Come ballot day, many of the domestic maids, small shopkeepers and other 
migrant workers in the capital will be going home to vote, as  they have done 
in the past. But this time, many others will not, thanks to the economic 
meltdown. 
 
Latika Das, 45, is a part-time maid in various homes at Chittaranjan Park in 
south Delhi. She said she has written to her family in Purulia district of West 
Bengal that she will not be able to reach the village for the Lok Sabha 
elections. 
 
"Every election, local political leaders, mostly from the CPI-M (Communist 
Party of India-Marxist), tell my family about election dates in advance so that 
I can book my rail tickets. But this year I cannot go because I am sustaining 
myself on just two jobs now. My son does not work, and I do not have enough 
money to go home for a month." 
 
In the wake of the economic meltdown, many households in and around Delhi have 
dismissed their maids, particularly those who had more than one. 
 
"I lost my job after my employers went abroad last month," said Zeenat, a 
housemaid in Mayur Vihar, east Delhi. Her former employers used to work in 
software firms, but both husband and wife were laid off recently. 
 
Zeenat, a native of Uttar Pradesh, will not be able to go home to vote. "I have 
told my family that I will be home later this year," she said, though she 
feared that someone may cast a false ballot in her name. "It is a common 
practice". 
 
Priya Ganguly, a journalist, is happy. Her maid is not going home to West 
Bengal to vote. "She is not springing a nasty surprise this time," she said. 
Ganguly felt it had nothing to do with the meltdown. 
 
However, some others are on their way home. A group of 12 cooks, domestic helps 
and fish sellers from Chittaranjan Park, Vasant Kunj and Gurgaon are leaving 
for their homes in North 24 Parganas district of West Bengal April 8 though the 
election will be held a month later. 
 
"We will vote in early May," said Sukumar Das, a cook. His friend Lakshman 
Bhuiyan, who sells fish, will leave for his village in Midnapore in West Bengal 
April 5. 
 
"We have to travel for three days to reach home," he said. The CPI-M, he said, 
will reimburse their travel expenses. "It is a good time for an annual 
holiday." 
 
At a high-rise construction site in Nehru Place, some daily wage labourers from 
villages near Jharkhand capital Ranchi are preparing to go home. They are 
mostly tribals, brought to New Delhi by a Haryana-based construction firm. 
 
"Every election, we vote and make it a point to go home. Booking (train) 
tickets is difficult. We would like to reach our villages by mid-April," said 
Nathu Ram, a Santhal. He has been in Delhi for six months with his sons. 
Traditionally, they are supporters of the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha. 
 
While the daily wage earners from Jharkhand are eager to vote, primarily 
because they have a state of their own, Jagjeet Yadav, an auto-rickshaw driver 
from Bhojpur in central Bihar, is not planning to go home. 
 
"I had to sell my old auto-rickshaw and purchase a new one on loan. It is a 
heavy burden. The steep prices of everything weigh heavily on my shoulders.. I 
have parents in the village. I have to support them. I've a wife and three 
children in Delhi. I make only Rs.3,000 a month. I don't think I will go home 
this election.  
 
 
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/4343523.cms?prtpage=1

 
 




 
  
 
  


      
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