India holds ‘Super Tuesday’ vote | Daily News

India holds ‘Super Tuesday’ vote

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi shows his ink-marked finger after casting his vote outside a polling station during the third phase of general election in Ahmedabad yesterday.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi shows his ink-marked finger after casting his vote outside a polling station during the third phase of general election in Ahmedabad yesterday.

INDIA: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was among tens of millions of people to cast ballots as India holds a 'Super Tuesday' of voting in its marathon election.

The 117 seats to be decided will be the biggest number of any of the seven rounds of the election being held over six weeks.

Some 190 million voters in 15 states were eligible to take part, and candidates on the ballot will include Modi's arch-rival Rahul Gandhi, head of the opposition Congress party.

Modi, leader of the Bharatiya Janata Party, voted in his home state of Gujarat. He ruled the western state for over a decade before leading the party to national power in a 2014 landslide.

This election is seen as a referendum on his five-year rule -- which has seen impressive economic growth but not the jobs that the BJP promised.

Gujarat sends 26 lawmakers to the Indian Parliament and the BJP won all of those seats in 2014.

Modi voted in the constituency where his close associate Amit Shah, the BJP president and key powerbroker, is contesting his maiden election.

Gandhi is standing in Wayanad in Kerala state, taking a risk as south India is considered a stronghold of regional parties.

The opposition party leader says contesting Wayanad is a sign of his commitment to southern India. His opponents say it shows he fears defeat in his traditional seat in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

Under Indian election law, candidates can contest two seats, though they can only keep one if they win both. Gandhi is also on the ballot for Amethi in Uttar Pradesh. - AFP

 


Add new comment