2020 Kerala local elections explained

Election Name:2020 Kerala Local Elections
Country:India
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2015 Kerala local elections
Previous Year:2015
Next Election:2025 Kerala local elections
Next Year:2025
Election Date:8, 10 and 14 December 2020
Seats For Election:1199 of 1200 local bodies in Kerala
1Blank:Grama Panchayat
2Blank:Block Panchayat
3Blank:District Panchayat
4Blank:Municipality
5Blank:Corporation
Turnout:76.2% (1.5%)
1Data1:514
2Data1:108
3Data1:11
4Data1:43
5Data1:5
Percentage1:40.2%[1]
Swing1:(2.8%)
1Data2:321
2Data2:38
3Data2:3
4Data2:41
5Data2:1
Percentage2:37.9%
Swing2:(0.7%)
1Data3:19
2Data3:0
3Data3:0
4Data3:2
5Data3:0
Percentage3:15.0%
Swing3:(1.7%)

Elections to local bodies (Panchayats, Municipalities and Corporations) in Kerala were held in December 2020.[2] Polling took place over 3 days; on 8, 10 and 14 December, with the votes counted and results announced on 16 December.[3]

Left Democratic Front (LDF), who also formed the state government, won majorities in more than half of all grama panchayats, two-thirds of district panchayats and in all municipal corporations barring Kannur. United Democratic Front (UDF), led by Indian National Congress (INC), despite improving its vote share by 0.7% won just three out of fourteen district panchayats and one corporation, in comparison to seven and two respectively in the previous election in 2015. National Democratic Alliance (NDA), led by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), increased their tally of wards won and secured a majority in two municipalities and nineteen panchayats.

Background

Kerala Panchayat Raj Act, 1994 made provisions for the creation of local bodies at the village, block and district levels. The Kerala Municipalities Act, 1994 made provisions for the creation of municipalities and corporations.[4]

In total, the state has 1200 local self-governing bodies – 941 grama panchayats, 14 district panchayats, 152 block panchayats, 87 municipalities and 6 corporations.[5]

COVID-19 pandemic

An all-party meeting filed a plea in Kerala High Court to defer the polls, which was set for November 2020, considering the increasing COVID cases.[6]

An ordinance by the Governor of the state, which temporarily amended Kerala Panchayat Raj Act, 1994, allowed COVID-19 quarantined patients to vote via postal ballots and increases the voting time by two hours.[7] [8]

Parties and coalitions

The Left Democratic Front (LDF) is the coalition of left wing and far-left parties, led by the Communist Party of India (Marxist) (CPI(M)). The United Democratic Front (UDF) is a coalition consisting chiefly of centrist and centre-left parties led by the Indian National Congress. The National Democratic Alliance (NDA) is led by the Bharatiya Janata Party.[9]

Chellanam 20/20, a newly formed civic forum, contested in all 21 wards in Chellanam panchayat.[10] [11] Twenty20 Kizhakkambalam, officially a nonprofit charitable organization formed by Anna Kitex Group, fielded candidates in five panchayats, including in Kizhakkambalam where they had won in 2015.[12] V4 Kochi, an apolitical organisation had 74 candidates contesting in all wards of Kochi Corporation.[13] Kerala Janapaksham (Secular), led by Poonjar MLA P. C. George, contested independently in four district panchayats, four block panchayats and two grama panchayats in Kottayam district.[14] Thiruvananthapuram Vikasana Munnettam an apolitical organisation contested in 14 wards of Thiruvananthapuram Corporation.[15]

Previous composition

Local body wise

[16]

Local self-government body! colspan="4"
Local Bodies in leadTotal
LDFUDFNDAOthers/Hung
Gram Panchayats5493651413941
Block Panchayats906101152
District Panchayats770014
Municipalities44411086
Corporations42006

Ward-wise

Local self-government body! colspan="4"
Wards wonTotal
LDFUDFNDAOthers
grama Panchayats7,6236,3249331,07815,962
Block Panchayats1,08891721532,076
District Panchayats17014534331
Municipalities1,2631,3182362593,122
Corporations1961435224414
Corporation! colspan="4"
Wards wonTotalAlliance in majority
LDFUDFNDAOthers
Thiruvananthapuram4221353100Hung (LDF mayorship)
Kozhikode50187075LDF
Kochi233821174UDF
Kollam36162155LDF
Thrissur23216555Hung (LDF mayorship)
Kannur26270255Hung (UDF mayorship)

