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BJP retains power in Gujarat but just barely
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SME Times News Bureau | 18 Dec, 2017
The ruling BJP was on Monday set to retain power in Gujarat, just edging
past the half-way mark in one of the most bitterly contested elections
that saw the Congress improve its tally compared to five years ago.
Election
Commission officials said the Bharatiya Janata Party, on course for its
sixth consecutive win, had bagged 58 seats and was leading in 41 while
the Congress had won 50 and was forging ahead in 27 more.
Smaller parties and independents had won three seats and were leading in three.
While
the BJP celebrated all across Gujarat and in Delhi, the 99-seat tally
was far less than the 150 BJP President Amit Shah had set for the party
to win and 16 less than what it got in 2012 despite intense campaigning
by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
The Congress, its campaign led
by its now President Rahul Gandhi, was poised to finish with a tally of
77, 16 more than what it bagged five years ago.
Outside
Parliament, a beaming Modi flashed a V sign to celebrate the victory in
his home state. Senior BJP leaders taunted Rahul Gandhi and said the
result proved that the people had embraced the Gujarat model of
development.
But the BJP's overall vote share in the state
plunged from 60.11 per cent notched in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls to 49
per cent, indicating a sharp erosion in support base in a state which
the party considers its fortress.
The vote share of the Congress,
which joined hands with Patidar leader Hardik Patel, Dalit leader
Jignesh Mevani and OBC leader Alpesh Thakore, soared from 33.45 per cent
of 2014 to 41.5 per cent.
Union Information and Broadcasting
Minister Smriti Irani brushed aside reports of BJP's waning support,
saying the winner was always the king. "Jo jeeta wo hi Sikander."
As
the vote count began across Gujarat at 8 a.m., at one point the
Congress leads went past the BJP's, giving a scare to the ruling party
and sending the stock markets plunging down.
The BJP, however,
managed to recover lost ground and eventually went past the half-way
mark of 92 seats needed to control the 182-member House.
Chief
Minister Vijay Rupani (Rajkot West) and Deputy Chief Minister Nitin
Patel (Mehsana) trailed to the Congress early in the day before bouncing
back and winning. While Rupani won by 50,412 votes, Patel's victory
margin was 7,951 votes.
The BJP also held on in most seats
affected by the Patidar agitation demanding job quotas, provoking
community leader Hardik Patel to complain about faulty Electronic Voting
Machines.
While the BJP dominated over the Congress in South,
Central and North Gujarat, the Congress held the upper hand in the
sprawling Saurashtra/Kutch region.
The BJP also proved its sway over urban centres while the Congress seats came mostly from rural regions.
All
Congress Chief Ministerial contenders lost -- Shaktisinh Gohil
(Mandvi), Arjun Modhwadia (Bokhiria) and Siddharth Patel (Dabhoi).
But the BJP suffered a setback in Unjha constituency which includes Modi's hometown Vardana where he grew up.
The
Gujarat election was held on December 9 and 14 and was marked by a
viciousness that pitted Prime Minister Modi against the Congress,
including his predecessor Manmohan Singh.
Modi had been the
Gujarat Chief Minister from 2001 until he became the Prime Minister in
2014. It was the first Assembly election in Gujarat after Modi shifted
to New Delhi.
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As on 13 Aug, 2022 |
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