New Delhi, July 1 (PTI): The stage is set for a direct contest between the ruling NDA’s presidential nominee Ram Nath Kovind and the opposition-backed Meira Kumar for the country’s top constitutional post.
Today was the last day for withdrawal of nominations for the presidential election scheduled for July 17.
Barring Kovind and opposition candidate Kumar, the nominations of over 90 other candidates who wanted to be in the race for the post of president have been rejected during the scrutiny process.
Members of Parliament will cast their votes using green- coloured ballot papers, while MLAs who vote in the presidential election will used pink-coloured ballots.
The process of printing ballot papers will begin tomorrow. The different colours of the papers will help the returning officer count the votes based on the value.
Total value of the electoral college is 10,98,903.
The ballot boxes will be brought to Delhi for counting on July 20.
I am not a scapegoat in the presidential election: Meira Kumar
Bengaluru, July 1 (PTI): Meira Kumar, the opposition's presidential nominee, today asserted that she was not a "scapegoat" in the upcoming election to the country's top constitutional post as she was fighting for an ideology.
"Anybody fighting for an ideology and appealing to the voice of conscience cannot be a scapegoat. I am a fighter and I will fight and I am sure that many will join me in this fight," she said in response to a question whether she was being made a scapegoat in the presidential election.
Union minister and Republican Party of India (RPI) leader Ramdas Athawale had yesterday took a jibe at the Congress saying it was using Kumar as a "scapegoat" by fielding her as the opposition candidate in the July 17 presidential election.
Kumar, a former Lok Sabha speaker and the daughter of iconic Dalit leader Jagjivan Ram, was speaking to reporters after meeting the Congress MPs and MLAs at the Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee office here.
Seventeen opposition parties have fielded Kumar as their joint candidate in the presidential election against NDA's nominee Ram Nath Kovind.
To a question on her not having the support of enough lawmakers, Kumar said she was fighting the poll on values and principles which were "sacred" to the people of the country.
"Wherever I go, people tell me that I do not have the numbers. If I do not have the numbers, why don't you round up the figures and declare the results? Why have the elections?," she wondered.
Pointing out that she launched her campaign from the Sabarmati Ashram in Gujarat, Kumar said, "I am carrying forward those values and principles which are sacred to most of my countrymen and women.
"Someone has to take them up. I am taking up your fight also....you want me to withdraw? Do you want me to get defeated? I am simply fighting."
Asked about the presidential poll turning into a "Dalit contest", she said it was "shameful" that a supreme election to the post of president was being painted in this manner.
Asked if she would meet Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar in the run-up to the election, Kumar said she had written a letter to him and would decide on meeting him when she visited the eastern state.
Going against the decision of its alliance partners, the RJD and the Congress, Nitish Kumar's JD(U) has decided to back the candidature of former Bihar governor Kovind. Kumar, the opposition's presidential nominee, also hails from Bihar.
When pointed out that like her, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had also been speaking about development based on Mahatma Gandhi's ideologies, Kumar said Gandhiji's ideology was that of "secularism".
"We do not just have to be tolerant towards the other religions, but be respectful towards them. That was Gandhiji's ideology and we have always carried that forward," she said.