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Kerala reports 50 per cent turnout at halfway mark, likely to gather pace

Shashi Tharoor, the Thiruvananthapuram Lok Sabha member has opined that as things stand and given the good turnout, this could be good for the Congress-led UDF.

Kerala reports 50 per cent turnout at halfway mark, likely to gather pace

(Photo: IANS/PIB)

At the halfway mark on Tuesday, about 50 per cent of the voters in Kerala have already exercised their franchise, say the sources.

In the 2016 assembly polls, the state witnessed a 77.5 per cent overall turnout while in the 2019 Lok Sabha polls it rose to 77.84 per cent but it dropped to 76.20 per cent at the December 2020 local body polls.

If the Tuesday trend and pace continue it could well be an all-time high if one compares the recent polls.

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Shashi Tharoor, the Thiruvananthapuram Lok Sabha member has opined that as things stand and given the good turnout, this could be good for the Congress-led UDF.

Apart from Shashi Tharoor, popular comedian and losing Congress candidate in the 2016 assembly polls Jagdeesh, who had campaigned for the UDF candidates in the present polls too feels that the increased pace of voters queuing up to vote and the turnout reaching 50 per cent might be a good sign for the UDF.

“I doubt if the increased turnout is going to favour the Left as the general norm is an increased fervour means it’s to vote out the ruling government. If the Left was to retain power, I doubt if this impressive turnout would have been there,” said Jagdeesh.

The fate of 957 candidates would be decided by an electorate of 1,41,62,025 women, 1,32,83,724 men and 290 transgender voters.

Polling is taking place according to strict Covid protocols. While in the 2016 Assembly polls, 21,498 polling booths were there, this time due to the Covid pandemic the number of polling booths has been increased to 40,771.

The poll will end at 7 p.m. and the last hour has been kept aside for Covid positive patients and for those in quarantine.

The principal political fronts contesting the elections are the ruling CPI-M led Left Democratic Front (LDF) the Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) and the BJP led National Democratic Alliance (NDA).

In the outgoing Assembly (2016 polls) the LDF had 91 seats, the UDF 47, the NDA one seat and there was one independent MLA.

(With IANS inputs)

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