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Battle for Delhi: 61% voters exercise their franchise

Last updated on: February 09, 2020 10:33 IST

Delhi recorded 61.46 per cent voter turnout on Saturday, down from 67.47 per cent in 2015 assembly election, with exit polls predicting an easy win for Aam Aadmi Party, which sought to retain power on development plank, against the Bharatiya Janata Party that ran an aggressive campaign centred around the issues of anti-Citizenship Amendment Act protests and nationalism.

IMAGE: Voters show their finger marked with indelible ink after casting vote at Jamia Nagar polling station in New Delhi. Photograph: Manvender Vashist/PTI Photo

The polling went off peacefully, Delhi Chief Electoral Officer Ranbir Singh told reporters.

Over 60,000 security personnel, including Quick Response Teams, had been deployed for the election while police and paramilitary forces conducted flag marches in sensitive areas.

 

The voting percentage was 57.04 till 6 pm deadline, and rose to 61.46 per cent as those in queues at polling stations were allowed to vote, poll officials said, adding it may increase further.

The officials said Mustafabad (66.29 per cent), Matia Mahal (65.62 per cent) and Seelampur (64.92 per cent) -- all three with large Muslim population -- recorded the highest voting percentage till 5 pm.

Long queues were seen outside polling stations in areas like Jaffrabad, Jamia Nagar, Turkman Gate and Shaheen Bagh which have been witnessing protests against the CAA.

In the 11 districts in the national capital, northeast recorded 65.24 per cent turn out, northwest (62.23 per cent), south (59.65 per cent), central (58.57 per cent), southwest 61.57 (per cent), east (61.29 per cent), west (61.79 per cent), north (57.19 per cent), New Delhi (56.10 per cent), Shahadra (62.96 per cent) and southeast (54.89 per cent).

On a sit-in for over a month against the CAA, women protesters at Shaheen Bagh in south-east Delhi voted in batches 'so that the agitation remains unaffected'.

Mehzabeen Qureshi, who returned to the protest site after voting, said, "I stayed at home to let other women in the house go out and vote. Now I have joined them here at Shaheen Bagh after voting. I voted today to secure democracy".

 

IMAGE: A wheelchair bound voter shows his finger marked with indelible ink after casting vote at Old Rajinder Nagar polling station. Photograph: Arun Sharma/PTI Photo

Polling started at a sluggish pace and the voting percentage was low till noon. However, it picked up pace as the day grew warmer.

A senior Delhi poll official said the lower turnout compared to 67.47 per cent in the 2015 Assembly polls could be attributed to the polling day falling on a weekend as a section of people may have gone out of the city. The voting percentage was 60.6 in 2019 Lok Sabha election.

A poll officer died apparently due to a heart condition at a polling booth at Babarpur, just before the voting began, Singh said.

Congress' Chandni Chowk candidate Alka Lamba got into an altercation with an AAP worker outside a polling booth and tried to slap the man, but missed.

Lamba alleged that the man used 'very foul' and objectional language against her.

Free electricity and water, development, jobs, national security and CAA were among the key issues on the minds of Delhiites in the polls where 672 candidates were in the fray in 70 Assembly seats.

Sonakshi Ranjan (22), a first-time voter, said she opted for development while casting her vote. S C Sharma (74), a voter in Kalkaji constituency, said he voted for development and national security.

Exit polls have predicted a clean sweep for the ruling Aam Aadmi Party while the BJP was a distant second.

Most exit polls also predicted that Congress is unlikely to open its account even this time in Delhi, which it ruled from 1998-2013.

After the polls ended, BJP President J P Nadda held a meeting with party's Delhi unit leaders and took stock of the situation.

Delhi BJP chief Manoj Tiwari put up a brave face amid prediction of defeat for his party, claiming it will win 48 seats and form a government in the city.

IMAGE: A polling official applies indelible ink on the finger of a voter during the Delhi assembly elections. Photograph: Arun Sharma/PTI Photo

AAP leader and Delhi Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia said his party is going to win with a big margin.

There were some complaints related to Voter-Verified Paper Audit Trail (VVPAT) slips.

Congress' New Delhi candidate Romesh Sabharwal said VVAPT slips did not show his name and photo.

"I gave a written complaint to poll authorities after which the machine was replaced," Sabharwal said, adding that polling was halted for sometime.

Chief Electoral Officer Ranbir Singh said that  (VVPAT) failure was only one per cent this time.

"There was very little VVPAT failure this time. In the Lok Sabha election, the VVPAT failure was more than 12.5 per cent and this time it is less than 1 per cent," he said.

"Because of our enforcement and preventive action we took, the elections went off peacefully," Singh told reporters.

Police said over 200 calls related to election complaints were received at the Delhi Police's control room on the polling day.

First time voters and women turned out in large numbers. More than 60 centenarians voted in the assembly polls, Singh said.

President Ram Nath Kovind, former prime minister Manmohan Singh, Congress President Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, West Delhi MP Parvesh Verma and Delhi BJP chief Manoj Tiwari also exercised their franchise.

Union Ministers S Jaishankar and Hardeep Singh Puri were also among those who cast their votes.

Chief Minister and AAP national convener Arvind Kejriwal voted at Rajpur Transport Authority polling station in the Civil Lines area.

Kejriwal, who is contesting the polls from the New Delhi constituency, was accompanied by his wife Sunita and son Pulkit. Before leaving for voting, he sought his parents' blessings.

Former vice president Hamid Ansari and senior Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh functionary Ram Lal were among those who queued up outside the Nirman Bhavan polling station in the first hour of voting.

Minutes before polling began, Kejriwal tweeted, 'Please go to cast vote. A special appeal to all the women - as you shoulder the responsibility at home, likewise, the responsibility of the country and Delhi is on your shoulders.'

IMAGE: Voters show their finger marked with indelible ink after casting their vote at Old Rajinder Nagar polling station. Photograph: Arun Sharma/PTI Photo

Union Home Minister Amit Shah, who covered 60 assembly seats during his whirlwind campaign, appealed to voters to 'free' the national capital from lies and vote-bank politics.

'By giving Delhi clean air, clean drinking water and every poor house, only the best capital of the world can make it a government with far-sighted thinking and strong intentions.

'I appeal to the people of Delhi to vote to free Delhi from lies and vote bank politics,' Shah tweeted.

Priyanka Gandhi Vadra's son Rehan and Kejriwal's son Pulkit were among first-time voters.

Asked if his father will be the CM again, Pulkit said whoever people choose will become the chief minister of Delhi.

Talking to reporters, Rehan said that public transport should be more affordable for students.

Taking a swipe at those protesting against CAA-NRC, senior RSS functionary Ram Lal said those shouting 'kagaz nahin dikhayenge' would be defeated in the Delhi assembly election as he appealed to people to show documents while voting.

He asked voters to keep in mind who can make Delhi the best capital city in the world.

Hundreds of people, protesting against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and the National Register of Citizens (NRC) in many areas across the country, often raise the slogan of 'kagaz nahi dikhayenge' (we will not show show documents).

"My message to the voters is 'aaj apna kagaz jaroor lekar jayen. Kagaz jaroor dikhayen' (Today, take your document along with you and show your document)," Lal said.

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