The Election Commission on Friday, 1 November said the state Assembly polls will be held in five phases between 30 November and 20 December in Jharkhand, where opposition parties, mainly the Congress and the JMM, will make a determined bid to oust the BJP government headed by Raghubar Das.
Announcing the five-phased assembly polls, Chief Election Commissioner Sunil Arora said here that the counting of votes will take place on 23 December.
He told reporters that the polls to 81-member assembly will be held on 30 November, 7 December, 12 December, 16 December and 20 December. The term of the state assembly ends on 5 January 2020.
The assembly polls in the Naxalism-affected state were held in five phases in 2014 and 2009 as well, he said, responding to questions on why a shorter poll schedule was not announced.
The CEC said that some of the seats are affected by Left Wing Extremism and the decision has been taken keeping it in mind.
Responding to a question on the absence of Election Commissioner Ashok Lavasa at the press conference, the CEC said the former is on an official visit to Australia and his views were taken over telephone."They have been (his views) recorded in the files," Arora said.
An official later said Lavasa was present when the state police chief and chief electoral officer briefed the commission here on poll preparedness on 22 and 23 October.
The BJP is in power the state, which has a large tribal population, and an alliance of opposition parties, mainly the Congress and the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM), is making a determined bid to oust the government headed by Das.
Thirteen constituencies will go to polls in the first phase, 20 in the second phase, 17 in the third, 15 in the fourth phase and 16 constituencies will go to polls in the fifth phase.
With the Jharkhand polls coming on the heels of assembly elections in Maharashtra and Haryana, its result will be keenly followed as political watchers believe that the opposition has been emboldened by the outcome in the two states where its numbers have been better than expected.
Though the BJP, which was in power in Maharashtra and Haryana, emerged as the single largest party in both states, its numbers fell short of expectation, even though the opposition was written off by the media and most pundits.
The saffron party has asserted that it has provided a stable, clean and development-oriented government in Jharkhand, with the opposition claiming that the state's progress has stalled under its rule.
Das is the first state chief minister to have completed the full term of five years in the state, long plagued by fractured mandate and unstable governments.
Asked why assembly elections in Maharashtra, Haryana, Jharkhand and Delhi were not announced together keeping in line with the pitch for simultaneous polls, he said it was up to the chief minister of a state to dissolve the assembly and not the commission.
"It (simultaneous elections) requires political consensus ... solid political consensus, not political brinkmanship," he said, adding that amendments to laws and constitution were also required.
"If the Delhi chef minister dissolves the assembly, we will announce elections, as not many security forces are required here," he said adding that the call has to be taken by the government, not EC.
He said the invite to the media specifically mentioned Jharkhand elections as a section of the media had reported that Delhi and Jharkhand polls would be announced together.
Giving out statistics, he said this time the number of poling stations is over 29,400 as compared to 24,600 in 2014, a jump of 19.54 percent.
The state has over 2.26 crore eligible voters and 58,000 ballot units, 38,000 control units and 23,000 paper trail machines would be deployed.
At least one control unit and one ballot unit make up for one EVM.
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