<<HOW SIKKIM HAS VOTED
Intro: Sikkim will
go to poll on 12 April 2014. In keeping with the mood, we bring to our readers,
on one election per day basis, a look back at Assembly elections in Sikkim
since 1979 when the first elections as a part of India were held in the State.
The daily capsule will cover one election per day and provide details like the
names of victors and runners-up from all 32 constituencies and their respective
vote-share. The constituencies had different names and boundaries before 2009
when the new delimitation came into effect. The rest of the country might be
undertaking opinion polls and poll projections, but at NOW! we believe that
going over past records can help make better sense of ongoing issues and
trends.
We hope our readers enjoy this
exercise as much as we enjoyed putting it together. We begin the series with
Election 1994.
Elections 1994
Total number of voters: 2,17,743 [M: 1,14,315; F: 1,03,428]
Parties in the fray: Sikkim Sangram Parishad, Sikkim
Democratic Front, Revolutionary Socialist Party, Indian National Congress,
Bharatiya Janta Party, and CPI-M.
Participation in the election process spiked again in
1994. The number of voters crossed the 2 lakh mark and the number of
contestants for the 32 seats jumped from 118 in 1989 to a respectable 186.
Interestingly, in 1994, there were more independent candidates in the fray than
those fielded by political parties. Between them, the six parties participating
in the elections had 74 candidates against the 76 independents. As anyone who
remembers that time 20 years back will vouch, there was much at stake. And as
the results bore out, Sikkim changed after that election.
Voter Turnout: 81.76% [M: 83.72%; F: 79.59%]
OUTCOME: In 1994, the Chamling-led Sikkim
Democratic Front was riding a wave of resentment against the Nar Bahadur Bhandari
government. This wave had ebbed a bit when Mr. Bhandari was toppled by his own
legislators earlier that year and deposed. For the last six months, there was a
Congress government in place headed by Sanchaman Limboo in Sikkim. This must
have disoriented the SDF strategy which was built around removing Bhandari from
power. Be that as it may, everyone in Sikkim was also aware of Mr. Bhandari’s
tenacity; he had after all been deposed in 1984 as well only to return with a
resounding 31/32 victory in the 1985 elections. 1994 was a politically very
charged time and as mentioned, SDF rode a popular wave. People know that SDF
won the elections, but as the below table will bear out, it barely managed to replace
SSP. Although SSP saw its vote-share halve from around 70% in 1989 to 35% in
1994. Although SSP was voted out of power, this was not Mr. Bhandari’s worst
performance [that would come a decade later], and was in fact better that Mr.
Bhandari’s SJP did in 1979 when it got 32% of the votes and emerged as the
single largest party in Sikkim and formed a coalition government. In 1994
however, SDF did better than SSP and secured 42% of the votes cast which
translated into 19 seats, three more than the halfway mark of 16. The party
barely made it. The Revolutionary Socialist Party and Independents shared
nearly 11 per cent of the votes between them. The jury is still out on who
would have benefitted if they had not been in the picture. In 1994, a political
upset was pulled off again in a three-cornered race. Congress, although it
bagged only 15% of the votes [which translated to two seats] was still a force
to reckon with in Sikkim at the time and mixed up the electorate enough to make
every vote count. The fight was keen and though SDF established a strong
performance in South and West Sikkim, constituencies in East and North saw
close battles with margins in the two digits in many constituencies. The
slimmest margin was in SDF’s victory at Loosing-Pacheykhani where DB Thapa won
by 12 votes against JK Bhandari. An election later, in 1999, JK Bhandari would
score an even more sensational victory when he beat SDF’s Vinod Pradhan by a
mere 5 votes. These were still paper ballot times and the counting was done,
SDF emerged victorious with 19 seats, SSP came second with 10 seats, Congress
had 2 and there was One Independent in the Assembly.
