Elections: True festivals of democracy!

Published By : Admin | December 4, 2013 | 17:23 IST

Dear Friends,

Today marks the culmination of yet another successful demonstration of the strength of our democracy. Over the past few weeks, 5 states, Mizoram, Delhi, Chhattisgarh, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh have voted for new Assemblies and there have been by-elections in 2 states, Gujarat and Tamil Nadu.

The credit for this goes to the Election Commission of India, who must be congratulated for their spectacular efforts in conducting the polls. I congratulate all the officials involved in facilitating the elections and the security personnel, police forces, fire services, who worked tirelessly to ensure peaceful polling across the states. These brave women and men faced a lot of challenges from extreme weather to personal hardships but they ensured that every single citizen of our nation gets to exercise the constitutionally granted Right to Vote.

This is no small achievement when you look at the scale of efforts the EC and other officials had to undertake. The polls covered over 11 crore voters, 630 Assembly constituencies, 1.3 lakh polling booths and were spread across some of the most challenging regions of India. The terrain varied from desert areas, dense forests, hilly terrain to even bustling metropolises. Additionally, voter rolls have to be updated. To the credit of the Election Commission, the sophistication and precision they have brought in is even unheard of in any other democracy. There was near 100% coverage of Photo Electoral Rolls and coverage of Photo Identity Cards was close behind with coverage of 98.8-100% across the 5 states.

Many of my young friends may ask- what is so special about this? Having worked at the organizational level, I have witnessed many elections, from local body polls to Lok Sabha polls. The scenario not too long ago was very different. Elections would be paper based and violence was not uncommon. Phrases like ‘booth capturing’, ‘bogus voting’, ‘booth rigging’ were common election vocabulary. The Election Commission not only ensured 100% electronic voting (something which even developed nations cannot claim) but also reduced poll violence and any other form of disturbance during elections.

The biggest achievement has been seen in voter outreach, especially to young and first time voters.The result is that both voter registration and voter turnout has increased. It is no longer considered ‘cool’ not to vote and remain ambivalent to one’s surroundings. See the turnout in the Naxal affected regions of Chhattisgarh or see the turnout in Mizoram- this shows the strong faith of democracy among our people. Nothing pleases me more than seeing how engaged our citizens are in the poll process and I sincerely hope this trend continues.

I would also like to compliment the non-government groups, civil society groups, social media and corporates, who have become extremely proactive in encouraging voter registration. These are very positive steps in strengthening our democracy.

Several innovative ideas have come on how to increase voter registration. In Gujarat, we saw pioneering innovation by government officials and those from outside the government. In Panchmahal district, SVEEP (Systematic Voters’ Education and Electoral Participation) messages were given on LPG cylinders. In Ahmedabad, SVEEP messages were stamped on the doctor’s prescriptions. In Sabarkantha district all women rallies were conducted. The Panchayat Department saw if a woman was registered as a voter during marriage registration. In 2010 the Education Department released a circular asking Colleges and educational institutes to enlist eligible voters at the time of admission itself. Many more such ideas have been discussed in great detail in a comprehensive document submitted by our state election authorities to the Election Commission. I am sharing the document with you.

If you have innovative ideas and experiences on how voter registration can increase, please share the same in the comments section of this blog. I would love to read them myself and explore if they can be used further.

One of the most innovative steps taken by the EC was to celebrate 25th January as National Voters Day. It is a day when we celebrate voter registration and honour efforts of election officers through Awards. In addition to this, we should also think about honouring families of those who may have laid down their lives or suffered injury during the discharge of their duty.

I will end by thanking the Election Commission and extend my best wishes to all the candidates whose fate remains sealed in the EVMs that would be counted on 8th December.

Yours,

Narendra Modi

ALSO READ: 

https://eci.nic.in/eci_main1/SVEEP/SVEEPGujaratElect2012documentedReport.pdf

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A Decade of Digital India
July 01, 2025

Ten years ago, we embarked on a bold journey into uncharted territory with great conviction.

While decades were spent doubting the ability of Indians to use technology, we changed this approach and trusted the ability of Indians to use technology.

