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Bhutan Elections: Ruling Pro-India PDP Exits Race Coming Third in Primaries

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https://sputniknews.com/asia/201809171068104651-bhutan-pro-india-party-looses/

Bhutan Elections: Ruling Pro-India PDP Exits Race Coming Third in Primaries

With the ruling PDP out of the race, it will be the DNT and the DPT vying for the top position in the subsequent rounds. It was with the DPT government at the helm in 2013 when New Delhi withdrew subsidies on cooking gas and kerosene in the middle of the country’s elections due to its alleged overtures with China.

New Delhi (Sputnik): Bhutan's People's Democratic Party (PDP) led by outgoing Prime Minister Tshering Tobgay, considered pro-India, received a massive jolt in the general election, as it slipped to third place in the primary round of polling held on Saturday for the 47-member National Assembly.

Druk Nyamrup Tshogpa (DNT), led by Dr. Lotay Tshering, a surgeon-turned-politician, emerged on top with 92,722 votes. Druk Phuensum Tshogpa (DPT) — considered as pro-China, surfaced as close second with 90,020 votes. DNT, with the plurality of votes, won only 16 constituencies, while DPT won in 22. This was the closest election between two parties in the primaries.

Lotay Tshering said the people supported DNT because health is the party's priority and the Bhutanese voted for positive change in daily lives.

"This is a typical example where election and results can be totally unpredictable. This is the charm of democracy. I am personally happy because DNT, being a party outside the parliament for the last five years, could manage to connect with so many supporters who could identify with our ideology of narrowing the gap. I am more convinced that improvement in health care services, especially those in rural areas cannot be more emphasized," Lotay Tshering was quoted by Kuensel as saying.

The voting trend is also reminiscent of the prevailing sentiments among the public that Bhutan should not get involved in the India-China dispute, local news reports suggested.

During the Doklam stand-off that erupted after China's People Liberation Army tried to build a road near the tri-junction of India, China and Bhutan last year in June, Bhutan had sought India's help to stop the Chinese attempt to change the status quo in the area. The stand-off ended after 13 rounds of diplomatic negotiations between India and China, but it highlighted Bhutan on the world strategic map, sending strong signals that Thimpu was an all-out Indian ally.

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Bhutan has long suffered under domination by Hindus, who even prohibit it from establishing relations with important foreign partners. In the coming political shake-up, we shall greater resolve by the Bhutanese people to renegotiate the terms of their unequal relationship with Hindus, and to move themselves out from under the malevolent Hindu shadow cast over them and into the sunlight of global political and diplomatic normalcy :tup:
 
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Countries neighboring India have been achieving greater political/economic freedom from India's British-like quasi colonialism. In Nepal, for instance, there is a left-wing coalition government now and it is so far so good.

I guess as these countries are given more options to decouple from India, they will choose to a more India-free politics and economics.
 
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Except none of the major Bhutanese parties are anti India. In fact, the leading DNT leader is considered pro India. The reason he was elected was he promised to improve public health. He also promised closer ties with India.

In fact, Modi will be the first world leader to visit Bhutan after the election, and the new Bhutanese pm will likely visit India on his first foreign trip. Nepal's PM is considered anti-India, but his first foreign trip was India. So I am sorry, but Bhutan will always be an Indian ally.
https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...ans-thimpu-trip-soon/articleshow/65836063.cms
"While India was not an election issue in Bhutan unlike 2013 polls, DNY in its poll manifesto promised to further strengthen economic ties to India."
 
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