Election officers crowd around a distribution center to receive electronic voting machines for their respective polling stations on the eve of polling in Allahabad, in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, on Tuesday. — AP NEW DELHI — India is on course for a record turnout in its general election as a young electorate and women engage with politics more than ever before, with unpredictable results for a contest that opinion polls say opposition leader Narendra Modi will win. The Modi-led Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its allies are seen as favorites to come to power when results of the five-week election are announced on May 16, displacing the Congress-led coalition that is battling public fury over a slowing economy, high inflation and a spate of corruption scandals. But regional parties will also play a key role, with most polls indicating that Modi's alliance will struggle to achieve a majority, falling short of winning 272 of the 543 seats in the lower house of parliament. “We have to be cautious. It's very hard to tell that increased turnout is good for the incumbent or bad for the incumbent,” said Vivek Dehejia, an economics professor at Canada-based Carleton University. “It seems to represent people coming out to vote out the Congress-led government (but) every vote taken away from Congress does not necessarily mean it's for the BJP.” The rising turnout is largely attributable to increased participation of younger and first-time voters, as well as women. These demographic groups have been targeted by the election commission with an outreach campaign since the last general election in 2009. The country has added over 23 million people in the 18-19 age group to voter rolls this time. This group now constitutes about 3 percent of total voters, against 0.75 percent in 2009. Among the first-time voters is 33-year-old Mriganka Dadwal, who feels “ashamed” to have never voted in elections after she turned 18, the minimum age required to cast vote in India. “I am proud of the fact that I realized and voted this time ... I am one of those who was very angry that why this kind of government is there,” said Dadwal, who is the founder of an activist group promoting women's empowerment. In the first eight phases of the 10-phase election, 66.2 percent of registered voters exercised their right to vote, provisional data from the election commission showed. That compares with the previous best turnout of 64 percent during the 1984-85 parliamentary election, when Congress leader Rajiv Gandhi rode a sympathy wave to come to power after the assassination of his mother, then prime minister Indira Gandhi. The record is likely to be broken this year, Sanjay Kumar, director at the respected Indian polling group CSDS, told Reuters. CSDS expects a turnout of 65 percent, Kumar said. “We are looking for a very good turnout, it should be much better than before,” said Akshay Rout, head of the election commission's voter education program. “It is likely to be one of the highest.” Of the 28 states and union territories that have gone to polls, 26 have recorded a higher turnout compared to the last parliamentary election, election commission data showed. — Reuters