The alliance led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is heading for a clear majority in the 543-member lower house of parliament of India, with around half of votes counted in the general election.
However, the INDIA bloc – a coalition of dozens of opposition parties led by the country’s oldest party, the Indian National Congress – has crossed the 200-seat mark, beating exit poll predictions.
A coalition needs at least 272 out of 543 Lok Sabha (lower house of parliament) seats to form a government.
The marathon six-week election ended on June 1, and the votes are being counted throughout Tuesday – a process carried out in each constituency.
Counting is carried out under the supervision of officers nominated by the Election Commission of India for each seat, in the presence of the candidates. First, postal ballots are counted, followed by Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs).
More than 642 million citizens took part in the election to choose a government for the next five years, in what has been described as the largest democratic exercise in world history.
The Indian stock market took a downturn on Tuesday morning after a rally the previous day – as early vote counting suggested the BJP-led alliance was unlikely to win a decisive majority. The rupee also slid as the election results triggered broad-based dollar demand, Reuters noted in a report.
Exit polls had projected a landslide win for Modi’s NDA, with most suggesting it could secure between 360 and 380 seats – short of the 400-seat target that the bloc had set for itself.
The Indian National Congress party dismissed the exit polls on Monday, using people to wait for the count. Rahul Gandhi, the de-facto leader of Congress, claimed the opposition bloc would win 295 seats.
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