This is how Sikkim voted in 1994…
Constituency
|
Winner
[with party and vote share in brackets]
|
Runner-up
[with party and vote share in brackets]
|
Yuksom
|
Ashok Kumar Subba [Indp, 40.71%]
|
Sanchaman Subba [INC, 38.07%]
|
Tashiding (ST)
|
Thutop Bhutia [SSP, 36.04%]
|
Rinzing Wangyal Kazi [SDF, 33.14%]
|
Geyzing
|
Dal Bahadur Gurung [SDF, 51.27%]
|
Dal Bahadur Karki [SSP, 25.01%]
|
Dentam
|
Chakra Bahadur Subba [SDF, 40.84%]
|
Padam Lal Gurung [SSP, 34.34%]
|
Barmiok
|
Tulshi Pd. Pradhan [SDF, 43.49%]
|
Birendra Subba [SSP, 33.63%]
|
Rinchenpong (ST)
|
Phur Tshering Lepcha [SDF, 60.39%]
|
Phurba Sherpa [SSP, 27.64%]
|
Chakung
|
Prem Singh Tamang [SDF, 59.48%]
|
Tika Gurung [SSP, 31.15%]
|
Soreong
|
Nar Bahadur Bhandari [SSP, 51.83%]
|
Man Bahadur Subba [SDF, 45.46%]
|
Daramdin
|
Ran Bahadur Subba [SDF, 62.30%]
|
Padam Bahadur Gurung [SSP, 32.87%]
|
Jorthang-Nayabazar
|
Bhoj Raj Rai [SDF, 59%]
|
Dil Kumari Bhandari [SSP, 35.73%]
|
Ralong (ST)
|
Dorjee Dazom Bhutia [SDF, 42.73%]
|
Ugen Tashi Bhutia [SSP, 25.73%]
|
Wak
|
Kedar Nath Rai [SDF, 53.02%]
|
Bedu Singh Panth [SSP, 33.85%]
|
Damthang
|
Pawan Kumar Chamling [SDF, 70.27%]
|
Kumar Subba [SSP, 26.33%]
|
Melli
|
Girish Chandra Rai [SDF, 52.63%]
|
Manita Pradhan [SSP, 36.46%]
|
Rateypani-West Pendam (SC)
|
Aita Singh Kami [SDF, 55.64%]
|
Madan Kumar Cintury [SSP, 35.68%]
|
Temi-Tarku
|
Garjaman Gurung [SDF, 57.20%]
|
Indra Bahadur Rai [SSP, 37.54%]
|
Central Pendam-East Pendam
|
Dilli Pd Kharel [SDF, 35.85%]
|
Sang Dorjee Tamang [SSP, 33.45%]
|
Rhenock
|
Kharananda Upreti [SSP, 46.52%]
|
Biraj Adhikari [SDF, 32.76%]
|
Regu
|
Karna Bahadur Chamling [SDF, 49.16%]
|
Krishna Bahadur Rai [SSP, 45.70%]
|
Pathing (ST)
|
Ram Lepcha [SSP, 43.40%]
|
Sonam Dorjee [SDF, 30.56%]
|
Loosing-Pacheykhani
|
Dil Bahadur Thapa [SDF, 31.30%]
|
Jai Kumar Bhandari [SSP, 31.05%]
|
Khamdong (SC)
|
Gopal Lamichney [SDF, 52.21%]
|
Ganju Thatal [SSP, 34.66%]
|
Djongu (ST)
|
Sonam Choda Lepcha [INC, 40.32%]
|
Sonam Dorjee Lepcha [SSP, 39.10%]
|
Lachen-Mangshila (ST)
|
Hishey Lachungpa [SDF, 45.42%]
|
Tseten Lepcha [INC, 27.85%]
|
Kabi Tingda (ST)
|
Thenlay Tshering Bhutia [SDF, 39.05%]
|
Thukchuk Lachungpa [INC, 37.66%]
|
Rakdong Tintek (ST)
|
Mingma Tshering Sherpa [SSP, 54.54%]
|
Phuchung Bhutia [INC, 16.93%]
|
Martam (ST)
|
Dorjee Tshering Lepcha [SSP, 49.97%]
|
Samten Tshering Bhutia [SDF, 27.85%]
|
Rumtek (ST)
|
Menlom Lepcha [SSP, 43.87%]
|
Karma Tempo Namgyal Gyaltsen [SDF, 29.44%]
|
Assam Lingjey (ST)
|
Tseten Tashi [SSP, 31.68%]
|
Namgyal Bhutia [SDF, 27.93%]
|
Ranka (ST)
|
Rinzing Ongmu [SSP, 37.56%]
|
Tseten Lepcha [SDF, 37.25%]
|
Gangtok
|
Narendra Kumar Pradhan [SSP, 39.55%]
|
Dilli Prasad Dhungel [INC, 26.26%]
|
Sangha
|
Namkha Gyaltsen [SSP, 47.08%]
|
Palden Lama [SDF, 39.47%]
|
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