Tagged: Bharatiya Janata Party RSS

  • Gaurav Mishra 5:24 am on April 15, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Bharatiya Janata Party, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , My Idea, , , , , , , , Voter Regiatration   

    The Role of Mobile Technology in the 2009 Indian Lok Sabha Elections 

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    The world’s largest democracy, India, goes to election starting April 16, 2009. The month long general elections to the 15th Lok Sabha will be held in five phases on April 16, April 22/ 23, April 30, May 7 and May 13, and the results will be announced on May 16.

    As India’s 714 million voters prepare to elect their 543 representatives, they are witness to a range of digital initiatives from political parties, civil society organizations, media houses and even corporates. As a result, some observers are calling it India’s first digital elections.

    Leading from the front is 82 year old Lal Krishna Advani, the prime ministerial candidate of the right wing Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, who has embarked on a Obama style new media campaign. Part of the campaign are a blog, a blogger outreach program, one of the most aggressive online ad campaigns ever seen in India, and an aggressive SMS campaign that will reach 250 million of India’s 400 million mobile subscribers. Rajesh Jain’s Netcore Solutions, which is running the SMS campaign for BJP, has bought an inventory of 1 billion SMSes for the campaign. Rajesh is also a part of the Friends of BJP group, which is running a social network and an opt-in MyToday-based SMS channel to support BJP’s campaign (Indian Express).

    Other parties are also running similar mobile campaign and, overall, telecom operators expect to make an additional revenue of $10 million from an extra traffic of 3-4 billion SMSes sent by all the political parties, apart from money from multimedia messages, songs and wallpapers (Economic Times).

    Several civil society campaigns are also using mobile technology in interesting ways.

    The Jaago Re campaign was launched by Tata Tea and Janaagraha in September 2008 to start a voter registration drive in colleges and corporates in 35 cities across the country and register four million voters.

    The voter registration itself is driven through an interactive application on its website, which helps users identify their constituency, prepares a ready to print voter registration form in five minutes, guides them to the nearest voter registration center and updates them via SMS when their names are added to the voting list.

    Jaago Re has turned out to be an extremely successful campaign. Not only has it been a topic of a huge number of news stories and blog posts, and resulted in much goodwill for Tata Tea, it has also managed to register 584,000 voters so far.

    Idea Cellular My Idea

    Idea Cellular’s My Idea campaign is a continuation of its participatory democracy ad campaign where a lady politician, aided by her tech-savvy assistant Abhishek Bachchan, gathers the views of the citizens in her constituency using mobile phones –

    The campaign asks people to submit an idea that can change India and vote on the ideas submitted by others. So far, more than 3,000 ideas have been submitted and more than 170,000 votes have been cast.

    Vote Report India Banner Vote Report India, a project I’m personally involved in, is a collaborative citizen-powered election monitoring platform for the 2009 Indian Lok Sabha elections.

    Users contribute direct SMS, email, Twitter and web reports on violations of the Election Commission’s Model Code of Conduct. The platform aggregates these direct reports with news reports, blog posts, photos, videos and tweets related to the elections from all relevant sources, in one place, on an interactive map.

    Vote Report India aims to not only increase transparency and accountability in the Indian election process, but also provide the most complete picture of public opinion in India during the month long elections.

    Vote Report India is built on the Ushahidi and Swift platforms and managed by eMoksha, a non-profit organization that aims to enable stronger democracies through increased citizen awareness and engagement.

    Mobile technology is playing a small but important role in the Indian Lok Sabha elections. Even as the media focus is on the web 2.0 elements in the digital election-related initiatives, it’s the lowly SMS that is likely to make the most difference.

    A slightly edited version of this post was cross-posted in MobileActive.

     
    • nadhiya 7:30 am on April 15, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      Likely to make the difference….??????

      there is going to b no change in the democracy in india at least for another 3 0r 4 lok sabha elecions…

      the corruption will continue until more sensible, honest and truly dedicated people make it to the lok sabha….

      Wat differnce is the mobile tech going to make??

      how many of them are aware of the system in our constitution, as per the 1969
      act, in section ” 49-O” ?????

    • Mayav 9:11 pm on April 15, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      Cool and informative post Gaurav! thanks.

