Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Akalis, Cong hope to grab what AAP got last year

- Parampreet Singh Narula

People understand that Amarjit Thind (who fought in 2017 on AAP ticket) has betrayed the party to join SAD. His exit has strengthen­ed us. People voted for the AAP, not the candidate alone. RATTAN SINGH, AAP nominee

SHAHKOT (JALANDHAR): Campaignin­g for the May 28 Punjab assembly bypoll for Shahkot segment is gathering pace as candidates of the three main contenders intensifyi­ng door-to-door canvassing and working on realtime strategies. While the state’s ruling party Congress hopes to wrest the seat from Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) on the back of being in power, the SAD is hoping to get some anti-incumbency votes. The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) is hoping to stay alive on the state’s political scene with a decent show despite infighting.

SAD’S Ajit Singh Kohar, whose death necessitat­ed the bypoll and whose son Naib Singh is now contesting, had got nearly 47,000 votes and defeated Congress candidate Hardev Singh Ladi Sherowalia by close to 5,000 votes last year when the Congress otherwise got a brute majority of 77 in a House of 117.

Congress and the SAD are both now eyeing at least a chunk of 41,000 votes that last year went to the AAP, which finished fewer than 1,000 votes behind Ladi and 6,000 behind the winner.

AAP’S then-candidate Amarjit Singh Thind recently switched to the SAD, hence, Naib Singh said, “Majority of AAP voters have automatica­lly switched to SAD after Thind joined us.” Thind said he has been holding meetings with people who had voted for him to ask them to vote for SAD.

Naib, who may get some sympathy votes of loyalty towards his father who remained MLA for five terms, further said, “People know the work that my father did under in his two-decade run.”

Congress’ Ladi has been covering 16 villages a day, and his guru and former minister, Rana Gurjit Singh, is also campaignin­g in at least 10 villages a day. Ladi said, “Our agenda is developmen­t; and people know the work our government has done so far.”

About AAP votes, he said he has “got over 75% of their voters to switch to us”. “People even from the SAD are switching to our party.”

Majority of the AAP voters have automatica­lly switched to SAD after their 2017 candidate joined us. And people also know the work that my father did in his twodecade run as MLA. NAIB SINGH KOHAR, SAD candidate

The AAP has fielded Rattan Singh Kakkar Kalan, a known social worker, but the party is beset with infighting ever since it performed way below the hype in the assembly polls to become a distant principal opposition in the assembly with 20 seats. SAD got 15 seats and its ally BJP got three. State AAP chief Bhagwant Mann has even said the party should not have contested this bypoll and instead focused on the 2019 Lok Sabha polls.

Rattan has been going door to door to make people aware of the “dhakkeshah­i” (high-handedness) by both “traditiona­l” parties. He claimed the party has faced no loss after Thind left.

“People understand that Thind has betrayed the party to join the Akali Dal. His exit has strengthen­ed us. People had voted for the AAP, not the candidate alone; and the votes are intact.”

For him, party’s co-president Balbir Singh, senior leader Sukhpal Singh Khaira, who is leader of opposition in the assembly, and other MLAS have been campaignin­g already. AAP’S state affairs in-charge, Delhi deputy CM Manish Sisodia, is expected to come on May 25.

Ladi had the chief minister, Capt Amarinder Singh, accompany him for nomination-filing despite the FIR registered against him over illegal mining.

For the SAD, “On Monday, former minister Bikram Majithia will hold meetings with the youth, while the SAD president, former deputy chief minister Sukhbir Singh Badal, will come on May 16; leaders will remain in the constituen­cy through the election,” Naib Singh said.

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