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The first phase of Kerala local-self-government institutions polls will be held on Tuesday. With the Kerala Assembly elections imminent early next year, the local body polls in the state will act as a semifinal of sorts between the two major political fronts in the state – the ruling LDF (Left Democratic Front) and the UDF (United Democratic Front).
The polls will also be a litmus test for the BJP to check whether it has strengthened its voter base in the state.
Of the total 1,200 local bodies, the elections will be held for 1,199 local bodies except the Mattannur Municipality in Kannur district that follows a different election calendar.
The elections will be held for 941 Grama Panchayats, 152 Block Panchayats, 14 District Panchayats, 86 Municipalities and six Municipal Corporations. A total of 2.7 crore people will cast their votes. With 50 percent reservation for women, there are 36,305 women in the fray.
The LDF bagged seven of the 14 District Panchayats, and 44 of the 87 municipalities in the 2015 elections. The UDF won 41 municipalities, seven District Panchayats and two corporations. BJP won 51 Corporation, 236 Municipality, 933 Grama Panchayat, 21 Block Panchayat and three District Panchayat wards.
The party's 'prestigious' victory was in the Thiruvananthapuram Corporation, where it pushed the Congress to the third place. The BJP secured 34 of the 100 seats while the LDF won 42 seats.
The major issues raised both by the Congress and the BJP against the government are – the gold smuggling case for the alleged link of Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan’s former Principal Secretary M Sivasankar; the controversies surrounding the Life Mission Project – the Kerala government’s housing scheme for the poor; and the Kerala Infrastructure Investment Fund Board (KIFFBI).
The Left has accused the opposition Congress of having a secret alliance with the BJP and has highlighted the welfare schemes for the poor and the developmental activities like the completion of the pipeline of Gas Authority of India in the state.
The number of male voters in 2015 was 12,058,262 while in 2020 this was 12,925,766. The corresponding figure of female voters is 13,050,163 and 14,194,725.
This is the sixth election to the decentralised tiers of the local bodies. The decentralisation that brought about a drastic change in the role of local-self-government institutions was introduced in 1996 when the LDF was in power.
(This story was first published in The News Minute and has been republished with permission)
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Published: 07 Dec 2020,04:01 PM IST