The Hindu 08.03.2013
52 per cent polling in Mysore corporation elections

A senior citizen being carried to the polling booth in Mysore on Thursday.— PHOTO: M.A. SRIRAM.
Elections to the Mysore City Corporation (MCC) council
on Thursday started off on a prosaic note in the morning, but picked up
gradually towards afternoon.
The response of voters
in the city appeared mixed with some wards witnessing brisk polling. The
turnout for the MCC elections was 52 per cent.
A higher percentage was recorded from rural parts of Mysore. The polling was by and large peaceful.
Party
workers were seen helping voters to look for their names in the list to
identify the booths. The Urs Boarding School premises was crowded with
around 7,000 voters from K.G. Koppal, Chamarajapuram, Saraswathipuram
and surrounding areas coming to vote.
There was less
activity at certain polling booths such as Jayanagar initially. There
was good response at Jayalakshmipuram and Gokulam areas with voters
queuing up in good numbers. The response at Manchegowdanakoppal in
Hebbal was enthusiastic.
One common complaint that was heard from several wards in the city was the missing of names from the voters’ list.
Sunanda
from Kumbarakoppal, said: “My name and that of my husband’s are
missing. My children’s names are there. Thousands of names are missing
from the list in Kumabarakoppal.”
Electronic voting
machines reportedly developed snags at certain booths, including the one
near Mysore Medical College. They were, however, set right quickly.
Mysore
district in-charge Minister S.A. Ramdas, along with his mother, cast
their votes at Vidyaranyapuram. H.S. Shankaralinge Gowdaand his wife,
exercised franchise on Vijaya Vittala School premises in Saraswatipuram,
while V. Srinivas Prasad, MLA, and family members cast votes at a booth
in Jayalakshmipuram. Tanvir Sait, MLA, and wife exercise their
franchise at D. Banumaiah Polytechnic at Udayagiri.
The
district administration had made elaborate arrangements to ensure free
and fair polling. Policemen were present at every booth. Police mobile
squads and mounted police did the rounds to maintain law and order as
there were reports of skirmishes between rival political party workers
in a few wards in the morning.
Voter turnout
Chamarajanagar
Correspondent reports: There was 78.25 per cent polling in elections
for the ULBs in the district. Though voting began at a slow pace in the
morning, it picked up later in the day. For the first time, electronic
voting machines were used in ULB polls.
There was a
record 85.16 per cent polling in Yelandur Town Panchayat, 71.60 per cent
in Kollegal City Municipal Council, 78.69 per cent each in Gundlupet
Town Municipal Council and 80.06 in Hanur Town Panchayat. Polling was
75.52 per cent in the elections to the Chamarajanagar City Municipal
Council.
Of the 1,13,834 voters in the district, 56,630 were women and 57,204 men.
Peaceful in Mandya
Mandya Staff Correspondent reports:
An
estimated 69.36 per cent of voters exercised their franchise on
Thursday in the district. The percentage of polling for four urban local
bodies in Ramanagaram was 75.95. Voting was brisk and peaceful across
these two districts.
A record 82.55 per cent cast
their votes for the K.R. Pet Town Municipal Corporation. The lowest
polling was recorded for the Mandya City Municipal Council at 61.37 per
cent turnout.
Turnout in Pandavapura was 76.27 per
cent, Srirangapatna 79.96 per cent, Maddur 74.95 per cent, Nagamangala
77 per cent and Malavalli 73.05 per cent.
A record 85.22 per cent cast their votes for Magadi Town Panchayat elections.
A
total of 69.40 per cent exercise their franchise for Ramanagaram City
Municipal Council elections, 74.51 per cent for Channapatna CMC and
74.40 per cent for Kanakapura Town Panchayat elections.