July 20 (UPI) -- The Election
Commission of India on Thursday said Ram Nath Kovind, formerly the
governor of the Bihar state and a member of the Dalit, has won the
presidential election.
Kovind, a member of the National Democratic Alliance coalition, will succeed outgoing Indian leader Pranab Mukherjee
to become India's 14th president -- defeating Meira Kumar, a former
member of India's parliament who became the first female speaker, in the
vote.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a member of the NDA, lauded Kovind for his victory.
"Congratulations ... on being elected the president of India! Best wishes for a fruitful and inspiring tenure," Modi said in a statement. "Gladdened by the extensive support for [Kovind] among MPs and across various states."
Kovind, 71, received 65 percent of the vote to Kumar's 34 percent. Mukherjee will leave office on Tuesday.
"I am not upset, why should I be upset? I am a fighter, I fought for
the belief and faith of majority of my countrymen and women," Kumar, 72,
said after results were announced.
The presidential election was held Monday but counting votes did not
start until Thursday morning. India's president is elected by an
electoral college made up of parliament members of the state assembly.
The Times of India
reported all of the 4,880 valid voters -- 4,109 members of legislative
assemblies and 771 elected members of parliament -- cast ballots.
Twenty-one were considered invalid.
Kocheril Raman Narayanan, the 10th president of India from 1997 until
2002, was the first member of the Dalit -- or untouchable caste system
-- to hold the presidential post.
When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)
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