Voting ends in the last round of India's election, a referendum on Modi's decade in power
UNB
Publish: 02 Jun 2024, 05:29 PM
NEW
DELHI (AP/UNB) - India's 6 -week-long national election came to an end Saturday
with most exit polls projecting Prime Minister Narendra Modi is set to extend
his decade in power with a third consecutive term.
During the grueling,
multi-phase election, candidates crisscrossed the country, poll workers hiked
to remote villages, and voters lined up for hours in sweltering heat. Now all
that's left is to wait for the results, which are expected to be announced Tuesday.
The election is
considered one of the most consequential in India's history. If Modi wins,
he'll be only the second Indian leader to retain power for a third term after
Jawaharlal Nehru, the country's first prime minister.
Exit polls by major
television news channels projected Modi's Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata
Party and its allies were leading over the broad opposition alliance led by the
Congress party. Most exit polls projected BJP and its allies could win more than
350 seats out of 543 - far ahead of the 272 seats needed to form the next
government.
Indian television
channels have had a mixed record in the past in predicting election results.
Modi's campaign began on
a platform of economic progress, with vows to uplift the poor and turn India
into a developed nation by 2047. But it turned increasingly shrill in recent
weeks as Modi escalated polarizing rhetoric in incendiary speeches that targeted
the country's Muslim minority, who make up 14% of India's 1.4 billion people.
After campaigning ended
on Thursday, Modi went to a memorial site honoring a famous Hindu saint to
meditate on national television. The opposition Congress party called it a
political stunt and said it violated election rules as the campaigning period
has ended.
When the election kicked
off in April, Modi and his BJP were widely expected to clinch another term.
Since coming to power in
2014, Modi has enjoyed immense popularity. His supporters see him as a
self-made, strong leader who has improved India's standing in the world, and
credit his pro-business policies with making the economy the world's
fifth-largest.
At the same time, his
rule has seen brazen attacks and hate speech against minorities, particularly
Muslims. India's democracy, his critics say, is faltering and Modi has
increasingly blurred the line between religion and state.
But as the campaign
ground on, his party faced stiff resistance from the opposition alliance and
its main face, Rahul Gandhi of the Congress party. They have attacked Modi over
his Hindu nationalist politics and are hoping to benefit from growing economic
discontent.
Pre-poll surveys showed
that voters were increasingly worried about unemployment, the rise in food
prices and an overall sentiment that only a small portion of Indians have
benefitted despite brisk economic growth under Modi, making the contest appear
closer than initially anticipated.
The seventh round of
polls covered 57 constituencies across seven states and one union territory,
completing a national election to fill all 543 seats in the powerful lower
house of parliament. Nearly 970 million voters - more than 10% of the world's
population - were eligible to elect a new parliament for five years. More than
8,300 candidates ran for the office.
In Kolkata, the capital
of West Bengal, voters lined up outside polling stations early Saturday morning
to avoid the scorching heat, with temperatures expected to reach 34 degrees
Celsius (93.2 Fahrenheit). Modi was challenged there by the state's chief minister,
Mamata Banerjee, who heads the regional Trinamool Congress party.
"There is a crunch
for jobs now in the present market. I will vote for the government that can
uplift jobs. And I hope those who cannot get jobs, they will get jobs,"
said Ankit Samaddar.
In this election, Modi's
BJP - which controls much of India's Hindi-speaking northern and central parts
- sought to expand their influence by making inroads into the country's eastern
and southern states, where regional parties hold greater sway.
The BJP also banked on
consolidating votes among the Hindu majority, who make up 80% of the
population, after Modi opened a long-demanded Hindu temple on the site of a
razed mosque in January. Many saw it as the unofficial start of his campaign,
but analysts said the excitement over the temple may not be enough to yield
votes.
Modi ramped up
anti-Muslim rhetoric after voter turnout dipped slightly below 2019 figures in
the first few rounds of the 2024 polls, in a move seen as a bid to energize his
core Hindu voter base. But analysts say it also reflected the absence of a
single big-ticket campaign issue, which Modi has relied on to power previous
campaigns.
In 2014, Modi's status
as a political outsider with plans to crack down on deep-rooted corruption won
over voters disillusioned with decades of dynastic politics. And in 2019, he
swept the polls on a wave of nationalism after his government launched airstrikes
into rival Pakistan in response to a suicide bombing in Kashmir that killed 40
Indian soldiers.
But things are different
this time, analysts say, giving Modi's political challengers a potential
opportunity.
"The opposition
somehow managed to derail his plan by setting the narrative to local issues,
like unemployment and the economy. This election, people are voting keeping
various issues in mind," said Rasheed Kidwai, a political analyst.
