February 11, 2020
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Delhi Assembly Elections: Early Trends Show AAP Headed For Massive Victory, BJP Distant Second

As much as 62.59 per cent voter turnout was recorded in Delhi on February 8, when the elections were held in a single-phase in Delhi.

Delhi Assembly Elections: Early Trends Show AAP Headed For Massive Victory, BJP Distant Second
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Delhi Assembly Elections: Early Trends Show AAP Headed For Massive Victory, BJP Distant Second
outlookindia.com
2020-02-11T11:36:38+0530

The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) was on Tuesday headed for a massive victory -- albeit not of the same magnitude as 2015 -- as early trends indicated that Kejriwal will return as Delhi chief minister.

AAP was leading in 55 of the 70 seats, followed by the BJP in 15 constituencies, according to the Election Commission. Congress, once the principal party in the national capital under Sheila Dikshit, was relegated further, getting just a fraction of votes that it received just 9 months ago during the Lok Sabha elections.

Kejriwal was leading in the New Delhi seat by 4,300 seats, but surprisingly, his deputy Manish Sisodia was trailing by 1427 from Patparganj. 

BJP leader Vijender Gupta, who is also the leader of opposition in the Delhi legislative assembly, was trailing by over 1,200 votes from Rohini.

As early celebrations broke out in the AAP headquarters in Rouse Avenue, BJP's Delhi unit chief Manoj Tiwari asked his party supporters not to lose hope.

Exit polls had predicted a big win for the ruling AAP, but the BJP leaders maintained the surveys would fall flat.

The counting began at 8 am and will be held in multiple rounds, Delhi Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) Ranbir Singh said.

"Elaborate security arrangements have been put in place. The exercise is being carried out as per the laid-down procedures of the Election Commission," Singh said.

"The postal ballots will be counted first till around 8.30 am and then the votes cast through electronic voting machines will be counted," the senior official said.

"The counting centres are spread across 21 locations, spanning the 70 constituencies. Each centre has several counting halls, equal to the number of constituencies falling in that district," he said.

After counting of votes through CUs from every assembly constituency, five VVPATs will be randomly selected and they will be counted, the official said.

The counting centres are located across 11 districts, including at CWG Sports Complex in east Delhi, NSIT Dwarka in west Delhi, Meerabai Institute of Technology and G B Pant Institute of Technology in southeast Delhi, Sir CV Raman ITI, Dheerpur in central Delhi, and Rajiv Gandhi Stadium in Bawana in north Delhi.

The election, largely seen as a battle between the AAP and the BJP, was held on Saturday, sealing the fate of 672 candidates -- 593 men and 79 women.

Nearly 24 hours after the polling ended in Delhi, the Election Commission on Sunday announced that the final voter turnout was 62.59 per cent, five per cent less than 2015, and asserted that it followed the laid down process to compile data, after the AAP questioned the "delay".

There were 13,780 polling booths where every vote was accounted for by the presiding officers, which is a time-consuming exercise, Sandeep Saxena, senior deputy election commissioner, said at a press conference on Sunday.

Over 1.47 crore people were eligible to vote in the Delhi polls, including 2.33 lakh in the age group of 18-19.

The turnout in the 2015 Assembly polls stood at 67.47 per cent.

The AAP had routed rival parties in the last Assembly polls, bagging 67 seats while the BJP was reduced to mere three seats and the Congress had drawn a blank.

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