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Tag: Elections

Politics

J&K polls: Jammu stirs poll pot in remote hamlets under terror’s shadow | Jammu News – Times of India

With assembly elections returning after a decade, people of Jammu region are eager to vote but their optimism is tempered by threats of terrorism, unresolved local problemsJAMMU: A hamlet deep inside dense forests and rugged terrain south of the Pir Panjal range in Kathua district of Jammu region was abuzz recently with a political meeting — a rare event in a place where communication with the outside world is sporadic at best.The assembly elections in J&K after a decade-long gap have cast Jammu into the heart of a political whirlwind, with fringe shows numerically dwarfing the big rallies.Kalna Dhanu Parole, isolated from the hustle of the outside world, is difficult to reach. Cell and internet service is inconsistent, or non-existent. Residents have grown accustomed to uncertainty. N...
Haryana CM Nayab Singh Saini | Younger legs for the race
Fashion

Haryana CM Nayab Singh Saini | Younger legs for the race

The unexpected is to be expected: that’s by now a motto in the BJP’s tactical playbook. But it always leaves a vast pool of possibilities. Where—rather, against whose name—would the roulette’s needle stop? The tall, lanky, bearded figure of Nayab Singh Saini is where it decided to stop on March 12. Soft of manner and speech, and perhaps even of ambition, the 54-year-old MP from Kurukshetra may have been as surprised as Manohar Lal Khattar was back in 2014 when picked as the chief minister of Haryana. The latter had an equally surprising exit clause sprung on him, six months short of a decade in office. Just the previous day, as he walked down the spanking-new Dwarka Expressway with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the 69-year-old Khattar had seemed supremely secure in saddle and stirrup. Sain...
Karnataka | A glass nearly full
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Karnataka | A glass nearly full

At a time when the revdi versus welfare debate was raging, the Congress decided to rechristen its welfarist promises and call them ‘guarantees’. The Grand Old Party went on to win the election in Karnataka on that steam. Six months down the line, the question everyone’s asking is: how are they faring? For, on their perceived success or otherwise depends the Congress’s appeal in the four big states going to elections this winter—Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and neighbouring Telangana.Source link