Countdown begins for Thrikkakara verdict; 12 rounds on 21 tables. Here's how votes will be counted

Ernakulam District Collector Jafar Malik
Ernakulam District Collector Jafar Malik visits the counting station at Maharaja's College on Thursday. Photo: PRD

All the arrangements have been completed for the counting of votes for the Thrikkakara assembly bypoll held on May 31.

The counting will take place at Maharaja's College, Ernakulam on Friday from 8 am.

The strongroom where the electronic voting machines have been kept will be opened by the officials at 7.30 am in the presence of the candidates and representatives of the contesting political parties.

The counting will take place on 21 tables. Each table will have a counting supervisor, a counting assistant and a micro-observer. Counting agents of political parties will also be allowed on each table.

Postal votes will be counted first. EVMs will be opened only after that.

The votes will be counted in 12 rounds. Votes polled at 21 booths will be counted in each of the 11 rounds. In the final round, votes in eight booths will be counted. Votes were cast in 239 booths in the constituency.

District Collector Jafar Malik on Thursday visited the counting station and took stock of the situation.

EVM
The Electronic Voting Machines (EVM) are kept inside a strongroom at the counting venue.

While many expected the turnout to be the highest ever since the constituency came into being in 2011, however, when the polling ended it turned out to be the lowest ever with 68.77 per cent.

The election became a necessity after the sudden demise of two-time Thrikkakara's Congress legislator P T Thomas last December.

And even though the Congress, perhaps for the first time without any internal squabbles, named the widow of Thomas -- Uma Thomas as their candidate and was the first to hit the campaign trail, the CPM after a while decided to go for a non-political Catholic Christian candidate, an interventional cardiologist -- Jo Joseph, while the BJP decided to field their veteran – A N Radhakrishnan.

The edge in the campaign trail that the Congress candidate had was almost wiped out with Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan leading the campaign from the front.

Not to be left out, around 75 of their legislators and the entire Vijayan cabinet was stay put at Thrikkakara, till the last day of campaign.

Uma Thomas, Dr Jo Joseph and AN Radhakrishnan.

Vijayan began his campaign on the plank of development and picturised the Congress as one against development. However, this failed to bring in much enthusiasm among the voters. The people towards the end of the campaign took up the issue of a fake video against their candidate and on the day of voting, the police arrested a person who they claimed was the activist of the Indian Union Muslim League- the second biggest ally of the Congress-led UDF.

Incidentally, one feature of the by-election was a massive influx of electoral campaigns in social media and on Thursday it was a smear campaign against Uma.

"All what I do in the name of PT Thomas is my personal thing and I dismiss all the things said against me with the contempt it deserves. We are confident that we are going to win and this increased hate campaign now against me is because they have realised what's going to be the result," said Uma.

But Joseph, who on Thursday got back to his job of seeing cardiac patients at the private hospital here where he works, said he is resuming his duties.

"I did not want a day to be lost, so I decided to get back to work. In our camp we are all confident and buzzing with activity. It seems a pall of gloom has befallen the Congress camp. We are supremely confident that we will hit a century with a six," said Joseph.

The BJP candidate Radhakrishnan, who till the end of polling, said he will be the winner, but on Thursday he said he will get more votes (over 15,000) than his party candidate got in the 2021 April Assembly polls.
(With inputs from IANS)

The comments posted here/below/in the given space are not on behalf of Onmanorama. The person posting the comment will be in sole ownership of its responsibility. According to the central government's IT rules, obscene or offensive statement made against a person, religion, community or nation is a punishable offense, and legal action would be taken against people who indulge in such activities.