Weeks of campaigning have come to an end ahead of the first phase of voting in the West Bengal assembly elections in India.
Voting will be held on Thursday from 7 am to 6 pm local time in a total of 152 constituencies in 16 districts of North and South Bengal.
The Election Commission has taken strict security measures for this year’s assembly elections, which many are calling ‘war preparations’.
Central forces have been deployed to ensure fair and peaceful voting. West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata has claimed that 2 lakh police and central forces have been brought from Delhi for the voting.
The presiding officer will hand over the slips to all the voters who are in line at the polling station gate, along with the central forces. This is the rule for this year’s election.
Moreover, this time, you will not be able to go to vote with your mobile phone. To solve that problem, the commission will set up a mobile counter in front of the booth for the first time. Voters will be able to leave their mobile phones there and go to vote.
The Election Commission has said that central forces will be in charge of security at all booths. They will ensure the safety of voters. In addition, care will be taken to ensure that the voting is peaceful.
In this election, the two main opponents, the Trinamool Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), will both want to maintain their dominance as much as possible in more than half of the seats in the state.
However, in addition to the equal fight between these two parties, candidates from the Congress, CPI(M), ISF, and Aam Janata Unnayan Party are also contesting in this election.
Nearly 36 million voters will decide the fate of 1,478 candidates in the first round of elections on Thursday.
The current Chief Minister of West Bengal, Mamata Banerjee, is campaigning for a fourth consecutive term. However, if the BJP wins the elections and is able to form the government, it will be the first Hindutva-based government in West Bengal.
If this happens, it will be a major turning point in West Bengal politics. On the other hand, if the Trinamool Congress wins again, their rule will continue.
Although the ruling Trinamool Congress party is ahead in various opinion polls, there are indications that the competition will be fierce. In this election, the result could change by just a few thousand votes.
Because, before these assembly elections, not only a two-way fight between the BJP and the Trinamool Congress has emerged in 152 seats, but a multi-faceted equation has emerged.
In the 2021 elections, 57 seats were decided by a margin of just 8,000 votes. All eyes are on those same seats again. Here, even a small change in votes can make a big difference.
Of the 57 seats with narrow margins, 47 are in South Bengal. There are only 10 such seats in North Bengal. South Bengal has long been known as a stronghold of the Trinamool Congress.
Therefore, the BJP has been more active there. The big challenge for the Trinamool Congress is to maintain its dominance in the seats with small margins, while retaining power.
Again, Congress may also attract some anti-BJP votes, which will further increase the problems of Trinamool Congress.
Moreover, it remains to be seen how much impact the breakup of the alliance between Humayun Kabir’s Aam Janata Unnayan Party and Asaduddin Owaisi’s AIMIM before the elections will have on the Trinamool.