In India, the election comes to him.
Bharatdas Darshandas, the lone inhabitant and caretaker of a Hindu temple deep in the Gir Forest, has become a symbol of India’s herculean effort to ensure that the votes of every one of its 900 million eligible voters is counted. Voting began Thursday in the world’s largest — and arguably most colourful — democracy, and a team of five election workers will trek to Darshandas’ temple and set up a polling station solely for his use.
“It is an honour, it really is,” Darshandas told reporters after a general election in 2009. “It proves how India values its democracy.”THE WORLD’S LARGEST DEMOCRATIC ELECTION, EVER
Those values are being put to the ultimate test with the largest democratic election in history.
In seven phases over 39 days, as many as 900 million people will casts ballots nationwide at 1 million polling stations, spread across densely populated megacities and far-flung villages. Each phase lasts a single day, with the date varying by location.
It is a feat of gargantuan proportions, requiring 12 million polling officials and cutting-edge technology. But just getting to the voters — some of whom live among the world’s tallest mountains, its densest jungles and sweltering deserts — presents its own set of challenges.
To provide ballots to voters in the most remote areas, the politically independent Election Commission of India will deploy 700 special trains, as well as boats, planes and teams of camels and elephants.
“There are mountains which can be reached only by helicopter,” said SY Quraishi, author of “An Undocumented Wonder: The Great Indian Election” and the country’s former chief election commissioner, who listed the many means poll workers use to get out the vote. “In fact there are many areas so remote where none of these will work, then parties have to walk for three days.”
Election officials have to not only account for the most isolated voters, but also provide efficient systems for voters in the country’s teeming cities. The busiest polling stations will see as many as 12,000 people arrive to cast votes.
With a population of 1.34 billion people, India is set to overtake China as the world’s most populous country sometime before the next general election, scheduled for 2024. Its electorate is four times the size of the United States, meaning more than 10% of the world’s population is eligible to vote in this year’s poll.
During the last general election in 2014, 553 million Indians, or 66% of all eligible voters, cast ballots.
In addition to the poll workers, tens of thousands of troops are deployed throughout the election to prevent party activists from interfering in the process and subdue potential outbreaks of violence.
HOW DO YOU COUNT 900 MILLION VOTES?
The tool most credited for improving the ease with which Indians vote is also part of the reason the process takes so long.
While voters in the United States and elsewhere continue to argue the merits and security of electronic voting, India has been using secure electronic machines since 1999. Beginning in 2014, the government introduced a second machine, a printer that deposits a hard copy of each ballot into a sealed box, ensuring an additional layer of redundancy and security.
Though nearly 1 billion people could cast ballots, there are just 1.63 million “control units,” the computerised brain of the electronic voting machine. The machines are toted across the country for use during each geographic phase of the election.
The individual machines tabulate the votes almost instantly, but the tallies are only officially announced four days after the last votes are cast, or six weeks after the election began.
After a weekslong process the counting takes just hours. Election Commission officials begin the count at 8 a.m. and the winners are announced by lunchtime.
MANY VOTERS FOR MANY CANDIDATES
Prime Minister Narendra Modi of the Bharatiya Janata Party and his principal challenger, Rahul Gandhi of the Indian National Congress, represent Parliament’s two largest factions.
But there are more than 8,000 candidates representing more than 2,000 political parties vying for 543 available seats in Parliament’s lower house, the Lok Sabha.
To secure a majority, a party or coalition must control 272 seats.
© 2019 New York Times News Service