India election: Voters expect big changes from frontrunner Modi
If Narendra Modi's right-wing BJP-led coalition wins an outright majority in India's national election, it will be thanks to voters in bellwether states like Uttar Pradesh.
Voters get their names checked in a voter's lists at a polling station during the final phase of the general election in Varanasi in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh May 12, 2014.
Ahmad Masood/Reuters
Mirzapur, India
If Narendra Modi pulls off the election victory that exit polls have predicted, he will have built it on his popularity in towns like Mirzapur, a dilapidated county seat where nothing works.聽
鈥淲e desperately need sewer lines, all our irrigation canals are silted up, the water system was built in 1914 and there are hardly any jobs even for educated youngsters,鈥 says Rajkumari Khatri, head of the town council, sitting cross-legged in the breezy shade of a Hindu temple porch with a group of fellow Modi supporters on the last day of India鈥檚 elections. Official results will be announced Friday.聽
鈥淚f Modi wins,鈥 she adds, 鈥渨e can expect some development and industries that would create jobs鈥 in this town of 250,000 on the banks of the Ganges river.
Here in the Hindu heartland, 500 miles southeast of the capital, Delhi, Mr. Modi鈥檚 relentless insistence on his ability to bring work, electricity, water, and good roads to the myriad towns and villages nationwide that lack such basics found a ready audience.
Uttar Pradesh, the state in which Mirzapur lies, is India's most populous state, electing 80 of parliament鈥檚 543 members. 鈥淚t is critical that Modi does very well in Uttar Pradesh,鈥 says聽Ajoy Bose, author of a book on the state鈥檚 politics. Exit polls suggest that the coalition led聽by the Bharata Janata Party, which Modi heads, may have won as many as 45 of the state鈥檚 seats, up from nine at the 2009 elections.聽
That apparent surge in support reflects rural Indian voters鈥 disenchantment with the Congress Party that has ruled the country for the past decade. After delivering an initial spurt of economic growth, the party has been buffeted in recent years by corruption scandals and rising food prices.
'Why not give him a chance?'
For many voters, Modi鈥檚 multi-billion, presidential-style election campaign, which swamped the country with TV and newspaper advertisements, made him the symbol of a new dawn.
鈥淚 heard on TV that if Modi comes, good days will come, so why not give him a chance?鈥 asks Sudeshwari Devi, a white-haired woman who was voting in her 13迟丑听 general election at a whitewashed schoolhouse in Varanasi, India鈥檚 holy city.
Younger voters are also enthused by Modi鈥檚 promises 鈥 and fed up with their current government. 鈥淪ometimes we get no electricity all day,鈥 complained first-time voter Rubi Bhola, a recently graduated doctor. 鈥淎nd the roads need mending. I like Narendra Modi and what he has done for Gujarat.鈥澛
Experts debate the merits of the business-friendly development model聽that Modi has pursued in the western state of Gujarat during his 12 years as chief minister there. But the state is undeniably more prosperous than most of its counterparts, its government has attracted large amounts of investment from both local and foreign businesses, and rural residents have seen some basic services improve.聽
A dark shadow, however, hangs over India鈥檚 leader-in-waiting 鈥 Hindu riots in Gujarat 2002 in which around 1,000聽Muslims were massacred. A Supreme Court investigation found that he did not encourage the rioters, as some have alleged, but suspicions that he could have done more to stop them continue to sully his reputation.
'He believes in dividing society'
Such suspicions were uppermost in the mind of Siraj Ahmed Khan, a Muslim carpet weaver, as he stood in the shade of a spreading tree on Monday after casting his vote in the village of Basai Kalam, not far from Mirzapur. He said he had voted for Congress.聽
鈥淲e cannot have such a radical and dogmatic person as prime minister,鈥 he says, referring to Modi. 鈥淗e believes in dividing society on religious grounds and if he wins, Muslims won鈥檛 get anything, we鈥檒l be left out of any progress.鈥澛
Mr. Khan is bound by a thread, literally, to the Hindus who live at the other end of his village, down a warren of narrow lanes. Hindu women spin and sell the yarn that Khan and his fellow Muslims weave into carpets.
Those women鈥檚 husbands and sons, standing in the shade of another tree after casting their own votes for a party allied with the BJP, shrugged off the possibility of heightened religious tensions in their district should Modi come to power.
Modi himself has discounted such fears, promising to be the leader of 鈥渙ne India.鈥 Jayprakash Yadav, a young sales representative for a machinery company, says he does not believe that massacres such as the one that occurred in Gujarat could happen again in his village.
Nor was he 鈥 or his Hindu neighbors 鈥 hoping that Modi would win power for religious reasons, Mr. Yadav insisted. 鈥淲e are voting for him because of all the jobs he created in Gujarat,鈥 he explained. 鈥淗e鈥檒l do the same all over Uttar Pradesh and India.鈥澛
Back in Mirzapur, sitting next to Ms. Khatri in the temple porch,聽discount airline executive Atul Mohan looks forward to better days for his hometown.
鈥淣o businessmen want to come here at the moment because we lack infrastructure, electricity and confidence,鈥 he lamented. 鈥淢odi is new and he has a proven track record. If he does just 50 percent of what he has done for Gujarat it will be enough for us.鈥