Bala, as the former finance head of Infosys is commonly known as, is fighting his first election from the Bangalore Central constituency here for Lok Sabha polls. Besides, Nilekani, a co-founder and former CEO of Infosys, is also in the poll fray from Bangalore South seat on Congress ticket.
Bala is fighting against BJP's sitting MP P C Mohan and Congress' youth wing chief Rizwan Arshad while Nilekani is pitted against BJP's sitting MP Ananth Kumar and Aam Aadmi Party's Nina Nayak, among others.
Confident of winning his debut election, Bala said he was meeting voters everyday through outreach programmes.
"My core team of 15 members are working hard. I am equally focussing on IT sector voters, the poor and the well to-do electors. It's a 24-hour job and more exciting than working in Infosys," Bala told PTI in an interview.
Bala said there is also a lot of mutual respect between him and Nilekani.
"This city has given me a great career and a superb life. I was disenchanted with politics till Arvind (Kejriwal) proved that honest politics works. Corruption is a hidden tax that is eating values that are Indian. There is an urgent need to create an ecosystem that nurtures honest enterprises. People know it and AAP will deliver this," Bala said.
On his rival candidates from BJP and Congress, Bala said there is "nothing formidable" about them and the constituency was suffering from civic problems, rampant corruption and rising economic divide even though both principal parties have considerable presence in assembly seats.
Carved out of Bangalore North and South Lok Sabha seats in the 2009 polls, the Bangalore Central constituency has eight assembly segments with a mixture of upper and middle class voters.
In his war room, Bala is supported by techies who have quit jobs or taken a break and AAP volunteers who lack the wherewithal of major parties but are braving the scorching sun and first-timer's issues of a fledgling entity.
"The current political system is based on money power, muscle strength and caste equations. Only voters can change this," said Bala, who unlike many others is contesting from an area where he resides with wife Chitra and two daughters Sneha and Shwetha.
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