Of manifestos, star campaigns and more

A compilation of all major issues that took place in last week.

The General Elections 2014 have begun. In the first phase reports suggest 80 – 85% polling in Tripura and 75% voter turnout in Assam. Voter turnout in phase two, in the other four North Eastern states of Arunachal, Meghalaya, Manipur and Nagaland began on a low note till noon. But picked up by end of day with Nagaland and Manipur recording around 80% and Arunachal a 55%

The national BJP Manifesto and the JD(S) manifesto for Bangalore city were released this week. The CPI (M), Congress and AAP termed aspects of the BJP manifesto as communal and the Congress went a step ahead saying that the BJP manifesto had parts copied from theirs. On six issues like economics, SC, urbanisation, corruption etc, the Congress and BJP manifestos seem to be on the same lines.

A comparison of the promises made by each party in different areas of health, economy, health, foreign policy, women and so on and the existing scenario in the country has been highlighted by this report.

In the city this week has seen the two heavy weights RaGa and Namo turn up to campaign for their respective candidates. Most news reports had more pictures than the content of what the leaders actually spoke. Promises Rahul Gandhi made were that of job creation and making Bangalore a manufacturing hub and seeing more of “made in Bangalore” products in the world.

Narendra Modi’s Bangalore visit seemed more of a campaign for the Bangalore South Constituency as he spoke more about Aadhaar card’s failure.  One point both leaders had in common was having their party stake claim for Bangalore being the IT hub of India.

The backgrounds and profiles of the candidates from Bangalore are varied and each of them having their own campaigning styles. Canvassing and campaigning for candidates seemed to have picked up momentum in the city this week with candidates focussing on sections of its electorate. Spouses and Stars were seen campaigning, Vivek Oberoi and Darshan were seen campaigning for Nandini Alva and PC Mohan respectively.

Some campaigns had its share of drama too, during Rizwan Arshad’s campaign, it was the presence of a rowdy sheeter Brigade Azam along with MLAs and even Home Minister K J George. Arshad denied knowledge of the sheeter’s presence during his campaign although in another report, he shared the dias with the MLAs and even alighted the vehicle for the procession.

Many other campaigns were taking place simultaneously in the city on voter awareness. Hoardings across the city carrying catchy messages sponsored by real estate developers is a part of a campaign by a city based developers. Rangolis patterns in front of homes and streetplays to create awareness on voting were measures taken by SVEEP. 

Related Articles

Checking out election campaigning at Ulsoor Lake

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

Conspicuous by absence in Mumbai election campaign: BMC elections

Delay in BMC elections hits the quality of everyday life in Mumbai. The fact that no political party is raising hell over this in their current campaigns speaks volumes.

In 2022, with the world just recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic, it didn’t seem extraordinary when elections to the richest civic body, Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) were postponed. Though the reasons for postponement were a case in the Supreme Court about OBC seats and an earlier delimitation exercise, any aberrations to the existing systems were acceptable in the backdrop of two ghastly COVID-19 waves and Omicron.  But decisions that seemed fine at that point have outlived the concession. In Mumbai, as the city prepares for the state assembly elections, the elephant in the room is actually the BMC elections. Not to…

Similar Story

MCAP: Initiated in 2022, how effective is plan to mitigate climate change in Mumbai?

The Mumbai Climate Action Plan (MCAP),launched in 2022, is a step in the right direction but its implementation leaves a lot to be desired.

Scorching heat waves, devastating floods, a yearly increase in temperature, high AQI levels, Mumbai has seen it all over the past few decades, with no sign that the vagaries of climate will let up anytime soon. If the island city is to weather the storm of climate change, it requires a concrete map to navigate the next couple of decades. The Mumbai Climate Action Plan (MCAP), created by the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) with the World Resources Institute (WRI) as a knowledge partner, is such a map. In 2020, Mumbai became a part of the global C40 network, pledging  a…