Bhopal Congress candidate Digvijaya Singh missed out on voting

Digvijay-Singh-PTI9_8_2018_000154B-1024x600BHOPAL : At the end of a polarised campaign in Bhopal, Congress’s Digvijaya Singh — up against the BJP’s Pragya Thakur — spent the day in the city, as voting was held on the prestigious seat. In the process, he missed voting himself. His vote is at Rajgarh, a seat 140 km from the Madhya Pradesh capital, which he has won twice.

“I was not able to go vote. But, next time I will try to transfer my vote to Bhopal,” he says. “I was busy overseeing the voting in Bhopal,” Mr Singh said. Asked if he was “nervous”, Mr Singh told  “No, no, not at all”. The voters’ response, he said, was “very good”. The BJP claimed Mr Singh had camped out in Bhopal as he was “nervous” about the outcome of the contest — one that he entered on a dare from Chief Minister Kamal Nath.
Bhopal has been voting for the BJP for nearly three decades and is seen as one of the toughest constituencies for the Congress to win.

But with the party — which wrested the state from the BJP after three consecutive terms in power — out to replicate the result across its 29 Lok Sabha seats, Mr Singh was challenged by Chief Minister Kamal Nath to pick the “toughest seat”.
The 72-year-old made it clear that Rajgarh and not Bhopal, was his choice. But Kamal Nath vetoed it as a soft option. Soon after Digvijaya Singh’s name was announced, the BJP fielded Pragya Singh Thakur, accused in Malegaon blasts case.
A highly polarised campaign followed, marked by the BJP candidate’s controversial remarks about Hemant Karkare, the police officer who died during the Mumbai terror attack, and her pride over participation in the demolition of the Babari mosque in Ayodhya. For the latter remark, Pragya Singh was even barred from campaigning by the Election Commission.(With Agency Inputs).

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