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March 24, 1998

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ELECTIONS '96

Invalid votes made all the difference in 69 constituencies

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Blame it on voters' illiteracy or plain, simple antipathy, but invalid votes were a factor to be reckoned with in as many as 69 Lok Sabha constituencies, where it outstripped even the winning margin of candidates!

Typifying this dubious phenomenon was Rajmahal constituency in Bihar where Bharatiya Janata Party candidate Bom Marandi defeated his nearest Congress rival by just nine votes, while the number of invalid votes cast was a whopping 10,432.

A prominent victim of invalid votes, which are otherwise scrap-heaps of wasted ballot paper, was former deputy prime minister and Haryana Lok Dal nominee Devi Lal who lost the election in Rohtak to his Congress rival by 303 votes. The number of invalid votes in this constituency was 8,225.

Yet another cliff-hanger was witnessed in Tirupattur constituency in Tamil Nadu, where the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam candidate managed to win by a margin of 274 votes. The number of invalid votes polled here was 25,250.

According to poll analysts, had these invalid votes been properly cast, the outcome could well have been different in all the constituencies.

Of the 69 constituencies where invalid votes played a crucial role, Uttar Pradesh accounts for 11, folowed by Maharashtra (eight), Tamil Nadu (seven), Andhra Pradesh and Gujarat (six each), Bihar , Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan (five each), West Bengal and Karnataka (three each), Assam, Haryana and Kerala (two each) and Goa, Mizoram, Punjab and Andaman and Nicobar (one each).

The two major beneficiaries of invalid votes were the BJP and the Congress. While the BJP romped home in 21 of the 69 constituencies, the Congress did so in 20.

Incidentally, the two parties were also the major victims of this phenomenon, with the Congress and the BJP losing in 24 and 18 seats respectively out of the 69.

For instance, the BJP lost the election in Andaman and Nicobar to the Congress by 544 votes while the number of invalid votes here was 1,850. However, the party's lone Muslim candidate, Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi from Rampur, defeated his Congress rival by 4,936 votes -- even though the number of invalid votes cast here was 9,510.

A prominent Congress loser was former Union minister Santosh Mohan Deb who lost to the BJP candidate in Assam's Silchar constituency by 19,566 votes -- while a whopping 25,957 votes were declared invalid.

Similarly, BJP heavyweight Vinay Katiyar had the mortification of losing the Faizabad seat to Mitrasen Yadav of the Samajwadi party by 7.737 votes; the invalid votes cast was close to 11,000.

In Nandyal, once the constituency of former prime minister P V Narasimha Rao, Telugu Desam Party candidate Bhuma Magi Reddy defeated the Congress candidate by 4,650 votes -- the number of invalid votes cast stood at 10,287.

UNI

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