The Economic Times daily newspaper is available online now.

    Phase VI keeps high voting trend; violence in Bengal

    Synopsis

    Voting over for 89% of 543 LS seats, higher turnout than 2014 in Bihar and MP, slightly lower in Delhi.

    elections-BCCL2
    Voting in West Bengal was conducted amid unprecedented security and incidents of clashes between workers of the ruling Trinamool Congress and the BJ.
    NEW DELHI The penultimate phase of 2019 Lok Sabha election wound up on Sunday with voting for 59 seats across seven states that saw a turnout of a little over 63%, which is expected to touch the 65% mark of 2014 in the final count.

    Violence, however, continued to mar elections in West Bengal where a BJP worker was reported killed in poll-related violence in Jhargram. The state again recorded the highest turnout at nearly 80% as of 6 pm.

    Bihar and Madhya Pradesh saw an increase of close to 2 percentage points over the 2014 turnout. Delhi, however, saw a slight decline till reports last came in.

    In phase six, 14 parliamentary constituencies went to polls in Uttar Pradesh, all 10 in Haryana, eight each in Bihar and West Bengal, four in Jharkhand and seven in Delhi.

    Turnout in Bihar was 59.3% at 6 pm, Delhi 59.8%, Haryana 62.9%, Jharkhand 65.1%, Madhya Pradesh 60%, Uttar Pradesh 54.12% and West Bengal 79.9%.

    Overall turnout in the six phases completed so far stands at 67.4%, 1.33 percentage points more than the 66.07% voting in 2014.

    The results in Haryana and Delhi are being watched closely for the political implications they may hold for the upcoming assembly elections scheduled to be held in these states over the next few months.

    Many Tough Contests

    In 2014, BJP won all seven seats in Delhi but lost the assembly elections six months later. In Haryana, however, the party doubled its vote share to 34.7% in the assembly polls and registered a convincing win.

    Most of the 59 constituencies that went to polls on Sunday were won by the BJP in 2014. But there are many tough contests in 2019.

    One of the most watched contests in this phase was in the BJP stronghold of Bhopal, where Congress veteran Digvijaya Singh took on Pragya Singh Thakur of the BJP. Jyotiraditya Scindia’s constituency Guna — one of the only two seats the Congress had won in MP in 2014 — also went to polls on Sunday.

    Voting was also held at Azamgarh in Uttar Pradesh, from where former chief minister and Samajwadi Party leader Akhilesh Yadav contested, and Sultanpur, where BJP’s Maneka Gandhi is pitted against Congress’ Sanjay Singh.

    Another veteran in the fray is Congress’ Sheila Dikshit, the three-time Delhi chief minister, who is taking on BJP’s Manoj Tiwari in North-East Delhi. The other big fight was between Aam Aadmi Party’s Atishi Marlena and cricketer Gautam Gambhir (of the BJP) in East Delhi.

    In Bihar, Union agriculture minister Radha Mohan Singh sought re-election from East Champaran while Siwan saw Hina Shahab, wife of convicted don and four-time MP Mohammad Shahabuddin, taking on JDU’s Kavita Singh, wife of strongman Ajay Singh.

    Voting in West Bengal was conducted amid unprecedented security and incidents of clashes between workers of the ruling Trinamool Congress and the BJP as the former Maoist hotbed and tribal belt of Junglemahal went to polls. The BJP is eyeing gains in this region.

    In Haryana, higher turnout was seen in Rohtak, Kurukshetra, Sonepat, Bhiwani and Hisar.

    The final round of Lok Sabha polls will be held on May 19, in which the remaining seats in Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Bihar, Punjab, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh and Himachal Pradesh will be covered along with the sole seat of Chandigarh.


    (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel)
    (Catch all the Business News, Breaking News, Budget 2024 News, Budget 2024 Live Coverage, Events and Latest News Updates on The Economic Times.)

    Download The Economic Times News App to get Daily Market Updates & Live Business News.

    Subscribe to The Economic Times Prime and read the ET ePaper online.

    ...more
    The Economic Times

    Stories you might be interested in