Sivasagar Ready for Vote Counting: 391 Officials Deployed Across 3 Key Constituencies

Sivasagar district has finalized preparations for vote counting across three key constituencies with 391 officials deployed. Nazira recorded the highest voter turnout at 85.57%, followed by Demow at 83.30% and Sivasagar at 82.36%. A total of 14 EVM counting tables have been set up, with postal ballots being prioritized as per election protocols. Congress and its allies have expressed confidence of victory and plan to remain vigilant on counting day.

Key Points: Sivasagar Vote Counting: 391 Officials Deployed

  • 391 officials deployed for vote counting in Sivasagar
  • 97-Nazira records highest turnout at 85.57%
  • 14 EVM counting tables set up across three constituencies
  • Congress-led alliance expresses confidence of victory
3 min read

Assam: Sivasagar ready for vote counting; 391 officials deployed across key constituencies

Sivasagar district completes preparations for vote counting across 3 constituencies with 391 officials deployed. Highest turnout at 85.57% in Nazira.

"Congress and its allies in Assam have expressed confidence of victory in the Assam polls and said they will remain vigilant on the counting day - Congress leaders"

Guwahati, May 3

The Sivasagar district administration has completed all necessary preparations for the upcoming vote counting across three key Legislative Assembly constituencies, namely 95-Demow, 96-Sivasagar, and 97-Nazira. To ensure the process remains transparent and seamless, a total of 391 officials have been deployed to oversee the proceedings.

Leading the district in participation, 97-Nazira recorded the highest turnout at 85.57%, with approximately 1,56,504 out of 1,82,885 total voters casting their ballots. In 95-Demow, 83.30% of the 1,78,953 eligible voters exercised their franchise, resulting in a total of about 1,48,068 votes. Meanwhile, 96-Sivasagar, which features the district's largest electorate of 2,10,484 voters, saw a turnout of 82.36% with approximately 1,73,353 citizens participating in the democratic process.

To facilitate the counting of Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs), 14 dedicated tables have been set up at the counting centres, with the duration of the process expected to vary by constituency.

In accordance with election protocols, officials will prioritise the counting of postal ballots, for which specific arrangements have been made across the district.

Sivasagar has been assigned 6 tables to process its 2,168 received postal ballots, while Demow and Nazira have each been allotted 4 tables to handle their respective counts of 1,226 and 1,027 ballots. With a total of 391 officials and staff deployed for the task, the district is prepared for a high-stakes counting day that will determine the political future of these three constituencies.

On the other hand, Congress and its allies in Assam have expressed confidence of victory in the Assam polls and said they will remain vigilant on the counting day on Monday.

The leaders of six parties who contested the polls together held a meeting on Saturday.

Assam went to the polls in the first phase of the election on April 9. The BJP-led alliance is looking for a third straight victory in the polls in a state which has traditionally been a Congress bastion.

Congress stitched a six-party alliance to prevent a split in the anti-BJP vote and present a united face in front of the people in the northeastern state. The state has 126 assembly seats.

Exit polls projected that the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) is poised to retain power for a third successive term. Axis My India projected that the BJP-led NDA would secure 88 to 100 of 126 seats and the Congress-led alliance 24 to 36 seats.

JVC predicted 88-101 seats for the NDA and 23-33 seats for the Congress-led alliance. It gave 0-2 seats to AIUDF and three to others. Matrize projected 85-95 seats for the BJP-led alliance, 25-32 for the Congress-led alliance, and 6-12 seats for others.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

M
Michael C
Interesting to see the Congress alliance so confident despite exit polls showing NDA ahead. The grassroots participation numbers suggest people are engaged, regardless of which way they vote.
R
Rohit P
391 officials for just 3 constituencies? That's a lot of manpower! But I guess with EVMs and postal ballots, it's better to be overprepared than underprepared. Counting day is always tense for candidates and supporters alike. 😅
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Kavya N
The postal ballot count priority is smart - ensures that service voters and those who couldn't vote in person still have their say counted properly. But I'm a bit skeptical about exit polls; they were wrong in 2019 Lok Sabha too. Let's wait and see what Monday brings!
S
Sarah B
Watching Assam's election from outside India - it's fascinating to see such high voter engagement. The Congress alliance strategy of "united opposition" is interesting too, though not sure it'll work against Modi's popularity in the Northeast.
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Nikhil C
Important thing is transparency in counting, not just who wins. With 14 tables for EVMs and separate postal ballot handling, things seem well-organized. Hope the opposition's vigilance committees are actually allowed to observe properly - that's where the real test of democracy lies.
D
David E
Big difference between 85.57% in Naz

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