Voters in this round of Assembly
elections have made or will make, depending on where their constituencies fall
in the staggered poll schedule, acquaintance too with a new symbol on the
ballot. The last option on the electronic voting machine now carries a symbol
of a big, fat cross mark to denote “none of the above”, or NOTA. It was
designed by Ahmedabad’s National Institute of Design — and its introduction
draws attention on the ways this tool is being used by the voters to carry a
message back home. Just recently, women activists in Kerala launched an
awareness programme, asking voters to hit the NOTA button if they do not see
women candidates in the list. Of course, should the number of NOTA votes in a
constituency of women-less candidates top even those of the highest-polling
contestant, he will still get elected. In its landmark
judgment in September 2013 ordering the inclusion of the NOTA option, the Supreme Court clarified that a high NOTA count
would not invalidate an election and candidate with high voter turnout would be
declared elected. The voter essentially got a method to register discontent, a
protest that became unavailable to her with the shift to EVMs. Prior to NOTA,
voters could deface the ballot paper or leave it unmarked to cast an invalid
vote. With EVMs, a vote is deemed to have been taken place only when a button
is pressed. Voters can still fill a form under Rule 49-O of the Conduct of Election Rules to invalidate votes, but
the process is not anonymous.
Unlike invalid paper ballot votes,
there is nothing ambiguous about choosing the NOTA button. There was no way to
determine if a paper ballot had been rendered invalid unwittingly or by design.
Voting NOTA is a statement of intent. And less than three years into its
existence, perhaps we are still to distil the messages in its tally. For
starters, the fact that on average NOTA votes tend to be just over 1 per cent
of total votes cast, suggesting that cynical lump-all-politicians attitudes are
not exactly prevalent. Voter turnouts in Indian elections continue to be
staggeringly high, and the voter clearly does not go through the trouble of getting
to a polling booth just to reject everybody. But there are cases where spikes
in the NOTA tally may tell a story. In the 2013 Assembly elections in
Chhattisgarh, for example, it was more than 3 per cent of total votes cast —
indicating possibly coercion (whereby a voter forced to cast her ballot beats
the effort by invalidating it) or relatively higher alienation. Or consider an
analysis in this newspaper that found NOTA votes are disproportionately higher
in reserved constituencies, at the Lok Sabha and Assembly levels, revealing an
undercurrent of social prejudice. For most candidates, however, it will remain
an exercise in getting every potential NOTA vote — so that like Kannur’s
runner-up in the 2014 Lok Sabha election, they are not hit by a margin of
defeat that is less than the NOTA count.
Good post. You need to attribute the material you have cited. You mention a newspaper. Which is it?
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