While decades were spent thinking that use of technology will deepen the gap between the haves and the have-nots, we changed this mindset and used technology to eliminate the gap between the haves and the have-nots.

When the intent is right, innovation empowers the less empowered. When the approach is inclusive, technology brings change in the lives of those on the margins.

This belief laid the foundation for Digital India: a mission to democratise access, build inclusive digital infrastructure, and opportunities for all.

In 2014, internet penetration was limited, digital literacy was low, and online access to government services was scarce. Many doubted whether a country as vast and diverse as India could truly go digital.

Today, that question has been answered not just in data and dashboards, but in the lives of 140 crore Indians. From how we govern, to how we learn, transact, and build, Digital India is everywhere.

Bridging the Digital Divide

In 2014, India had around 25 crore internet connections. Today, that number has grown to over 97 crores. Over 42 lakh kilometres of Optical Fibre Cable equivalent to 11 times the distance between Earth and the Moon now connects even the most remote villages.

India’s 5G rollout is among the fastest in the world, with 4.81 lakh base stations installed in just two years. High-speed internet now reaches urban hubs and forward military posts alike including Galwan, Siachen, and Ladakh.

India Stack, which is our digital backbone, has enabled platforms like UPI, which now handles 100+ billion transactions a year. Around half of all real time digital transactions happen in India.

Through Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT), over ₹44 lakh crore has been transferred directly to citizens, cutting out middlemen and saving ₹3.48 lakh crore in leakages.

Schemes like SVAMITVA have issued 2.4 crore+ property cards and mapped 6.47 lakh villages, ending years of land-related uncertainty.

Democratising Opportunity for All

India’s digital economy is empowering MSMEs and small entrepreneurs like never before.

ONDC (Open Network for Digital Commerce) is a revolutionary platform which opens a new window of opportunities by providing a seamless connection with huge market of buyers and sellers.

GeM (Government E-Marketplace) enables the common man to sell goods and services to all arms of the government. This not only empowers the common man with a huge market but also saves money for the Government.

Imagine this: You apply for a Mudra loan online. Your creditworthiness is assessed through an account aggregator framework. You get your loan and start your venture. You register on GeM, supply to schools and hospitals, and then scale up via ONDC.

ONDC recently crossed 200 million transactions, with the last 100 million in just six months. From Banarasi weavers to bamboo artisans in Nagaland, sellers are now reaching customers nationwide, without middlemen or digital monopolies.

GeM has also crossed ₹1 lakh crore GMV in 50 days, with 22 lakh sellers including 1.8 lakh+ women-led MSMEs, who have fulfilled orders worth ₹46,000 crore.

Digital Public Infrastructure: India’s Global Offering

India’s Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) from Aadhaar, CoWIN, DigiLocker, and FASTag to PM-WANI and One Nation One Subscription is now studied and adopted globally.

CoWIN enabled the world’s largest vaccination drive, issuing 220 crore QR-verifiable certificates. DigiLocker, with 54 crore users, hosts 775 crore+ documents, securely and seamlessly.

Through our G20 Presidency, India launched the Global DPI Repository and a $25 million Social Impact Fund, helping nations across Africa and South Asia adopt inclusive digital ecosystems.

Startup Power Meets AatmaNirbhar Bharat

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India is doing extremely well when it comes to AI skill penetration and AI talent concentration among our youth.

Through the $1.2 billion India AI Mission, India has enabled access to 34,000 GPUs at globally unmatched prices at less than $1/GPU hour making India not just the most affordable internet economy, but also the most affordable compute destination.

India has championed humanity-first AI. The New Delhi Declaration on AI promotes innovation with responsibility. We are establishing AI Centres of Excellence across the country.

The Road Ahead

The next decade will be even more transformative. We are moving from digital governance to global digital leadership, from India-first to India-for-the-world.

Digital India has not remained a mere government program, it has become a people’s movement. It is central to building an Aatmanirbhar Bharat, and to making India a trusted innovation partner to the world.

To all innovators, entrepreneurs, and dreamers: the world is looking at India for the next digital breakthrough.

Let us build what empowers.

Let us solve what truly matters.

Let us lead with technology that unites, includes, and uplifts.