Gujarat to introduce compulsory voting in local body polls: CM

Gujarat will introduce compulsory voting in the upcoming local bodies polls, which are likely to be held in October, and the process of framing rules for default voters is underway

June 18, 2015 05:08 pm | Updated July 03, 2015 01:50 pm IST - Rajkot/Ahmedabad

Gujarat will introduce compulsory voting in the upcoming local bodies polls, which are likely to be held in October, and the process of framing rules for default voters is underway.

“We are in the process of notifying rules for compulsory voting bill. It will be implemented in Gujarat in corporation and the district Panchayat elections,” Chief Minister Anandiben Patel said on Thursday.

She was answering a query on whether the Gujarat government will implement the compulsory voting bill in the upcoming local bodies elections.

“The state government has made all the necessary arrangements to implement compulsory voting in the state. We have also been framing rules for people like those who cannot cast their votes and the norms will be declared very soon,” added Ms. Patel.

“We have given orders of machines (electronic voting machine) and those machines will come in time as well. So without any fear, all of us should participate in compulsory voting,” she said.

Ms. Patel was in Rajkot to kick off ‘Shala Pravesotsav’ (school enrollment) drive of the state government at Karansinhji school of Rajkot Municipal Corporation.

Opposition Congress criticised the move saying that the Gujarat government is ‘imposing’ compulsory voting through the power of majority.

“You can pass the laws through majority but you have to see the spirit behind it. Such compulsory voting system is imposed on communist countries like Russia and China. People will be harassed in such system,” Leader of Opposition in state Assembly, Shankarsinh Vaghela said.

“Voting is the matter of one’s own will...You cannot pressurise or impose it on people. This is government’s pressure on people to make them cast their votes,” Mr. Vaghela added.

“The laws should be in consonance with constitution.

Our country’s constitution gives right to the vote to people and now it is up to the people whether they want to cast their votes or not,” Mr. Vaghela told reporters here.

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