Published on 11:31 AM, May 12, 2019

Voting in Indian elections reaches next-to-last phase

Election officers crowd around a distribution center to receive electronic voting machines for their respective polling stations on the eve of polling in Prayagraj, India, Saturday, May 11, 2019. The sixth phase of the seven-phased general elections will be held Sunday. Photo: AP /Rajesh Kumar Singh

Millions of Indians today exercised their franchise as the long-drawn parliamentary elections entered its home stretch to winding down with voting in the sixth and penultimate phase underway across the national capital and six other states in another litmus test for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's re-election bid.  

India's first citizen President Ram Nath Kovind cast his vote at polling booth inside the Rashtrapati Bhavan complex this morning, reports our New Delhi correspondent.

Kovind and his wife Savita cast their votes. This is the first time that Kovind has exercised his voting right after taking over as the President of India in July 2017. Top of Form

Rahul Gandhi too cast his vote early in the morning, the correspondent reports.

The fate of several ministerial colleagues of Modi, including Radha Mohan Singh (Agriculture), Harshvardhan (Science & Technology) and Maneka Gandhi (Women and Child Development), opposition Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav and Congress leaders Digvijay Singh and Jyotiraditya Scindia, will be decided in the sixth phase in which polling is being held in 59 constituencies where an estimated 10.70 crores people are eligible to vote in the penultimate phase.

The seventh and final phase of voting will take place on May 19 and results are to be declared on May 23.    

Elections are being held in 14 seats in the key battleground state of Uttar Pradesh, 10 seats in Haryana, eight constituencies each in Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and West Bengal, seven seats in Delhi and four in Jharkhand.

Today's polling is seen as a big test for Modi-led Bharatiya Janata Party which had won 45 of the 59 seats five years ago. The party is looking to make big gains in West Bengal against Mamata Banerjee-led Trinamool Congress and seek to cut its potential losses in states where it had reached the peak in the national polls five years ago.  

In Uttar Pradesh, the BJP had won 13 of the 14 constituencies, where voting took place today,

seven of the ten seats in Haryana, seven of eight in Madhya Pradesh, all eight in Bihar,all seven in Delhi and all four in Jharkhand.

While the BJP is facing a divided opposition in Delhi and neighbouring Haryana, it has run into a strong challenge from the caste-based alliance of the SP and the Bahujan Samaj Party in UP, especially in eastern part of UP where polling was held today.

The saffron party is also hoping to make a big impact in four of the eight constituencies in West Bengal. These four constituencies—Jhargram, Purulia, Bankura and Midnapore are in the tribal belt of the state where it had put up an impressive show in panchayat polls last year.

The Trinamool Congress, the BJP, the Congress and the Left Front constituents - the CPI(M), the CPI and the Forward Bloc - are the main contenders in West Bengal. In this phase, polling will be held in Jangal Mahal - the forested region of Bankura, West Midnapore, Jhargram and Purulia districts, which used to be a Maoist hotbed, during the erstwhile Left Front government. The BJP made a determined push to wrest this area dominated by Trinamool since the decline in Maoist presence.

The Congress will be looking to make major gains in MP after its win against the BJP in state assembly polls less than six months ago. The party could win only two out of the total number of 29 parliamentary seats in the heartland state. 

In MP, the Bhopal parliamentary seat will see an interesting fight between senior Congress leader Digvijay Singh, a former Chief Minister, and BJP nominee Pragya Singh Thakur, an accused in a terror blast case. Guna constituency in the state will seal the fate of Congress general secretary and Jyotiraditya Scindia and Modi's ministerial colleague and BJP nominee Narendra Singh Tomar who is in fray from Morena.

The fight in the national capital, is triangular involving the BJP, the Congress and the Aam Aadmi Party. Prominent candidates in the fray in Delhi include veteran Congress leader Sheila Dikshit, Olympian boxer Vijender Singh, Harsh Vardhan of BJP and rival cricketer-turned-politician Gautam Gambhir of the BJP.

In Haryana, former chief minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda, a sitting legislator of the Congress from Rohtak district, is once again trying his luck to enter the lower House, this time from Sonipat. Earlier, Hooda had been a four-time parliamentarian from Rohak constituency.

In Jharkhand, the BJP this time is facing a grand alliance between the Congress and a clutch of regional parties and anti-incumbency including some controversial policies of the state's BJP government relating to transfer of forest land ownership from tribals to non-tribals. Tribals make up about 26 per cent of Jharkhand's nearly 32 million population.

In Bihar, four sitting lawmakers including India's Agriculture Minister Radha Mohan Singh, are among the 127 candidates contesting.