Modi said during a meeting of party office-bearers on March 19 that state elections coupled with local-level polls, spread across virtually every year, often "hinder" the execution of welfare measures, a party official said, adding that the Prime Minister was keen on simultaneous elections once in five years.
"The view in the BJP is that there should be combined elections from panchayat to Parliament," he said.
The idea, floated long back by BJP veteran L K Advani, has found favourable mentions from various Parliamentary panels and the Law Commission.
However, due to the complexities in undertaking the mammoth exercise, no government has taken up the issue even though political parties and leaders have spoken about it on and off.
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BJP sources said the idea was informally floated by the government in an all-party meeting held prior to the Budget Session.
The Standing Committee on Law and Personnel in its recent report had made a strong pitch for holding of simultaneous Assembly and Lok Sabha elections all over the country, suggesting that it can be done in the near future.
"The Committee does not feel that simultaneous election in every five year cannot be held in the near future but slowly it would reach in stages for which tenure of some of the state legislative assemblies need to be curtailed or extended," it said in a report tabled in Parliament in the Winter Session.
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Later, in a statement Javadekar said people have supported in a big way the government's decision to invalidate high-value currency notes from the day Modi announced it.
"Despite all the inconveniences they are facing people are contributing massively in this campaign to get rid of black money," he said and cited electronic media reports which have claimed that people favour the move.
BJP's win in local polls have showed mirror to the opposition parties which alleged that people in rural areas are facing hardships, he said.