    • Wais 8:55 am on April 16, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      I’m using this to stay up to date with the elections:

      http://www.demotix.com/loksabha

  • Gaurav Mishra 10:42 pm on March 22, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Advani@Campus, , Bharatiya Janata Party, , BJP IT Vision, , , CPI(M), , , , , Gandhi, , India Shining, , , , Milind Deora, , Narendra Modi, , Priya Dutt, , , Shivraj Singh Chouhan, SM Krishna, , Sonia, , V K Malhotra,   

    Updated: How Internet and Mobile Technologies are Transforming Election Campaigning in India 

    I’m starting off the Global Voices special coverage on the 2009 Indian general elections by analyzing how internet and mobile technologies are transforming election campaigning in India.

    Politics in India is essentially local and India’s voters elect their representatives based on small local and regional issues, instead of the big national issues. As a result, election rallies and door-to-door canvassing, supplemented by local hoardings and print ads in the vernacular languages have traditionally been at the core of election campaigning in India.

    In 2004, the incumbent BJP broke away from this pattern with its aggressive nation-wide ‘India Shining’ campaign. It recruited advertising and PR agencies to manage its campaign, focused on the urban first time voter, advertised heavily on print and television, and allocated 5% of its campaign budget to an e-campaign, for revamping its campaign website, pushing out text messages, pre-recorded voice clips and emails to its database of 20 million email users and 20 million phone users, and offering campaign-related mobile ringtones for download (BBC/ BBC/ Rediff/ Hindu). The ‘India Shining’ campaign didn’t work eventually, and Sonia Gandhi led Congress to a surprise victory, once again reaffirming the almost magical appeal of the Nehru-Gandhi family amongst India’s voters. Many observers even attributed BJP’s loss to its “elitist” ‘India Shining’ campaign (Live Mint).

    In spite of its “failure”, BJP’s India Shining campaign has set the pattern for all Indian election campaigns since then: spend 40-50% on print, 20% on outdoors, 15% on TV, 5%-10% on internet and mobile and the rest on radio, film theaters and on-ground activities (Live Mint).

    What, then, has changed since 2004? For one, the demographic profile of India’s electoral based has shifted. More than half of India’s 1150 million population is younger than 25, 42 million new voters have entered the electorate since 2004, and, as a result of the newly delimited constituencies, the importance of urban votes has increased in the electoral collage. Not only that, the internet and mobile penetration in India has increased dramatically since 2004, from 26 million to 365 million for mobile, and from 16 million to 80 million for the internet. Even more importantly, shaken by the 11/26 Mumbai terrorist attack, and inspired by Barack Obama’s success in the US elections, the young urban Indian is likely to step out to vote for the first time in India’s recent electoral history. As a result, both BJP and Congress are targeting young, urban voters like never before. BJP and Congress, however, have adopted different tactic to appeal to this audience. While Congress is banking on the youthful appeal of Rahul Gandhi, the 39 year of scion of the Gandhi family, BJP has embarked on an aggressive 360 degree campaign, inspired by the Obama campaign (Chicago Tribune/ AFP/ Indian Express/ TOI/ Reuters/ Economic Times/ The Hindu).

    While BJP’s official website is nothing but a brochure, Lal Krishna Advani’s website has several interesting features. To begin with, LK Advani’s blog has been active since January 2009 and each of the ten odd posts have between 50 to 150 comments. Surprisingly, the Hindi version of LK Advani’s blog has very few comments. The forum on LK Advani’s website isn’t much to look at, but it’s doing well, with 6586 members, 2940 topics, and 9354 posts.

    The Advani@Campus initiative seeks to build a grassroots volunteer campaign “to contact and mobilize young voters in thousands of college campuses across the country” (Telegraph/ DNA/ NDTV/ Indian Express). The focus on recruiting volunteers is reflected in a well-structured volunteer program. The tasks range from recruiting first time voters, promoting LK Advani’s website and social media profiles, translating sections of the website, designing banner ads, and helping out with other campaign work. According to one report, BJP has recruited more than 7000 volunteers through the website (Business Standard).

    Bloggers for Advani

    Especially interesting is the Bloggers for Advani initiative run by Mallika Noorani. The initiative is coordinated through a Google Group (started based on a suggestion by yours truly), and encourages bloggers to display a Bloggers for Advani button and promote BJP’s ideas on their blogs (Hindustan Times/ NDTV).

