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Asia India

Update

India state polls: UP records 60% voter turnout in 1st phase

Opinion polls indicate BJP will retain power; polls popularity test for Yogi and Modi



Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath shows victory sign to the crowd from a helicopter as he leaves after an election rally in Muradabad, on February 8, 2022. The polls are a referendum on the saffron-robed Adityanath, a poster figure for the Hindu right-wing, who some analysts believe is vying to be the next prime minister.
Image Credit: AP

Ghaziabad:  India’s most populous state went to the polls on Thursday in a key popularity test for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government.

Victory in the northern state of over 200 million people, and strong performances in four other state polls in the coming weeks, would boost Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) party ahead of 2024 national elections when he will likely seek a third term.

“We will win all five [states] … They [the people of Uttar Pradesh] will accept us in 2022 after seeing our work,” Modi, 71, said in an interview with ANI news agency on the eve of the election.

Uttar Pradesh, home to more people than Brazil, is run by Yogi Adityanath, a firebrand monk from the BJP.

Voters queue up to cast their ballot at a polling station in Vrindavan on February 10, 2022 during the first phase of Uttar Pradesh state assembly elections.
Image Credit: AFP
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As the first phase of the 403-member Uttar Pradesh Assembly concluded on Thursday, the voter turnout for the Jat-dominant belt of western Uttar Pradesh was recorded to be nearly 60 per cent.

As per the Election Commission, the total voter turnout was 59.87 per cent at the end of the session.

The districts which recorded the highest voter turnout were Shamli with 66.14 per cent, followed by Muzaffarnagar and Mathura at 65.32 per cent 62.90 per cent respectively.

Gautam Buddha Nagar reported only 54.38 per cent voter turnout till 7:55pm.

The second phase of polling for the Uttar Pradesh Assembly is scheduled for February 14. 586 candidates are in the fray for 55 Assembly Constituencies in the second phase, including nine reserved for the Scheduled Castes.

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‘Jobs lost’ 

The BJP’s main rival is the Samajwadi (Socialist) Party, led by Akhilesh Yadav who has been seeking to tap into discontent over job losses and rising prices.

The state government’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic has also been widely criticised, with hundreds of bodies floating in the Ganges or buried in its banks last year.

A voter shows his inked finger after casting his ballot at a polling station in Vrindavan.
Image Credit: AFP

“The government should address what happened during COVID [in] the past two years. Many people have been affected and suffered losses no doubt,” voter Amit Pratap Singh, 48, told AFP.

“People’s businesses have been impacted. Jobs have been lost. So the government should plan to address it.”

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Keen to make up lost ground, the BJP has promised a job for at least one member of each family and free electricity for farmers - a key voting bloc - if it retains power.

Opinion polls have indicated that the BJP will retain power - something no party has done since 1985 - with an increased vote share.

“I don’t think the government should change if there’s good governance. I have seen good governance in this regime. Yogi [Adityanath] has performed well. Because he’s done well, he should stay,” said Sandeep Sharma, 46, a voter from the state’s Ghaziabad district.

Voters line up in Meerut.
Image Credit: AFP

‘Love jihad’

Since winning power in 2017, Adityanath’s government has tightened curbs on slaughterhouses killing cows - sacred in Hinduism - and on loudspeakers for the Muslim call to prayer.

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It also brought in a law against “love jihad”, the alleged masterplan by the Muslim minority to hoodwink Hindu women into marriage in order to convert them to Islam.

The shaven-headed 49-year-old, who has been touted as a possible successor to Modi, has also given several cities new names in place of Islamic-sounding ones.

The state was one of the worst affected when deadly violence erupted in late 2019 following protests against the federal government’s amendments to India’s citizenship law.

“Injustice is at its peak under Yogi’s government. It can’t get worse than this,” Shahbuddin, 28, told AFP.

Results from the election, as well from the four other polls, are due after counting begins on March 10.

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