Campaign

The president of the Kerala unit of BJP K. Surendran claimed that the incumbent LDF government would face a setback in the election due to the 2020 Kerala gold smuggling case, in relation to which the Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan's then principal secretary was arrested by Enforcement Directorate.[17] The opposition UDF faced several infightings, one among which an alliance partner, Kerala Congress (M), underwent a split with the faction led by Jose K. Mani joining LDF.[18] BJP faced factionalism between some of its top leaders and the state president.[19] [20]

Voters and polls

Voters list for the election was published on 17 June.[21] The final list was published on 1 October with a supplemental list published on 10 November.[22]

Voters list[23] !Group of voters!Voters population
Male1,31,72,629
Female1,44,83,668
Transgenders282
Total Voters2,76,56,579
As the term of the current members of local bodies end on November 11, three-member administrative committees would be formed and take over administration in each local body, in accordance with Kerala Panchayat Raj Act, 1994, and the Kerala Municipality Act, 1994.[24]

Kerala High Court dismissed petitions which alleged that reservation of local body constituencies continued for a third successive term citing that the court would not interfere in elections.[25]

1.68 lakh candidates filed nominations to various local bodies,[26] which was dwindled down to 74,899 candidates after the rest were either rejected or withdrawn.[27] In total there are 34,744 polling booths; 29,321 in panchayats, 3,422 in municipalities and 2,001 in corporations.[28]

Schedule!Event!Date
Publishing of final voters' list1 October 2020
Announcement of election schedule Enactment of Model Code of Conduct6 November 2020
Last date to file nomination19 November 2020
Scrutiny of nomination20 November 2020
Last date to withdraw nomination23 November 2020
PollingPhase I: 8 December 2020
Phase II: 10 December 2020
Phase II: 14 December 2020
Announcement of results16 December 2020

Phase I: Thiruvananthapuram, Kollam, Pathanamthitta, Alappuzha and Idukki districts

Phase II: Ernakulam, Kottayam, Thrissur, Palakkad and Wayanad districts

Phase III: Malappuram, Kozhikode, Kannur and Kasaragod districts

Result

Voter Turnout[29] [30] [31] [32] [33]
PhaseDistrict%
Phase IThiruvananthapuram70.073.1
Kollam73.8
Pathanamthitta69.7
Alappuzha77.4
Idukki74.7
Phase IIKottayam73.976.4
Ernakulam77.1
Thrissur75.0
Palakkad78.0
Wayanad79.5
Phase IIIMalappuram78.978.7
Kozhikode79.0
Kannur 78.6
Kasaragod77.2
Kerala76.2

Popular votes

All of the three major pre-poll alliances in the state increased their vote share compared to that in the previous election.! class="unsortable" |! colspan="2"|Alliance! Political party !! Votes !! Vote % !! ±pp |-|colspan=7 bgcolor=""||-|rowspan=12 bgcolor=""|!rowspan=12|LDF|! Left Democratic Front!8,450,430!40.18%!2.82%|-|| Communist Party of India (Marxist)|5,628,188|26.71%||-|| Communist Party of India|1,459,396|6.93%||-|| Kerala Congress (M)|534,759|2.54%||-|| Loktantrik Janata Dal|293,814|1.40%|1.40%|-|| Janata Dal (Secular)|175,613|0.83%||-|| Indian National League|139,016|0.66%||-|| Nationalist Congress Party|132,933|0.63%||-|| Congress (Secular)|45,215|0.21%||-|| Kerala Congress (B)|39,140|0.19%||-|| Janadhipathya Kerala Congress|1,612|0.01%|0.01%|-|| Kerala Congress (Skaria Thomas)|744|0.00%||-|colspan=7 bgcolor=""||-|rowspan=9 bgcolor=""|!rowspan=9|UDF|! United Democratic Front!7,988,255!37.92%!0.69%|-|| Indian National Congress|5,327,605|25.29%||-|| Indian Union Muslim League|1,909,729|9.06%||-|| Kerala Congress (Joseph)|419,049|1.99%|1.99% |-|| Revolutionary Socialist Party|171,483|0.82%||-|| Communist Marxist Party (John)|80,304|0.38%||-|| Kerala Congress (Jacob)|48,448|0.23%||-|| All India Forward Bloc|19,174|0.09%||-|| Bharatiya National Janata Dal|12,463|0.06%||-|colspan=7 bgcolor=""||-|rowspan=6 bgcolor=""|!rowspan=6|NDA|! National Democratic Alliance!3,164,454!15.02%!1.74%|-|| Bharatiya Janata Party|3,118,249|14.80%| |-|| Bharath Dharma Jana Sena|26,336|0.13%|0.13% |-|| Kerala Kamaraj Congress|14,358|0.07%||-|| Kerala Congress (Thomas)|4,975|0.02%||-|| Lok Janshakti Party|536|0.00%||-|colspan=7 bgcolor=""||-|rowspan=10 bgcolor=""|!rowspan=10|Others|| Social Democratic Party of India|132,423|0.63%||-|| Twenty 20|41,845|0.20%||-|| Bahujan Samaj Party|36,284|0.17%||-|| Welfare Party of India|32,630|0.15%||-|| Kerala Janapaksham (Secular)|27,995|0.13%||-|| Peoples Democratic Party|26,223|0.12%||-|| Revolutionary Marxist Party of India|24,899|0.12%||-|| Aam Aadmi Party|10,539|0.05%||-|| Janathipathiya Samrakshana Samithy|2,140|0.01%||-|| Marxist-Leninist Party of India (Red Flag)|2,055|0.01%||-|colspan=7 bgcolor=""||-|rowspan=2 bgcolor=""|!rowspan=2|IND|-|| Independents|1,206,878|5.73%||-! colspan=7 ||- class="unsortable" style="background-color:#E9E9E9" |! colspan = 4|Total! 21,068,782 !! 100.00%! |}