    Advani youtube channel

    It seems that most of I have confirmed from the BJP campaign team that all the social media initiatives on the Advani campaign are run by volunteers and encouraged by the campaign coordinators. In any case, it’s difficult to identify which profiles or groups are official and which are unofficial. The official website links to a LK Advani Facebook page (with 390 supporters) and an Advani for PM Orkut group (with 960 members), but there are several other unofficial groups with similar memberships. The BJP Supporters Group on Orkut with 22,157 members and the @BJP_ Twitter profile with 416 followers claim to be official, but are probably run by volunteers.

    bjp_twitter_profile

    A group which seems to work closely with the campaign team is the Friends of BJP group (Facebook/ Orkut), which includes several prominent professionals including Rajesh Jain and R K Mishra (DNA). Another unofficial website which is getting some traction is Join BJP.

    Apart from these national level initiatives, several BJP leaders, including Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi (DNA), Madhya Pradesh chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan and V K Malhotra also have well-designed websites. Narendra Modi and V K Malhotra also have Twitter profiles.

    The BJP is also running an aggressive online ad campaign, primarily with Google, with search ads across as many as 200,000 keywords (including keywords related to Congress leaders), placement ads across 50,000 websites, and banner ads across 2,000 websites. With a billion searches every month, BJP’s campaign is expected to recah 75% of India’s internet users (Live Mint/ Economics Times/ TOI/ ContentSutra).

    BJP is also planning to send one billion SMSes to about 250 million cellphone users, who are not enrolled in the Do-Not-Call registry. Overall, telecom operators expect to make an additional revenue of $10 million from an extra traffic of 3-4 billion SMSes sent by all the political parties, apart from money from multimedia messages, songs and wallpapers (Economic Times/ Indian Express/ Financial Express).

    BJP is also planning to use technology on the backend during the elections. For instance, it plans to use a Geographical Information System (GIS) based application to track progress in all polling booths as it gets booth-wise results from its volunteers (Telegraph).

    Last week, the BJP also released a detailed 30-page IT Vision document (PDF) with much fanfare. The document is partly a road map to reform and partly a pre-election populist pipe dream. It promises to give the highest priority to developing IT infrastructure and leveraging it for better governance and inclusive development. Specifically, it promises to match China on all IT-related parameters within 5 years. While many observers have dismissed the document as pre-election populism, others have pointed out that it is a testament to BJP’s forward looking thinking that it believes that it can win an election by promising to transform India into an IT super-power. On the other extreme, Binu Karunakaran is worried about the growing reach of techno-Hindutva.

    vote_for_congress

    The Indian National Congress, on the other hand, seems to be stuck in the web 1.0 era. Both the official Congress website and the Congress Media websites are online brochures. The Vote for Congress portal, which was supposed to revolutionize its online campaign by providing the Congress candidates a platform to blog (Hindu/ TOI), is still not up. None of the senior Congress leaders — Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi, and Manmohan Singh — have a website and, what’s worse, their URLs are owned by cyber-squatters (Indian Express). The party does want to set up 600 internet kiosks across the country (Hindu) but without engaging interactive content, their effectiveness might be limited.

    Shashi Tharoor — author and former Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations — is perhaps the only Congress candidate to seriously leverage the web in his campaign, with presence on Facebook and Orkut (CIOL/ Sify). Former Karnataka chief minister SM Krishna has a Twitter profile. Some of the younger Congress candidates like Priya Dutt, Milind Deora (Facebook) and Sachin Pilot also have well-designed websites, but aren’t really active on social media (Hindu). Some regional Congress leaders, like Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Y S Rajasekhara Reddy, also have a respectable presence on the web (Hindu/ Exchange4Media/ Indian Express).

    vote_for_cpim

    Several other regional parties have either set up, or revamped, their websites, in the run up to the general elections. The CPI-M (Live Mint/ Hindu/ Economic Times/ Indian Express/ Business Standard) and Samajvadi Party websites seem to be the most well-designed. However, none of these websites are using social media tools, beyond asking for donations and newsletter subscriptions.

    Even as politicians are trying to use new media tools effectively, agencies specializing in digital political campaigns have sprung up in response to the opportunity, and are even offering money back guarantees .

    The use of internet and mobile technologies for political campaigning has also posed new questions in front of the election commission, related to tracking expenditure on new media and implementing rules that ban campaigning 48 hours before the poll (LiveMint).

