The country may see the highest voter turnout since Independence in the ongoing Lok Sabha polls if the first four rounds, which clocked 67 percent polling, is any indication, says a report
The last phase had closed with the highest turnout at 67.6 percent and if the remaining three phases of the seven-legged election season record more turnouts then this election will create history
Normally, psephologists and political pundits consider a higher voter turnout as an indication of anti-incumbency
Mumbai: The country may see the highest voter turnout since Independence in the ongoing Lok Sabha polls if the first four rounds, which clocked 67 percent polling, is any indication, says a report.
The last phase had closed with the highest turnout at 67.6 percent and if the remaining three phases of the seven-legged election season record more turnouts then this election will create history among elections held since Independence, says SBI Research.
Normally, psephologists and political pundits consider a higher voter turnout as an indication of anti-incumbency. Of the 543 Lok Sabha seats, voting has been completed in 373 seats (69 percent of the total seats) in the first four of the seven phases, which will end on 19 May after beginning on 11 April.
Lok Sabha election: India may see highest voter turnout since Independence, says report, as 67% polling recorded in first four phases
Voters show their fingers marked with indelible ink. PTI
A phase-wise turnout rate indicates that polling in 2019 is more or equal to the 2014 rate, except for the third phase. Overall turnout after the four rounds this time is 67 percent compared to 67.6 percent in 2014.
“If the same trend continues, this year’s turnout rate may cross the previous record, and will be the highest since Independence,” the report said Thursday. It said though the delayed elections in 1985, the voter turnout was 72 percent, but it was only in Assam and Punjab, and the average turnout of 1984 and in 1985, when only these two states went to polls, is coming 67.9 percent.
So far in the ongoing elections, the voter turnout in Andhra, Assam, Gujarat, Karnataka registered highest ever since 1962 or in last 57 years since Independence. Chhattisgarh has seen a 15-year and Maharashtra, a 30-year high in voter turnout. Mumbai registered a voter turnout of 55.1 percent, which is the highest for the city since 1989, the report said.
In Assam, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Andhra, Kerala, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh (partial) and Rajasthan (partial) the polling percentage of younger voters in the 18-25 age bracket) on an average is more than national average, there is a 3.3 percent increase in voter turnout (additional 4.5 million), it said.
States like Maharashtra where the elderly population is higher than national average has witnessed an increase in voter turnout, though marginally. In Karnataka and Kerala that are relatively older states (8.6 percent elderly population, that is much higher than the national average) there is also an increased 1.8 percent more voting (or 1.1 million), it said.
Women voters who were previously missing from the electoral process due to various socio-economic reasons, their numbers have come down in 2019 and are also now actively casting their votes.
It said that the westerns states, where poverty is less, are seeing better polling this year than in the past election. Southern states also have lower levels of deprivation, and with the exception of Tamil Nadu, they have improved their voter turnout, the report said.