Local body wise

[34]

Local self-government body! colspan="5"
Local Bodies in leadTotal
LDFUDFNDAOthersTie
Grama Panchayats514 (35)321 (44) 19 (5) 23 (15) 64 (51)941
Block Panchayats108 (20) 38 (24)0 0 (1)6 (5)152
District Panchayats11 (4)[35] 3 (4)0 0 0 14
Municipalities[36] 43 (2)[37] 41 (1) 2 (1)0 0 86
Corporations5 (1) 1 (1)0 0 0 6

Ward-wise

Local self-government body! colspan="4"
Wards in leadTotal
LDFUDFNDAOthers
Grama Panchayats7,262 (361)5,893 (431)1,182 (249)1,620 (542)15,962
Block Panchayats1,266 (178)727 (190)37 (16)49 (4)2,080
District Panchayats212 (42)110 (35)2 (1)6 (2)331
Municipalities1,167 (96)1,172 (146)320 (84)416 (157)3,078
Corporations207 (11)120 (23)60 (8)27 (3)414
Corporation! colspan="4"
Wards wonTotalPrevious alliance in majorityAlliance in majority
LDFUDFNDAOthers
Thiruvananthapuram51 (9)10 (11)35 5 (4)100LDFLDF
Kozhikode51 (1)17 (1)7 0 75LDF LDF
Kochi34 (11)31 (7)5 (3)4 (7)74Hung (UDF lead)UDFLDF
Kollam39 (3)9 (7)6 (4)1 55LDFLDFLDF
Thrissur[38] 24 (1)24 (3)[39] 6 1 (4)55Hung (LDF lead)LDFHung
Kannur19 (7)34 (7)1 (1)1 (1)55Hung (UDF mayorship)UDF

Aftermath

Result analysis

All of the three major pre-poll alliances, LDF, UDF, and NDA, improved their vote share compared to that in the previous election. The result showed popular support in favour of LDF led government, led by Pinarayi Vijayan. Jose K. Mani faction of Kerala Congress (M), which left UDF to join LDF, performed well in traditional UDF strongholds in Kottayam, Pathanamthitta and Idukki districts.[40] UDF improved its position in the districts of Ernakulam and Malappuram.

Reactions

Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan hailed his alliance's victory as that of secularism and inclusive development, while remarking that the results were a befitting reply to UDF and BJP. Leader of the Opposition Ramesh Chennithala said that UDF voter base was intact highlighting that they had won more municipalities and mentioned that he would introspect into their poor performance in Thiruvananthapuram corporation. BJP national president J. P. Nadda and state president K. Surendran thanked the voters for providing an improved mandate to their party in the election[41] [42]

TREND software error

The final results of a few panchayats and municipalities were changed due to an error in the TREND software, which was used for displaying election results, as per the State Election Commission. This meant that the lead UDF had over LDF in municipalities was cut from 10 municipalities to 4. The Election Commission published the results in its official website after rectifying the error.[36]

Post-election incidents

LDF won control in 43 municipalities, UDF in 41 and BJP in 2 municipalities.[37] In Kalamassery municipality, UDF won control of the municipality by drawing lots, as both they and LDF had equal backing in the administrative council.[43] LDF also controls 11 district panchayats, while UDF got the remaining 3. The latter assumed control of Wayanad district panchayat after drawing lots.[35]