    Many observers have pointed out that the digital campaigns by BJP and other Indian political parties are amateurish in comparison to Barack Obama’s social media campaign and they are right. BJP’s digital campaign can hardly be compared to Obama’a campaign in terms of ambition, execution or results (CIOL/ Networked World).

    Even within the Indian context, the Facebook groups of all the politicians, taken together, have fewer members than the facebook group for the recent Pink Chaddi Campaign (Economic Times).

    The campaign is hardly going to change the course of the election; the election will still be decided in India’s small towns and villages. But, even if it “fails”, the campaign will set a precedent for all future elections in India, just like the ‘India Shining’ campaign did, five years ago.

    Cross-posted on Global Voices, my fellowship blog and my class blog.

     
    • vivek khandelwal 12:05 am on March 23, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      Hey…

      I am not really sure about the impact sending 1 billion smses would make, but for sure the early adopters are not really happy seeing LK aAdvani all over the place but then talking about figures , yes the BJP does have a advantage as compared to Congress.
      The LK Advani ads have been repulsive off late but i guess the TIER 2 Cities is what they are targeted to and this spamming would create a impact there.
      However the IT Vision document that BJP has come up with , is simply far too fetched. The kinda of history the country has and the priorties we are looking at , the document is nothing but a another political gimmick.
      infact this document triggered of a article in Mint titled BJP’s outlandish vision.
      Sanjay Nirupam is another politician who is very active on facebook and also maintains a blog
      http://sanjaynirupam.blogspot.com/
      Its interesting to see political parties using the internet but then the fact that the blog comments are highly moderated and not screened and the PR Agencies maintaining their profiles screws up the entire motive.
      This election would see some wannabe Obama’s,however spamming and not interacting

    • Aryan Niyukti 12:24 am on March 23, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      Use of Internet & Mobile in Election Campaign is surely a welcome change because unlike other mediums these are two way mediums. If nothing else, it will lead to opening up of an easily accessible means of communication with our elected representatives.

      Aryan
      Bihar Jobs

    • Prasad 3:01 am on March 27, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      I would say Pradyut Bora has done a real good job by taking BJP’s election campaign to the next level. Also the other political parties have woke up to the challenge and are doing their bit to use the digital media to the best of their ability. However, I think all these political parties need to be more professional and strategic with their campaigns.. you wouldn’t like to wake up to an SMS from Chadra Babu Naidu at 3.00 in the morning asking you to vote for him ( yes , it happened with me ) or it is not so pleasing to see a veteran leader like Advani gazing out of his banner onto some half naked female actress. There has already been a lot of blogs speaking about these and today I found this guy who not just analysed the drawbacks of the BJP campaign but also added screenshots
      http://seo-kolkata.blogspot.com/2009/03/internet-in-indian-political-campaigns.html – (for those few who haven’t yet seen the Advani ad in some crappy site )

    • Anaggh A. Desai 3:52 pm on March 27, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      I do not really think they have understood the use at all. It has been more than 5 years & at least the mobile world plan should have been in place. The idea of Consistency & Constancy is not understood by the Political Parties at all.

      Frankly speaking, it is just an addition, plugged in by Advisors, Advt. Agencies who need to plug in the so called Social Media angle.

      And it is ridiculous to see our Politicos most of them 70+ talk about internet, mobile or simply technology:) Pathetic to say the least.

      Twitter has an abundance of them, so has FB followers with none of them knowing what the other is doing in the same party!

      However the positive – Gives some employment in this recession; some nepotism also helps. Advt agencies can learn with their money instead of understanding it themselves.

      AND on a lighter note – allows you to act as a critic, thereby other parties hopefully to read & learn (if they know how). Also allowing me to Rant about all of this.

      Have a good one! Cheers

    • Abhishek 9:00 am on March 31, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      This is one of the best post I have read in recent times and definitely the best for politics so far. Kudos to Gaurav for that. I am involved in one of political campaigns itself so this post definitely gives me better idea on how to go about it. I know one another twitter account which is of Gujarat Congress @gujcongress.

      Another interesting stuff I read today was about google keywords campaign by BJP. If you search for the keyword “Sonia Gandhi” or “Rahul Gandhi” in google you will get L K Advani’s site in a sponsored result :) . It made me laugh out loud.

