The world's biggest democracy just had
an election. The worldโs biggest democratic election Itโs a marathon election A mammoth undertaking Itโs the worldโs biggest exercise in democracy In India, voters picked its central government for the next five years. An eighth of the world's population was eligible to vote in this election. This year, 2019, there are
900 million eligible voters in India making this the largest Democratic exercise in the history of humanity. But this isn't a
video about Indian politics, because before India's people can even cast their vote, the election needs to come to them Polling stations need to be set up
wherever people live. And in one of the largest and most populous countries in the world, that isn't an easy task. India has to reach voters in coastal cities in
the south, in the rural regions of the west, and jungles to the east and
everywhere in between. And what's more, they want every Indian
citizen to be within 2 km of a voting station. That's only about 25 city blocks no matter where you are in the country. It's an incredibly ambitious
goal and yet, somehow they're able to do it. This is the biggest election in the
world and I wanted to know how does it work. Every election a team of government
officials and security forces, get on a boat in the east of India to take off
towards this island. They travel about 100 km to get here, all to
securely deliver these Electronic Voting Machines or EVMS, the instrument that
logs India's votes, the heart of this elaborate election process. India has 2.3 million voting machines
for its 900 million voters. So getting these machines close to every voter is a big logistical undertaking. That's why India doesn't have a single Election Day, instead, it's closer to an election month with multiple phases that last weeks. This process takes more than
11 million election officials and security forces, who move from polling station to polling station to polling station from densely populated cities to the rural areas where the majority of Indians live. Once on the island with the EVMs, officials pile on to bike carts and head towards the polling station. Once they arrive, they begin setting
everything up for the vote . On Election Day, voters line up, cast their vote, and get
their fingers inked to prevent double voting. This is where the process ends
for the voters, but for the election officials this is just the beginning. Driving a boat out to a remote island is just one of many ways that officials reach every voter. India's vast and diverse terrain requires transportation methods of all kinds, like in the jungles
of this northern state where elephants transport voting machines to reach a
remote town or in the Himalayas where officials hike for hours to bring EVMS
for election day. Helicopters, trains, they even use camels. But what makes India's elections so impressive isn't just how they reach everyone in such a big country, that's just half the battle. It's also the ways they try to include voters of all backgrounds into the process, a challenge that has been a part of India's elections since the very beginning. India has 22 official languages and hundreds of dialects and when India became an independent nation, less than a quarter of the population could read and write. The newly formed Election Commission of India created a range of symbols to correspond to each political party, like an elephant, a lotus, a hand or even an alarm clock so that from the beginning all people regardless of literacy level and language could vote with confidence. Since 1947, the literacy
rate has increased significantly, but it's still only 75 percent, so these
symbols are still useful to many when casting a vote. But this is a massive sprawling operation and over the years it's run
into some pretty serious problems like allegations of election rigging and
problems with a practice called booth capture, where gangs actually take over
polling stations and tamper with the elections. It's partly because of these problems that the Commission introduced these voting machines in the 1990s. It also increased security around the elections. These efforts to include all voters and protect elections seem to be working. In 2019, India saw the highest
voter turnout yet and for the first time women voted just as much as men. India's elections are only getting bigger and more complicated. India has one of the fastest growing populations in the world. and in 2020, young people will make up
more than a third of the country. This is the biggest election in the
world that takes millions of officials fanning out across a massive country to
help hundreds of millions vote. Every part of this, the symbols, the elephants, the
boats, the machines shows how hard it is to make sure that everyone in a country this large can participate and all without going more than two kilometers
from home. If you want to learn more about the evolution of democracy in South Asia, you should check out the Bhutan episode of Asia's Monarchies. It's a series of documentaries on CuriosityStream. CuriosityStream is a subscription streaming service that offers thousands of documentaries and non-fiction titles from some of the world's best filmmakers for $2.99 a month. But because you are Borders fan, you can get the first 31 days for free if you go to curiositystream.com/borders. And enter the promo code "Borders." CuriosityStream is the exclusive sponsor of this season of Borders and while they don't influence our editorial process, or what the videos are about, they support us and help make videos like this possible. So thank you CuriosityStream. You should definitely go check them out and stay tuned for more Borders.
I find the logistics behind this kind of thing fascinating. Imagine being the guy who they ask to organize the largest election in the world.
I thought the woman in the thumbnail was flipping the bird at first
Every voter at most 2km away from a voting station? What's that for the US? And then there are still huge queues. Is India better at giving their citizens a voice than the "free-est" country in the world?
Wait, dosen't China run the world's biggest election?
/s
Do the people living in the slums end up voting?
Edit: can we not downvote questions on Reddit please. You are underminding this community if you downvote questions. This whole website is about learning and expanding your understanding, and using downvotes inappropriately is going against what we are all here for.
By using voter ID, the same way everyone else in the entire world does it. Except for the US of course, where voter ID is racist.
Vox? Grab the popcorn
Oh yummy. Vox.
Voter ID!