PML-N leads, PTI follows as ECP receives Islamabad LG poll results

Published December 2, 2015
According to DRO, PML-N has secured 19 chairman seats. ─ Photo: Twitter
According to DRO, PML-N has secured 19 chairman seats. ─ Photo: Twitter
Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf came in second, with 17 chairman positions. ─ Photo: Twitter
Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf came in second, with 17 chairman positions. ─ Photo: Twitter

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N) took the lead as Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) received the results of the local government (LG) polls held in Islamabad on Monday, DawnNews reported on Tuesday.

District Returning Officer Aleem Shahab has sent ECP the results of all Union Councils of the federal capital.

According to the results released by DRO, PML-N has secured 19 chairman seats while rival Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) came in second, with 17 chairman positions.

Independent candidates emerged as the third largest entity, grabbing a total of 13 seats.

The DRO told media that in one Union Council, UC-4, the winner will be decided by a toss as the vote count ended in a tie between the candidates.

Residents of Islamabad went to the polls on Monday amidst tight security to elect local representatives for the first time under the newly-minted Islamabad Local Government Act, 2015.

PTI leader Asad Umar announced on Twitter that his party is filing recount application on at least eight seats while the party chairman Imran Khan announced that PTI will be putting up its candidate for Mayor in Islamabad.

Tweet from Asad Umar's official account
Tweet from Imran Khan's official account

The last such exercise was held under military rule in 1979 on a non-party basis and was limited to rural areas only.

Islamabad, which now has a population of around two million, had been divided into 50 union councils for the polls.

Around 2,407 candidates took part in the elections, of which 972 were independent candidates, 506 belonged to PML-N, 479 to PTI, 164 to Jamaat-i-Islami and 81 to the PPP, according to the Election Commission of Pakistan.

Also Read: Islamabad LG polls: The evolution of a grassroots system

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