[Unlike in the past, this year’s
contest featured a potential spoiler in the Aam Aadmi, or Common Man, Party.
Its leader, the firebrand anticorruption activist Arvind Kejriwal, was battling
to dethrone the state’s longtime chief minister, Sheila Dikshit of the Congress
Party, and siphon votes from the other establishment choice, the Bharatiya
Janata Party, or B.J.P. (Exit polls by the local media on Wednesday night were showing that
the B.J.P. was likely to win the most seats in the state assembly.)]
By Betwa Sharma
Saurabh Das/Associated Press |
Finally, the Election Commission said
it would wait until 9:30 p.m. to close the polls.
At the polling station in the New Delhi district, those
waiting in line agreed that a relatively warm winter evening was helping to
draw people out to vote.
Though no official data on voter
turnout had been released by 9 p.m. , it was clear that
voters were coming out in unprecedented numbers for this year’s Delhi state elections.
Analysts were predicting that this election would break the previous voter
turnout record of 61.75 percent in 1993.
Unlike in the past, this year’s
contest featured a potential spoiler in the Aam Aadmi, or Common Man, Party.
Its leader, the firebrand anticorruption activist Arvind Kejriwal, was battling
to dethrone the state’s longtime chief minister, Sheila Dikshit of the Congress
Party, and siphon votes from the other establishment choice, the Bharatiya
Janata Party, or B.J.P. (Exit polls by the local media on Wednesday night were showing that
the B.J.P. was likely to win the most seats in the state assembly.)
The prospect of upending the
political status quo brought out young voters like 23-year-old Hina Kousar,
although she had to put up a fight with her family to cast her vote for the Aam
Aadmi Party. Her mother lectured her on how governments don’t care about
people, but that didn’t deter Ms. Kousar.
“They have the wrong mentality, and
young people should change it,” she said. “My granny is 70 years old and I told
her to vote.”
Many of the youthful voters turned
voting into a social activity, both in person and online. At one polling
station, most people cast their votes quietly and left, but many of the young
voters came with their friends. They talked animatedly about their choices while
leaving the polling stations.
Others called their families to say
they had voted. Some clicked photos of each other on their smartphones and
posted the images on their Facebook pages.
In less than a year, Mr. Kejriwal,
45, and his party has pasted itself quite literally on city’s consciousness
with aggressive campaigns and posters of brooms, symbolizing sweeping away the
old order. And that’s why he got Ms. Kousar’s vote.
“The most important thing is that he
has promised to remove corruption. The money that is going into Swiss banks is
our money. The rising market prices are because of it,” she said.
Several voters between the ages of 20
to 25 who were interviewed by India Ink said they were backing Mr. Kejriwal,
who represented a change from the three-term winner Ms. Dikshit. The B.J.P. had
no star state candidate that appealed to them, even though its prime
ministerial candidate, Narendra Modi, engaged with students at Delhi University earlier this year
and is extremely active on social media.
Besides corruption, several young
voters, both male and female, said that ensuring women’s safety had to be a
priority for any Delhi government.
Another Kejriwal voter, Kavita, a
27-year-old teacher who goes by one name, said that Ms. Dikshit’s government
hadn’t effectively improved women’s safety after the gang rape of a
physiotherapy student one year ago. “I don’t feel the difference,” she said. “I
still feel unsafe on the streets, so let’s see what some new leaders can do to
change this.”
Another Kejriwal supporter, Abhilash
Sasidharan, 27, said a safe environment for women is “absolutely” the most
important thing to him, but the software engineer also was moved that Mr.
Kejriwal had left his lucrative job as a revenue service officer to join
politics.
“I don’t have the courage to step
into dirty politics, but he does and I want to support that,” he said. “Look,
Congress has had 15 years, so why not see if someone can do better, and all
these parties should feel a threat to do better.”
But not all young people are buying
Mr. Kejriwal’s promises of sweeping change. Shiv Raj Syal, 20, called them
“flowery and too good to believe,” as he cast his vote for Ms. Dikshit. “He is
just very new at this and I don’t think it’s wise to hand over the running of a
national capital to a party with no experience,” he said.
The chief minister had focused on
development, the college student said, making Delhi a hub for foreign
brands and corporates, and transforming it into an international city.
Despite the appearance of a robust youth
presence at the polls on Wednesday, analysts are waiting on the Election
Commission’s numbers before declaring this election cycle the year of the youth
vote.
Sanjay Kumar, an election analyst
from the Center for the Study of Developing Societies in Delhi , said that as of
July, only 68 percent of eligible voters between the ages of 18 and 21 had
registered to vote, far lower than the 86 percent average of other
demographics.
V.S. Sampath, the chief election
commissioner in India , said that youth
participation in the electoral process had been a priority in recent years, and
several efforts including visiting universities and colleges had been made to
register them, which had resulted in a “significant increase.”
In 2011, Mr. Sampath said, 119,000
voters between the ages of 18 and 19 were on the electoral rolls in Delhi , which accounted
for 0.93 percent of total Delhi voters, but now the
numbers had gone up to 405,000, or 3.4 percent.
Election observers have also pointed
out that the hype about social media, especially Twitter, becoming a tool for
political expression and organization for the youth has not necessarily
translated into a surge in voting in that demographic of users.
The political debates on social media
could translate into votes by the next elections, according to Sunil Abraham
from the Center of Internet and Society in Bangalore , who describes the
Internet penetration as “limited,” and social media use even smaller and
dominated by the economic elite.
Mr. Abraham, however, said social
media is influencing the political discourse, not by motivating voters, but by
influencing the coverage in mainstream media.
Relative to the country’s population,
he added, social media users had a “disproportionate influence on discourse.”
But the young voters who spoke to
India Ink said that at least for them, social media did play a role in drawing
them into politics this year. Mr. Syal, the Congress voter, for instance, said
that he had posted a message on his Facebook wall criticizing some of Mr.
Kejriwal’s claims, which drew 50 comments.
And Mr. Sasidharan, the Aam Aadmi
Party supporter, posted on Facebook a photo of him holding up his finger
stained with ink, showing that he voted, immediately after coming out of the polling
station. “I hope that it inspires more people to come and vote,” he said.
Betwa Sharma is a
freelance journalist in New Delhi .