21 year old Arya Rajendran became the mayor of Thiruvananthapuram corporation, thereby becoming the youngest ever mayor of a municipal corporation in India.[44] [45]

Reshma Mariam Roy, who was the youngest candidate in the elections, became the youngest ever president of a panchayat in Kerala at 21 years old after being elected as the president of Aruvappulam Grama panchayat in Pathanamthitta. She had filed her nomination on November 18, days before she turned 21.[46] [47] [48]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: State Election Commission.
  2. News: 2015-10-04. Local body polls in Kerala to be held on November 2 and 5. en-IN. The Hindu. 2020-09-26. 0971-751X.
  3. Web site: Kerala local body polls in three phases in December. 2020-11-06. The New Indian Express.
  4. Web site: Business – Kerala Legislature. 2020-09-27. www.niyamasabha.org.
  5. Web site: Local Self-Governance – Government of Kerala, India. 2020-09-27. kerala.gov.in. 2020-09-25. https://web.archive.org/web/20200925172016/https://kerala.gov.in/local-self-governance#:~:text=Local%20Self-Governance%20Page&text=At%20present,%20there%20are%201200,Municipalities%20and%206%20Municipal%20Corporations.. dead.
  6. Web site: September 11, 2020. P. S. . Gopikrishnan Unnithan. Kerala all-party meeting agrees to cancel assembly bypolls, postpone local body elections. 2020-10-19. India Today. en.
  7. News: Radhakrishnan. S. Anil. 2020-10-02. Coronavirus Kerala promulgates Ordinance to allow COVID-19 patients vote through postal ballots. en-IN. The Hindu. 2020-10-19. 0971-751X.
  8. Web site: Postal Ballot For Covid Patients In Local Polls: Kerala Election Panel. 2020-12-01. NDTV.com.
  9. Web site: 2020-11-19. Explained: How has Kerala planned its three-tier local body elections?. 2020-11-19. The Indian Express. en.
  10. Web site: August 1, 2020. Kerala: Now, a '20-20 to save Chellanam'. 2020-10-19. The Times of India. en.
  11. News: Martin. K.. 2020-11-06. In Chellanam, fresh voices speak up. en-IN. The Hindu. 2020-11-11. 0971-751X.
  12. Web site: 2020-11-10. Kerala firm that won panchayat in 2015 to contest four more. 2020-11-11. The Indian Express. en.
  13. Web site: 74 candidates in fray, V4Kochi may make election tough to call. 2020-11-11. The New Indian Express.
  14. Web site: Local body polls: Elections a test for PC George's Janapaksham. 2020-11-25. The New Indian Express.
  15. Web site: November 22, 2020. 14 candidates on fray for TVM in local body polls. 2022-01-22. The Times of India. en.
  16. Web site: Election 2015. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20201017163325/https://specials.manoramaonline.com/News/2015/Election2015/dist.html?id=english . 2020-10-17 .
  17. Web site: 2020-11-21. Kerala Local Body Elections: Political Fronts Get Ready for Fight. 2020-12-14. NewsClick. en.
  18. News: Hiran. U.. 2020-11-07. Stakes high for Jose K. Mani. en-IN. The Hindu. 2020-11-23. 0971-751X.
  19. News: Govind. Biju. 2020-11-19. Local body polls a litmus test for BJP. en-IN. The Hindu. 2020-11-23. 0971-751X.
  20. Web site: November 21, 2020. Sobha Surendran skips BJP pre-poll meeting in Kochi. 2020-11-23. The Times of India. en.
  21. Web site: June 17, 2020. Aswin J.. Kumar. Kerala: Voters' list for local body polls published . 2020-10-19. The Times of India. en.
  22. Web site: November 6, 2020. P. S. Gopikrishnan. Unnithan. Kerala: Local body elections to be held in 3 phases, counting of votes on December 16. 2020-11-06. India Today. en.
