Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Exit polls predict tight race

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com CONTINUED ON P 6 FULL COVERAGE P9

BENGALURU/NEW DELHI: As voting ended in Karnataka on Saturday, a range of exit polls indicated that the election could throw up a hung assembly, with only a narrow margin separating the incumbent Congress and the challenger Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). A hung House could position the Janata Dal (Secular), or JD (S), the third political force in the state, as the potential kingmaker.

Two exit polls gave Congress the edge. India Today estimated that the Congress could win anywhere between 106 and 118 seats while placing the BJP tally at between 79 and 92 seats and that of the JD (S) at 22 to 30 seats. Times NOW-VMR gave the Congress between 90 and 103 seats,the BJP between 80 and 93 seats, and JD(S) between 31 and 39 seats.

Three other polls said the BJP had the edge. The ABP News-c Voter poll estimated that BJP would win between 104 and 116 seats, Congress between 83 and 94, and JD(S) between 20 and 29 seats. NEWSX-CNX gave the BJP between 102 and 110 seats, Congress 72-78 seats and JD(S) between 35 and 39 seats. Today’s Chanakya came up with a slightly wider range, placing the BJP tally at between 109 and 131 seats; It predicted that Congress would win between 62 and 84 seats and the JD(S) between 19 and 33 seats.

To be sure, exit polls in India have got it wrong, sometimes spectacula­rly, in multiple elections in the past . Both the principal contenders in Karnataka, the Congress that is trying to hang on to the last large state it controls, and the BJP that is trying to wrest back the only southern state it has governed in the past, have asserted that they would win the election with a majority on their own. For the BJP, a win would give it a springboar­d for expansion in the south.

The exit polls triggered a war of words between the two parties, which only backed the polls that showed them as the favourites and claimed they would win when the results are declared on May 15.

“Even though it is satisfacto­ry to note that most exit polls are showing a Congress victory or a majority for the Congress party, we are more than confident that the Congress will get 130+ seats

on May 15 when the results will be declared,” Congress’ chief spokespers­on Randeep Singh Surjewala said.

Anil Baluni, Rajya Sabha MP and head of the BJP’S media cell, had a similar reaction to the exit polls. “These are just trends which show improvemen­t for the BJP and a slide for the Congress . BJP chief Amit Shah has said the party will win more than 130 seats and this will be proved right when the results are announced on May 15.”

Political analysts said the exit

polls had revealed nothing new about the nature of the contest. “The fact that the race will be close was known from the beginning itself. All of these exit polls are equally divided and none of them have disclosed the methodolog­y. So the suspense remains,” said Delhi-based political analyst N Bhaskara Rao.

A Narayana, associate professor for public policy at the Bengaluru-based Azim Premji University, agreed.

 ?? PTI PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi beats a drum at Muktinath Temple in Nepal before leaving for India on Saturday. Speaking at a civic reception held in Kathmandu to honour him, Modi said India will stand shoulderto­shoulder with Nepal in its developmen­tal...
PTI PHOTO Prime Minister Narendra Modi beats a drum at Muktinath Temple in Nepal before leaving for India on Saturday. Speaking at a civic reception held in Kathmandu to honour him, Modi said India will stand shoulderto­shoulder with Nepal in its developmen­tal...
 ?? PTI ?? Voters show their ID cards as they wait in a queue at a polling booth at Hundi village in Mysore on Saturday. The counting of votes will take place on Tuesday, May 15.
PTI Voters show their ID cards as they wait in a queue at a polling booth at Hundi village in Mysore on Saturday. The counting of votes will take place on Tuesday, May 15.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India