Dummy candidate
A dummy candidate is a candidate who stands for election with no intention of winning.
A dummy candidate can serve any of the following purposes:
- A dummy candidate may direct preferences to other candidates in order to increase the serious candidate's share of the vote.
- A dummy candidate may be used by a serious candidate to overcome limits on advertising or campaign financing. For example, in India, there have been cases of serious candidates fielding multiple dummy candidates to distribute their poll expenses. The expenses are directed towards the campaign of the serious candidate, but shown to the election commission under the dummy candidates' names.[1]
- Dummy candidates with names similar to that of a more established candidate may be fielded by political parties to confuse the voters, and cut that candidate's vote share.[2] For example, in the 2014 Indian general elections, there were 7 candidates named Chandu Lal Sahu and another 4 named Chandu Ram Sahu in the Mahasamund. The serious candidate - Chandu Lal Sahu of Bharatiya Janata Party - received 503,514 votes, but his margin of win was just 1,217 votes. The dummy candidates received the votes intended for him, with one of them finishing third in the constituency.[3] To solve this problem, the Election Commission of India is designing Electronic Voting Machines with candidates' photographs.[4]
- Dummy candidates can also result from candidates withdrawing from a particular race, but being unable to pull their name off the ballot, remaining listed as a choice.
References
- ↑ "EC warns of strict action against dummy candidates". Firstpost. 2013-10-13.
- ↑ Complaint against dummy candidate for misleading people
- ↑ V. Kumara Swamy (2014-05-25). "What's in a name?". The Telegraph.
- ↑ "Soon, voting machines will have candidate photos". Hindustan Times. 2015-09-15.
See also
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