Kathmandu. 90-year-old Shanta Regmi, returning from the Padma Kanya Vidya Ashram polling station in Dilli Bazaar, does not remember exactly how many times she has voted.
The only thing he remembers is that many of the leaders who voted for him in the last elections won, but most of them could not fulfill the promises he made to the people. Some didn’t even come back. “Now we are like the sun on the hills,” she said, adding, “I don’t want our grandchildren and children to suffer.” ”
His granddaughter is overseas. Regmi feels that if there was a good employment environment in the country, the younger generation would not be compelled to go abroad. “If I got work in the country, why would I have to live abroad?” he asks.
Gokul Dhital, another voter from Dilli Bazaar, however, does not take the past as a complete disappointment. He believes that some work has been done in the country, but it has not been enough to meet the expectations of the people. “I voted a lot of times. I can’t say that nothing happened in the past,” he says, “But it didn’t work as well as we expected.” According to him, good governance and employment are the main need of the hour.
He stressed the need to address the expectations of the new generation, especially Genji. “The future of the country will be strong only when the trust of the youths is won,” he said. Today, after the Jenji movement, the election of the House of Representatives is being held under special circumstances.











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