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Regular-article-logo Tuesday, 23 April 2024

The big fights in Mumbai

Mumbai had in 2014 logged a voter turnout of a shade under 53%, 11 percentage points higher than in 2009

The Telegraph Mumbai Published 29.04.19, 02:02 AM
Urmila Matondkar waves at party supporters during her election campaign for the Lok Sabha polls, at Kandivali in Mumbai, April 20, 2019.

Urmila Matondkar waves at party supporters during her election campaign for the Lok Sabha polls, at Kandivali in Mumbai, April 20, 2019. (PTI)

Not known to be particularly enthusiastic when it comes to voting, Mumbai had in 2014 spared itself a repeat of the 2009 embarrassment and logged a voter turnout of a shade under 53%.

This was 11 percentage points higher than in 2009, when Mumbai’s six constituencies averaged a turnout of 41.4%.

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There’s a touch of glamour too this time as Rangeela girl Urmila Matondkar makes her political debut for the Congress from Mumbai North; in Mumbai North-Central Congress’s Priya Dutt is pitted against Poonam Mahajan of the BJP.

The big ticket contest, however, would be in Mumbai South where Mukesh Ambani has endorsed Congress’s Milind Deora. All eyes are on the Maximum City which votes on Monday.

Mumbai North

Urmila Matondkar (Congress) vs Gopal Shetty (BJP)

Mumbai North-West

Gajanan Kirtikar (Shiv Sena) vs Sanjay Nirupam (Congress)

Mumbai North-East

Manoj Kotak (BJP) vs Sanjay Dina Patil (NCP)

Mumbai North-Central

Priya Dutt (Congress) vs Poonam Mahajan (BJP)

Mumbai South-Central

Eknath Gaikwad (Congress) vs Rahul Shewale (Shiv Sena)

Mumbai South

Milind Deora (Congress) vs Arvind Sawant (Shiv Sena)

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