  23. Web site: November 13, 2020. 2.76 crore voters in Kerala for local body election . 2020-11-14. The Times of India. en.
  24. News: 2020-11-04. Administrative panels to take over local bodies. en-IN. The Hindu. 2020-11-06. 0971-751X.
  25. Web site: November 11, 2020. Mahir. Haneef. Continuous reservation of constituencies: Kerala HC declines to interfere; criticizes election commission. 2020-11-16. The Times of India. en.
  26. News: 2020-11-19. Over 1.68 lakh file nominations for local body elections. en-IN. The Hindu. 2020-11-21. 0971-751X.
  27. Web site: Rao. Madhu. 2020-11-27. 74,899 candidates in fray in Kerala local body polls. 2020-12-03. www.indiatvnews.com. en.
  28. Web site: Kerala Local Body Elections 2020. 2020-11-21. ManoramaOnline. ml.
  29. Web site: Kerala local body election 2020 live updates: Polling of votes for first phase under way. 2020-12-09. The Times of India. en.
  30. Web site: ജയപ്രകാശ്. എസ് എൻ. ആദ്യഘട്ട പോളിങ് 72.67 ശതമാനം. 2020-12-09. Mathrubhumi. en.
  31. Web site: തദ്ദേശ തിരഞ്ഞെടുപ്പ്: രണ്ടാംഘട്ടത്തില്‍ 76 ശതമാനം പോളിങ്. 2020-12-10. Mathrubhumi. en.
  32. Web site: മൂന്നാം ഘട്ടത്തില്‍ പോളിങ് 78 ശതമാനത്തിലധികം; വോട്ടെണ്ണല്‍ ബുധനാഴ്ച. 2020-12-14. Indian Express Malayalam. en.
  33. Web site: Kerala local body polls 2020 live updates: 78.64% polling in final phase : In the first phase of the polling, the voter turnout was 73.12 and in the second phase it was 76.78%.. 2020-12-14. The Times of India. en.
  34. Web site: Local Body Elections 2020 – Trend by State Election Commission Kerala. 2020-12-18. www.trend.kerala.gov.in. 2020-12-16. https://web.archive.org/web/20201216221743/http://www.trend.kerala.gov.in/views/index.php. dead.
  35. Web site: 14-ല്‍ 11 ജില്ലാ പഞ്ചായത്തുകളിലും എല്‍ഡിഎഫ് അധികാരത്തിലേറി; വയനാട് നറുക്കെടുപ്പിലൂടെ യുഡിഎഫിന്. 2020-12-30. Mathrubhumi. en.
  36. Web site: 2020-12-17. mistake trend software; UDF does not have the upper hand in the number of municipalities ട്രെന്‍ഡ് സോഫ്റ്റ് വെയറിലെ പിഴവ്; മുനിസിപ്പാലിറ്റികളുടെ എണ്ണത്തിലും യുഡിഎഫിന് മേല്‍ക്കൈ ഇല്ല. 2020-12-18. www.twentyfournews.com. en-US.
  37. Web site: New administrative committees take office in Corporations and Municipalities. 2020-12-29. Mathrubhumi. en.
  38. Web site: UDF rebel likely to become mayor as LDF wins Thrissur corporation. 2020-12-19. Mathrubhumi. en.
  39. Web site: തൃശൂരിൽ എൽഡിഎഫിനെ ഞെട്ടിച്ച് യുഡിഎഫ്; പുല്ലഴിയിൽ അട്ടിമറി ജയം; കോർപറേഷൻ കക്ഷിനില ഒപ്പത്തിനൊപ്പം | Samakalika Malayalam.
  40. Web site: 2020-12-16. Explained: Why Kerala local body election results are a victory for Pinarayi Vijayan. 2020-12-16. The Indian Express. en.
  41. Web site: 2020-12-17. Kerala Local Body Election Results 2020 HIGHLIGHTS: JP Nadda thanks people for improved mandate for BJP in Kerala. 2020-12-18. The Financial Express. en-US.
  42. Web site: Kerala civic body polls bring cheers and tears for BJP. 2020-12-18. The Week. en.
  43. News: 2020-12-20. Draw of lots to break the tie. en-IN. The Hindu. 2020-12-29. 0971-751X.
  44. Web site: December 28, 2020. Aswin J.. Kumar. Arya Rajendran takes oath as mayor of Thiruvananthapuram civic body. 2020-12-29. The Times of India. en.
  45. Web site: 21-Year-Old College Student Elected Mayor Of Kerala Capital. 2020-12-29. NDTV.com.
  46. Web site: 21-Year-Old College Student Reshma Mariam Roy youngest in fray for LSG polls . timesofindia.indiatimes.com .
  47. Web site: 21-Year-Old College Student Reshma Mariam Roy to be Kerala's youngest panchayat president. www.onmanorama.com.
  48. News: CPI(M) chooses 21-year-old to lead Aruvappulam grama panchayat. The Hindu . 28 December 2020. Hiran. U..