Ram Nath Kovind elected India’s new president
:: A leader backed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been chosen India’s new president, a largely ceremonial position.
Ram Nath Kovind was elected by the Indian Parliament and state legislatures in voting held on Monday, with the results announced Thursday.
Kovind is a former governor of the eastern state of Bihar and a longtime associate of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh.
The group is the ideological parent of Prime Minister Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, which controls enough seats in federal and state legislatures to push its favored candidate.
Kovind pledged to help poor farmers and workers as he recalled his childhood living in a mud hut in a northern Indian village.
“I never dreamed of this position. This was not the ambition of my life,” Kovind said, thanking those who voted for him.
Ceremonial role
The president’s role is mainly ceremonial. He is bound by the advice of the Cabinet led by the prime minister, who is the chief executive.
He will replace Pranab Mukherjee, a former senior member of the Congress party, on July 25.
He received 65.5 percent of votes against his opponent, Meira Kumar of the Congress party, a former speaker of the lower house of India’s Parliament.
Both Kovind and Kumar belong to the Dalit community, which is at the lowest end of Hindu caste hierarchy.
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