New Delhi, Feb 27,2021: Assam will go for Assembly elections in three phases on March 27, April 1 and 6, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Puducherry in one phase on April 6, while West Bengal in eight phases on March 27, April 1,6,10,17,22, 26 and 29, with counting in all states and the UT on May 2, the Election Commission of India announced here on Friday evening.
With the announcement, the Model Code of Conduct has come into force, Chief Election Commission Sunil Arora said in a presser at Vigyan Bhavan here.
The constituencies at stake are 294 in West Bengal, 126 seats in Assam, 234 in Tamil Nadu, 140 in Kerala and 30 in Puducherry. The term of Assemblies ends in May-June.
The striking part is West Bengal where polling is spread in eight phases. In 2016, the elections in the eastern state were conducted in six phases with the last phase divided into two parts.
In Assam, in phase one polling on March 27, a total 47 constituencies will go for voting while 39 on April 1 and remaining 40 on April 6.
In West Bengal, polling will be held in 30 seats each in phase 1 and 2 on March 27 and April 6, as many 31 seats in third phase on April 10, forty-four seats in fourth phase on April 10, forty-five in fifth phase on April 17, forty-three in sixth phase on April 22, thirty-six in seventh phase on April 26 and remaining 35 seats in eight, last phase.
As per the official data, 2.32 crore voters are registered in Assam, 6.28 cr in Tamil Nadu, 7.34 cr in West Bengal, 2.67 cr in Kerala and 10 lakhs in Puducherry.
The number of polling stations have been increased by over 34 pc in Assam and Tamil Nadu, 31 per cent in West Bengal and whooping 89 pc in Kerala and 67 pc in Puducherry.
The ECI reasoned increase in the number of polling stations with restricting 1,000 voters per station due to the pandemic and rise in the number of voters since 2016.
This will be the second large scale election in India in the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic after Bihar Assembly, which went to polls last November.
The ECI stated that the polling will be conducted with COVID-19 guidelines in place which mentions restricting the number of people accompanying the candidate in filling nominations to two and in door-to-door campaigning to five and holding rallies or meetings after taking permission from district authorities.
The polling, like in Bihar, has been extended by one hour, with postal ballot facilities being extended to voters above 80 years of age, benchmark disabilities and those engaged in essential services.
The COVID-19 patient, who is quarantined, will be allowed to cast the vote in the last hour of the voting, the guidelines said.
The ECI will use Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail (VVPAT) along with Electronic Voting Machine (EVM) at every polling station to enhance the transparency and credibility of the election process as VVPAT allows the voter to verify the vote.
The EVMs and VVPATs are randomized twice using “EVM Management System (EMS)” while being allocated to an Assembly and then to a polling booth ruling out any fixed allocation, the ECI mentioned.
For the first time, the ECI said, it has directed to establish one polling station in every constituency, to be fully managed by women staff.
In Assam, eight are reserved for SCs and 16 for STs; Tamil Nadu–44 seats for SCs and two for STs; West Bengal–68 for SCs and 16 for STs; Kerala–14 seats for SCs and two for STs while five seats are reserved for SCs and nil for STs in Puducherry.