      By the way keep up the good work Gaurav.

    • salma 11:57 pm on August 19, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      wat were the reasons for the failer of advani’s online canpaign when compared to congress, when his campaign was much better?

    • salma 12:00 am on August 20, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      wat were the reasons for the failer of advani’s online canpaign,wat was the result of it after the elections? when compared to congress, his campaign was much better?

    • best_internet_phone 11:01 am on November 20, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      I have not much time, but I've got many useful things here, love it!

    • staffing 8:51 pm on December 1, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      This blog is useful.
      For more jobs visit http://www.staffingpower.com

  • Gaurav Mishra 10:15 pm on March 22, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Bharatiya Janata Party, , , , , , , , , , , ,   

    Global Voices Special Coverage on the 2009 Indian General Elections 

    Indian Election 2009
    Image by Flickr user Carol Mitchell, used under a Creative Commons license

    The world’s largest democracy, India, goes to election starting April 16, 2009. The month long general elections to the 15th Lok Sabha will be held in five phases on April 16, April 22, April 23, April 30, May 7 and May 13, and the results will be announced on May 16.

    This is an important election for India, in the context of a series of terrorist attacks last year that shook up the country, and a worldwide financial crisis that threatens to derail its strong economic growth. However, even as analysts debate about the big issues that will shape the upcoming elections, they will do well to remember that India’s 714 million voters elect their 543 representatives based on small local and regional issues, instead of the big national issues.

    This local nature of India’s national elections is at the core of India’s coalition politics. In the last decade, both Indian National Congress (Congress) and Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) have had to form coalitions consisting of several small regional parties. The BJP led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) was in power from 1999 to 2004 under BJP leader Atal Bihari Vajpayee. The Congress led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) has been in power since 2004 under Congress party’s Manmohan Singh. Parties opposed to both the Congress and the BJP are also talking about forming a Third Front, but previous experience has shown that such coalitions tend to be fragile.

    Both the alliances have announced their prime ministerial candidates. On December 11, 2007 the NDA announced that BJP party leader Lal Krishna Advani will be their candidate (BBC). It has built its campaign around L K Advani, with the slogan Kushal Neta, Nirnayak Sarkaar (able leader, decisive government) (IBNLive). On February 6, 2009, Congress leader Sonia Gandhi wrote in the Congress party magazine Sandesh that Manmohan Singh will be UPA’s candidate (IBNLive). Congress is using the Oscar winning soundtrack Jai Ho (let there be victory) from the movie Slumdog Millionaire as its official campaign tune (Financial Times), but its campaign seems to be more focused on Sonia Gandhi and her son Rahul Gandhi, than the official candidate Manmohan Singh. This, however, is in line with the Congress party’s long history of dependence on the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty.

    The election has already witnessed a controversial tussle between the outgoing Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) N. Gopalaswami and the incoming CEC Navin Chawla (Indian Express) and legal battles over alleged hate speech by BJP candidate Varun Gandhi (IBNLive). During the election period, we are sure to see the usual controversies that surround general elections in India: the use of government resources for campaigning, incidences of divisive and inflammatory rhetoric in campaign speeches, changes in the coalition alliances before, during and after the elections, and allegations of booth capturing and other irregularities during the elections.

    In this special coverage on the 2009 Indian elections, the Global Voices team will capture the Indian blogosphere’s reactions to the campaigns and the controversies, and also highlight interesting digital initiatives to build a vibrant networked public sphere in India, get out the vote and build transparency into the election process. Stay tuned.

     
    • Deepika 1:52 am on March 25, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      I and my family have always been congress supporters but slowly are realising that in the national interest we hv to look for other options.Because even after 50 yrs of congress rule if a movie on slums can get oscars it is only due to congress.
      And about the leader,i just dont have even slightest of doubt that Mr.manmohan Singh has failed and failed miserably.And its not exactly Manmohan who has failed but the madam behind him.If Manmohan was doing wt madam was telling him to,then it means that madam has failed in ruling,so she’s a looser and thus will loose this election too.I hope in the tension of loosing she doesnt commit the all famous “Margaik” mistake which congress always commits.
      We can clearly see the party slowly going towards the confusing state of “Margaik”.You can see the fear clearly,everybody knows margaik will happen.

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