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Record 66 percent turnout for Delhi assembly elections

New Delhi: A record 66 percent Delhiites voted on Wednesday in the Assembly polls, considered the litmus test for Congress ahead of the next year’s Lok Sabha elections, as arch rival BJP and debutant Aam Aadmi Party made it a tight triangular contest.
While Congress was seeking another term under Sheila Dikshit, BJP and AAP were led by their chief ministerial candidates Harsh Vardhan and bureaucrat-turned-politician Arvind Kejriwal respectively for the 70-member assembly.

“The turnout has been around 66 percent. The election was incident free,” Delhi’s Chief Electoral officer Vijay Dev said addressing a press conference.

Nearly 70,000 people were standing in queue around 6 PM, he said.

Vice President Hamid Ansari, Congress chief Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Gandhi, Dikshit, Kejriwal and Vardhan were among the early voters.

Facing the toughest battle of her political career, Dikshit said she has kept her “fingers crossed” on the outcome of the election.

Price rise and anti-incumbency are seen as major issues that may trouble Congress which is in power in the city for the past 15 years.

After casting her vote, Sonia exuded confidence of her party’s fourth straight victory in the Delhi polls.

“We will win,” she said with a smile after casting her vote at Nirman Bhavan polling booth.

Rahul said Dikshit has “done a lot of good work in Delhi. I think she will do well.”

There were reports of malfunctioning of electronic voting machines (EVMs) in some parts of the city but they were rectified, election officials said. The EVM at polling booth in Aurangazeb Lane, where Rahul cast his vote, malfunctioned when polling began.
In Jungpura, Badli and Krishna Nagar constituencies, some voters complained that their names have been struck from the electoral rolls and they could not vote.

Elaborate security arrangements were made in the capital with deployment of 32,801 personnel of Delhi Police and 10,700 central paramilitary force personnel to ensure peaceful elections.

The voting began at 8 AM at 11,753 polling booths out of which 630 have been identified as critical and hyper critical. The Election Commission has appealed to people not to carry mobile phones while going to cast their votes.

A total of 1.19 crore voters are eligible to exercise their franchise, out of which 66.11 lakh are men and 53.20 lakh are women. The number of first time voters is 4.05 lakh.

810 candidates are in the fray in the three-cornered contest between Congress, BJP and AAP.
While BJP has fielded candidates in 66 constituencies Congress and AAP are contesting from all 70 seats.

BSP, which was the third largest party in last Assembly elections, has fielded candidates in 69 seats, NCP in nine and Samajwadi Party in 27 seats. A total of 224 independents are also in the fray.

The entry of Kejriwal’s AAP has changed the dimension of the election and it will be interesting to see whether the newbie will just be a “spoiler” or win some seats as predicted by opinion polls, riding on its anti-corruption plank.

The elections in Delhi and four other states are being seen as the semi-final for the Lok Sabha polls to be held next year.

The stakes in this election are high for three-time Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit, who mainly highlighted her achievements and development agenda during the campaigning, while BJP’s Chief Ministerial candidate Harsh Vardhan promised to cut power tariff by 30 percent and slash vegetable prices within 30 days of coming to power.

 

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