Voters across swaths of southern India began queuing up on Thursday in the second phase of a mammoth staggered general election in which opposition parties are trying to stop Prime Minister Narendra Modi from winning a second term.
Over 155 million people are eligible to vote in the second phase, which covers 95 parliament constituencies in 12 states including parts of restive Jammu and Kashmir.
India’s parliament has 545 members.
The focus would be on the southern states of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka, where the main opposition Congress party and its allies need to win big if they hope to oust Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
“The BJP secured a landslide majority in the previous general election in 2014, in part by winning sweeping victories in six northern states that gave the party 70 per cent of all its seats, Neelanjan Sircar, an assistant professor at Ashoka University near the capital, New Delhi, said.
“You can never expect you’ll do that again. Those seats that you lose, you’ll have to make up somewhere,” he said.
Sircar also said the BJP would be looking to make gains in Karnataka.
The election began recently and will end in May in a giant exercise involving almost 900 million people.
Votes would be counted on May 23 and the results are expected the same day.
Modi and the BJP have run an aggressive campaign, playing to their nationalist, Hindu-first base and attacking rivals they accuse of appeasing minorities.
Critics say such divisive election rhetoric is a threat to India’s secular foundations.
“Communal polarisation is obviously the biggest issue for me.
“And the growing intolerance in the country is what worries me the most,” Rakesh Mehar, who voted in Karnataka’s capital, Bengaluru said.
A firebrand Hindu ascetic from the BJP who governs northern Uttar Pradesh was banned from campaigning for a few days because of anti-Muslim comments, India’s election commission said on Monday.
The Congress party is focusing on concerns about rising unemployment and agrarian distress and is staking it campaign on a promise for a generous handout to India’s poorest families.
Voters in Bengaluru, once a sleepy retirement town that has been transformed into India’s technology hub, said they wanted lawmakers who would fix infrastructure problems such as traffic congestion and poor water management.
“We have been voting every time expecting a change but nothing has come so far. People are talking about national issues.
“But only when they fix the local issues will there be progress in the nation,” Manjunath Munirathnappa said. (Reuters/NAN)