 2003 where the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), led by Vasundhara Raje had claimed a comfortable victory.

Policies by BJP in Rajasthan – For This Polls

In Rajasthan, the BJP party is expected to consider a proposal which will bar those who have failed to win thrice, consecutively, and those who had lost the previous election by a margin of more than 25,000 votes, from being given a ticket for the forthcoming elections.

Those MLAs who constituencies have been redrawn considerably on account of the delimitation process too are unlikely to be considered. This would mean that as many as 50% new faces will figure in the forthcoming assembly election line up. The party proposes to announce an initial list of candidates in the third week of October.

In the last assembly election in Rajasthan, the BJP secured its victory by a margin of 4%. This means that the BJP will need to be extremely careful while considering the winning potential of its candidates. There will also be some reworking to accommodate new caste alliances and reinforce existing ones. The BSP, which is expected to contest all 200 seats, is expected to play a spoiler and the BJP is banking on the party to cut into the Congress vote base.

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