20 Terms You Need To Know To Decode The Indian Elections

As the Lok Sabha elections conclude, here's a list of terms you need to know to make sense of electoral politics 

offline
As the Lok Sabha elections conclude, here's a list of terms you need to know to make sense of electoral politics 

1. First-past-the-post system

The first-past-the-post (FPTP) system is a simple majority voting system, whereby the candidate securing the maximum number of votes in a constituency is declared the winner. Though a relatively simple voting system, it fails to provide a truly representative mandate: It is possible to win an election, without winning a majority of votes, which goes against the democratic principle of majority rule. This system is used in India to elect members to the Lok Sabha and state legislative assemblies.

2. Swing

This is a statistical measure of the movement of voter support for or against a party on a national or constituency level between two elections. It is an indication of trends that affect voting behaviour. A one per cent swing in votes in favour of one party reduces the opposing vote by the same percentage.

3. State capture

Reportedly used for the first time in the early 1970s, it refers to a situation where those in power secure control over government-owned agencies and institutions, harnessing them to serve personal and political gains. When state capture is entrenched, political competition is undermined and elections and other institutions are reduced to mere facades propped up to bolster the legitimacy of the ruling government.

4. Paper trail—VVPAT

Introduced in India in 2013, as a response to the clamour against the electronic voting machines (EVM), a paper trail or voter-verified paper audit trail (VVPAT) is the physical proof of the action of casting a digital vote. Every EVM comes attached with a VVPAT machine—a printer—which is sealed, whereby every vote cast is recorded on a slip of paper, which falls into a sealed container at the base of the VVPAT machine. This paper trail serves as a second line of verification, where the voter can confirm if their vote has been correctly allott...

Read more!