Arjun Singh Votes in Kolkata Phase 2 Polls, Expects High Turnout

BJP candidate Arjun Singh cast his vote in Kolkata for the second phase of West Bengal Assembly elections, expressing hope for a high voter turnout similar to Phase 1's 93.2%. He reported a webcast camera cable issue at his booth that was fixed by the Election Commission. The second phase covers 142 seats, including high-profile urban contests like Mamata Banerjee versus Suvendu Adhikari in Bhabanipur. For TMC, this phase is crucial to maintain dominance in South Bengal and Kolkata, while BJP aims to make inroads among urban voters and the Matua community.

Key Points: West Bengal Phase 2: BJP's Arjun Singh Votes in Kolkata

  • Arjun Singh casts vote in Kolkata
  • Expects high voter turnout like Phase 1
  • Webcast camera cable found snapped, fixed by EC
  • 142 seats up for grabs in Phase 2
  • Key contest: Mamata Banerjee vs Suvendu Adhikari in Bhabanipur
3 min read

West Bengal Phase 2 polls: BJP candidate Arjun Singh casts vote in Kolkata, expects high voter turnout

BJP candidate Arjun Singh casts vote in Kolkata for West Bengal Phase 2 polls, expects high turnout like 93.2% in Phase 1. Key contests include Mamata Banerjee vs Suvendu Adhikari.

"I have voted for a change. I have voted for the formation of a BJP government here. - Arjun Singh"

Kolkata, April 29

Bharatiya Janata Party candidate from the Noapara constituency, Arjun Singh, cast his vote at a polling booth in Kolkata as polling for the second phase of the West Bengal Assembly elections began on Wednesday morning.

Arjun Singh told ANI, "I have cast my vote. I have voted for a change. I have voted for the formation of a BJP government here."

Singh said he expects a high voter turnout, like 93.2 per cent in the first phase of the polls.

"This (voter turnout) should be like the first phase. This is the Election Commission's duty; if they don't do it, then it is their failure. At booth number 238, the cable of the webcast camera was found snapped. The Election Commission fixed it. Police cannot be seen here; it will be good if we can see them," the BJP candidate said.

Arjun Singh is contesting elections from the Noapara constituency against Trinamool Congress candidate Trinankar Bhattacharjee. The seat is currently held by TMC's three-time MLA Manju Basu, who won the Communist Party of India (Marxist) bastion for the first time in 2001.

In the last elections, Manju Basu defeated the BJP's Sunil Singh by a margin of 26,710 (14.1 per cent) votes.

Congress' Asoke Bhattacharya and CPI(M)'s Gargi Chatterjee are also in the fray, turning polls in Noapara into a four-cornered contest.

Meanwhile, people formed queues at a polling station in Nadia to cast their votes. A voter lauded the security arrangements and said, "Everything is fine here; there are no issues. Security arrangements are good."

The second phase of the polling is widely seen as the 'litmus test' for the Trinamool Congress (TMC), as voting moves into the party's traditional fortresses in South Bengal and Kolkata.

The second phase covers 142 out of 294 seats in West Bengal. The total electorate is around 3.21 crore, with 1,64,35,627 men, 1,57,37,418 women and 792 transgender voters.

1,448 candidates are in the fray, including 220 women at 41,001 polling stations, with over 8,000 managed entirely by women.

While 142 seats are up for grabs, all eyes are on the 'Big Five' urban contests. The high-stakes seat of Kolkata Bhabanipur Constituency is witnessing a clash of heavyweights in Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee versus LoP Suvendu Adhikari. Tollyganj, the heart of the Bengali film industry, is a high-profile star-studded battle.

In the 2021 elections, the TMC dominated this specific belt, winning 123 of these 142 seats. For the BJP, this phase is about making inroads into the urban "bhadralok" vote and the Matua community. For the TMC, it is about holding the line to ensure a fourth consecutive term for Mamata Banerjee.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

V
Vikram M
BJP trying to break into urban 'bhadralok' votes... tough ask in Kolkata. Mamata has deep roots here. But this phase is indeed litmus test—if TMC loses even a few seats in South Bengal, it's a warning sign. Let's see if the Matua community shifts.
A
Ananya R
Watching from outside Bengal, but this is fascinating. Four-cornered contest in Noapara means votes get split. TMC's Manju Basu won by big margin last time, but with Congress and CPI(M) in fray, it could help BJP sneak through. Arjun Singh might pull an upset!
R
Rohit P
"Police cannot be seen here"—Arjun Singh's comment about lack of security is worrying. If candidates themselves feel unsafe, what about common voters? EC needs to deploy more forces, especially in sensitive booths. High turnout is great, but only if everyone can vote without fear.
J
James A
As an outsider, I'm impressed by the scale—3.21 crore voters, 41,000 polling stations, 8,000 all-women managed. That's serious democracy in action. Hope the 'Big Five' urban contests get fair coverage, especially Bhabanipur where Mamata vs Suvendu could be explosive. Good luck, Bengal!
K
Kavya N
Honestly, I'm tired of these high-profile battles. What about the Matua community's issues? Citizenship concerns, land rights... no one talks about that. Candidates just want votes. At least the voter in Nadia said security is good—small wins matter. Let's hope polling is peaceful.

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