
The moment of pause which intervenes between the last vote being polled and the last vote being counted lends itself to introspection on elections, on democracy, and the link between them. Each set of elections throws up its own peculiar challenges. The big gain this time was that the West Bengal polls remained relatively free of the violence and intimidation that had become almost intrinsic to them. The ruling Left Front government will not acknowledge this, of course, and Jyoti Basu has already claimed for the West Bengal government all credit for conducting 8220;peaceful elections8221;. But it cannot but redound to the credit of the Election Commission that the latest exercise is seen to be one of the most free and fair that the state 8212; under one-party rule since 1977 8212; has witnessed in a very long time.
West Bengal is by no means the last frontier for the Election Commission. Uttar Pradesh looms large on the electoral calendar. But the EC8217;s experience in conducting two important elections in Bihar and West Bengal over the last six months, should help it greatly in managing next year8217;s polling in the largest state in the country. The measures this time ranged from the significant 8212; like the careful revision of electoral rolls that saw lakhs of bogus names being weeded out and the staggering of polls into five phases 8212; to the discreet 8212; telephone numbers of officials were prominently displayed outside all booths, for instance. These efforts indicate how and why the EC has come to be regarded as arguably the country8217;s most credible institution.