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Friday, March 10, 2017

2017 Assembly Elections - Counting of Votes today Saturday March 11,2017


Counting of votes in assembly polls in five states takes place today Saturday March 11,2017 amid tight security with the most riveting contest in Uttar Pradesh, seen as a gamechanger and a virtual referendum on Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s popularity and his reforms agenda.
The Samajwadi Party-Congress alliance in Uttar Pradesh is hoping to stop the BJP juggernaut, which had earlier stumbled in Bihar and Delhi, and lead the way for opposition unity in the run-up to the 2019 general election.

Congress is claiming it will wrest power in Punjab and retain its hold in Uttarakhand and Manipur


The election is also important for the nascent Aam Aadmi Party, which is hoping for success in its maiden outing in assembly elections outside Delhi and has put up a spirited fight in Punjab and Goa.
Counting of votes starts at 8 am today Saturday March 11,2017 
Tens of thousands of central forces personnel were being deployed at the polling centres, including 20,000 personnel in Uttar Pradesh.
In Uttar Pradesh which has a 403-member assembly, 78 counting centres have been set up in 75 districts

 In Uttarakhand where the Assembly strength is 70, 15 counting centres have been established.

Votes will be counted at 54 centres in 27 locations set up for election to the 117-member Punjab Assembly

In Goa, votes will be counted at two centres in North and South Goa to declare the winners in 40 seats

In Manipur, counting of votes will be held for 60 seats.
The Election Commission has issued strict guidelines on security arrangements for counting of votes and has prohibited mobile phones inside the counting halls.
In addition to general observers, a micro-observer will be deputed at each and every counting table. A three-tier security arrangement has been made in and around the counting centres.
Only central forces will be deployed inside the counting centres, while local police will be deployed in the outer circle and forces from other states will be around the centres to prevent entry of any unauthorised persons.
A senior magistrate will be posted at the entrance to control the crowds and regulate entry. A 100-metre area around a counting premise or campus is to be demarcated as pedestrian zone and no vehicles shall be allowed within this perimeter.
Additional CCTV cameras will be installed at locations from where the carrying of EVMs from strong rooms to the counting halls can be effectively monitored.
Exit polls have projected a hung assembly in Uttar Pradesh and Goa, with BJP likely to lead the table. They forecast a close fight in Punjab between the Congress, which is seeking to return to power after a hiatus of 10 years, and Arvind Kejriwal’s AAP. The Shiromani Akali Dal-BJP combine could be in for a drubbing in the state.
They have predicted victory for BJP in Uttarakhand.
A good show by the BJP, especially in Uttar Pradesh, will be seen as a reaffirmation of Modi’s standing among the masses and popular endorsement of his agenda, especially demonetisation.
It will also boost its president’s Amit Shah’s authority as capturing power in Uttar Pradesh has been a dream project for the party, after it was reduced to the margins of the state's politics that it ruled for much of the 1990s.
Amit Shah has been seen as the architect of the party’s outreach to various social groups, mostly OBCs and sections of Dalits, and some experts believed that it might have antagonised its core support base and also old loyalists, who were passed over by him in distribution of tickets

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