Earlier this month, the Election Commission of India ordered repolling at a polling station in Gujarat’s Dahod Lok Sabha constituency. The reason? A man had gone viral live-streaming while voting at the booth on 7 May, after which the poll body deemed the votes that had already been cast as worthless, and decided to repeat the process. The digital era may throw up new reasons for repolls, but the phenomenon isn’t new.
While full data for the ongoing elections is not yet available, past data shows that in the last three Lok Sabha polls, a total of 1,474 polling stations across 295 constituencies saw repolls being held for various reasons—though rarely for reasons such as voters live-streaming themselves. Odisha, Bihar, and Tripura saw the maximum number of repolls, accounting for nearly half of all repolls held in India in 2009, 2014, and 2019, a Mint analysis of the ECI statistical reports showed. Odisha saw 294 polling stations going for repolls, but 226 of them were in 2019 alone.
Out of this, 182 were held in a single constituency (Aska), while other seats saw few repolls. On the flip side, not a single repoll was held in these three years in the states of Himachal Pradesh, Mizoram, and the union territories of Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Chandigarh, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, and Lakshadweep. Among larger states, Gujarat, Haryana and Punjab stood out with 10 or fewer repolls.
The reasons for repolls can be varied, hence there appears to be no consistent pattern. Tripura, for instance, saw 168 repolls in 2019, all in one constituency, but had none in the preceding two elections. In Bihar, as many as 182 polling stations across 17 seats saw repolling in 2009.
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