rajasthan-elections

Updated: Dec 07, 2018 22:44 IST

Rajasthan saw 74.05% of its 47 million voters turn out for the assembly elections on Friday as sporadic incidents of violence and some incidents of malfunctioning electronic voting machines (EVM) marred polling in some areas.

Voting started at 8 am for 199 of 200 seats as election to the Ramgarh assembly seat in Alwar district was countermanded after death of the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) candidate Laxman Singh. Votes will be counted on December 11.

State chief electoral officer Anand Kumar said the polling percentage recorded till 5 pm was 72.69%, less than the 75.23% percent recorded in 2013.

Kumar added that the percentage was likely to increase as people already inside polling stations before 5 pm were allowed to cast their votes. He said postal ballots and service votes would also add to the poll percentage.

Stray incidents of violence were reported from Alwar, Bharatpur, Churu, Sikar Bikaner and Jaisalmer districts. Three people were injured in a clash in Churu while five were injured in Bikaner, two in Bharatpur and one in Sikar, said special director general of police (law and order) NRK Reddy.

In Sikar and Bikaner, three vehicles were set ablaze while in Shahjahanpur in Alwar district, paramilitary forces had to open fire to bring the situation under control. In Alwar, a brawl broke out in one of the polling booths around 3pm and security personnel had to fire a bullet in the air. No injury was reported.

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Reports of EVM malfunctions came in from areas such as Jaipur Sikar, Kota and Sardarpura. The Congress complained to the Election Commission that they received 460 complaints.

Chief minister Vasundhara Raje voted at a so-called pink booth manned by women staff in Jhalawar while former chief minister Ashok Gehlot exercised his franchise in Sardarpura. State Congress president Sachin Pilot cast his vote at a polling booth in Jalupura, Jaipur.

Leaders of both the parties claimed victory after the polling got over. Pilot said that the party will sweep the polls and Raje expressed confidence of winning the polls.

“Public has done their job, now big responsibility to those who win and other have to introspect,” Pilot said.

There were 51,687 polling centres in 199 assembly constituencies. Webcasting was done from 3,078 critical polling booths in Rajasthan. A total of 2,274 candidates were seeking the votes of 47 million voters, of which 24.5 million were men and 22.5 million women. There were also two million first-time voters.

The election in Rajasthan is a primarily bipolar affair between the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The Congress contested on 195 seats and gave five seats to its allies --- two each to Sharad Yadav’s Loktantrik Janata Dal and Ajit Singh’s Rashtriya Lok Dal, and one to Sharad Pawar’s Nationalist Congress Party (NCP).

The BJP is contesting on its own in all seats. Hanuman Beniwal’s Rashtriya Loktantrik Party and Bharatya Tribal Party have put candidates in several segments and may impact a few seats in their areas of influence.

The campaign for 200-member assembly was intense with issues of farm and water crisis, jobs, reservation to certain castes coming under the focus. In 2013, the BJP got 163 seats and vote share of 46.03%, a jump of about eight percentage points since 2008. The Congress bagged 21 seats with vote share of 34.27%, a fall of two percentage points. The state has never returned a party to power in 26 years.

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