Punjab heads for counting day, parties keep fingers crossed
CHANDIGARH: The stage is set for counting of votes on
Saturday for 117 assembly seats in Punjab with pollsters predicting the exit of
the ruling SAD-BJP alliance and a neck-and-neck fight between the debutant AAP and
the Congress.
Counting of votes will commence at 8am at 54 centers in 27 locations, an
election office spokesman said here.
More than 14,000 officials have been deployed at the counting centers, where
tight security arrangements have been made to ensure that the exercise is
completed peacefully.
Unauthorised persons would not be allowed to enter the counting centers.
Nobody, barring the election observers, would be allowed to carry mobile phones
there, the spokesman said.
Live results will be shown on TV screens at district election offices,
prominent public places and malls.
Poll results will also be updated at regular intervals on the Election
Commission's website.
Despite the exit polls predicting a total rout for the ruling SAD-BJP alliance,
which is targeting a third term in the state, 89-year-old chief minister
Parkash Singh Badal claimed the combine will win 72 seats.
State Congress chief Amarinder Singh claimed his party would emerge victorious
on 65 seats, while the AAP was confident of bagging close to 100 seats.
The state went to polls in single phase on February 4 and recorded 78.60 per
cent polling as against 78.57 per cent voter turnout in 2012.
As many as 1,145 candidates are in the fray, 81 of whom are female and one
transgender.
The SAD contested 94 seats and its ally BJP 23. The Congress
contested all the seats. The AAP and its ally Lok Insaf Party, led by the Bains
brothers of Ludhiana, are fighting on 112 and 5 seats respectively.
The Congress and the SAD have been alternatively forming the government after
the reorganisation of Punjab in 1966.
In 2007, the SAD-BJP alliance came to power. As per the trend of politics in
Punjab, it was the turn of the Congress in 2012 but it happened otherwise and
SAD-BJP got the second term.
Key constituencies whose results would be keenly watched include the Lambi
seat, where the CM is locked in a triangular contest with Amarinder Singh and
journalist-turned-politician Jarnail Singh (AAP).
Patiala is another key seat where Amarinder Singh is fighting against SAD
candidate and retired army Chief General JJ Singh.
Jalalabad, considered a pocket borough of the ruling Badal family, has two
sitting MPs - Ravneet Singh Bittu (Congress) and comedian-turned-politician
Bhagwant Mann (AAP) - taking on SAD president and deputy chief minister Sukhbir
Singh Badal. Veteran Congress leader and former chief minister Rajinder Kaur
Bhattal is fighting it out against Finance Minister Parminder Singh Dhindsa
(SAD) from her traditional bastion of Lehragagga.
AAP's Himmat Singh Shergill is fighting against Revenue Minister Bikram Singh
Majithia from Majitha while Gurpreet Singh Ghuggi (AAP) is giving a challenge
to Congress stalwart Ashwini Sekhri from Batala.
Navjot Singh Sidhu, who after several flip-flops had joined the Congress,
contested the Amritsar East seat against Rajesh Kumar Honey of the BJP. The
CM's estranged nephew Manpreet Singh Badal is trying his fortunes from Bathinda
Urban seat on a Congress ticket while Indian Youth Congress chief Raja
Amarinder Singh Warring is contesting Gidderbaha seat. The results are crucial
for Congress, which is seeking to wrest power after failing in previous two
Assembly elections fought under the leadership of Amarinder Singh.
Meanwhile, after witnessing a high-profile battle between political stalwarts -
BJP's Arun Jaitley and Congress's Amarinder Singh in 2014 - the Amritsar Lok
Sabha by poll was overshadowed by the Assembly polls this year. The BJP has
fielded 66-year-old leader Rajinder Mohan Singh Chhina against Congress's
Gurjit Singh Aujla (44) and Aam Aadmi Party's Upkar Singh Sandhu (63).
The by-poll to Amritsar seat was necessitated after Amarinder Singh resigned in
protest against the Supreme Court's verdict on the SYL canal issue.
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