Hindustan Times (Delhi)

MODI IN MUNICH

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BJP WINS SP BASTIONS

democracy in BJP rule: ... misuse of force to prevent voting, irregulari­ties in counting, pressure on public representa­tives and dismantlin­g the elected government­s.”

The voting for the bypolls was held on June 23.

By-elections were also held for seven assembly seats across Delhi, Tripura, Andhra Pradesh and Jharkhand. In Delhi’s Rajinder Nagar, the AAP’S Durgesh Pathak defeated BJP candidate Rajesh Bhatia by a margin of over 11,000 votes, according to an official.

Shortly after the BJP’S wins in Azamgarh and Rampur, Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted: “The by-poll wins in Azamgarh and Rampur are historic. They indicate wide-scale acceptance and support for the double engine government­s at the Centre and in UP. Grateful to the people for their support. I appreciate the efforts of our party karyakarta­s.”

Union home minister Amit Shah said: “Under PM Modi’s leadership, the win is a vote for UP’S good governance model of Yogi Adityanath’s government.”

The BJP’S candidate who won the Azamgarh seat was Dinesh Lal Yadav “Nirahua”. He defeated Dharmendra Yadav of the SP by 8,679 votes. The BJP candidate polled 312,768 votes and the SP leader got 304,089 votes.

In Rampur, BJP candidate Ghanshyam Singh Lodhi defeated Mohammad Asim Raja of the Samajwadi Party by 42,192 votes. Lodhi polled 367,397 votes and Raja got 325,205 votes.

Such was the SP dominance in the two seats that even as the party was reduced to five parliament­ary seats in 2019, SP chief Akhilesh Yadav won the Azamgarh seat by about 259,000 votes, while senior party leader Azam Khan won the Rampur seat by about 109,000 votes. In the 2022 assembly elections, the SP bagged three assembly seats – Rampur Sadar, Suar and Chamrua – which are part of the Rampur Lok Sabha constituen­cy, and also won all five assembly seats

— Mehnagar, Sagadi, Gopalpur, Azamgarh Sadar and Mubarakpur — under the Azamgarh Lok Sabha constituen­cy.

In a tweet on Sunday, Adityanath said: “The historic victory of the BJP candidates in the by-elections to the Azamgarh and Rampur Lok Sabha seats is the result of the welfare policies of the double engine BJP government under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.”

Khan alleged that the BJP misused the government machinery in the state to engineer the SP’S defeat.

The BJP’S tally of Lok Sabha seats in Uttar Pradesh has risen from 62 to 64, while the SP has been reduced to three seats.

In Punjab, Simranjeet Singh Mann’s victory came as a blow to the newly formed AAP government. Simranjit Singh Mann beat AAP’S Gurmail Singh by a margin of 5,822 votes, securing 253,154 votes, with Singh getting 247,332 votes. With this, the AAP lost its only member of the Lok Sabha.

Since 2014, Sangrur was condrone sidered the AAP and Bhagwant Mann’s stronghold, where he won both in 2014 and 2019. In the March 2022 assembly polls, the party swept all nine segments of this Lok Sabha seat.

Simranjit Singh Mann said his win was a victory of the people who stood against the “misrule of the AAP”. “People have rejected the AAP within three months of formation of government. Law and order has collapsed and people are feeling unsafe, thus they punished the inexperien­ced AAP government. Delhi wants to control the state, and Punjabis rejected this propositio­n,” said Simranjit Singh Mann, a pro-khalistan leader who has been an MP twice before.

Chief minister Mann said that he accepted the verdict. “I bow before the verdict. I am working day and night for the progress and prosperity of Punjab and I will work harder…i am your son and I will spare no effort to brighten the future of your families,” he tweeted.

The ruling BJP won three assembly seats and the Congress bagged one in the Tripura by-elections. Chief minister Manik Saha was among the BJP winners, while Sudip Roy Barman of the Congress, who had quit the BJP, won the Agartala seat. The BJP previously held three and the CPI(M) one of these four seats.

In Jharkhand, Congress candidate Shilpi Neha Tirkey won the Mandar seat, defeating her nearest rival, the BJP’S Gangotri Kujur, by a margin of 23,690 votes, the Election Commission said.

The ruling YSR Congress retained the Atmakuru assembly seat in SPS Nellore district of Andhra Pradesh by a huge margin of 82,888 votes.

Experts said the BJP’S victory in the SP bastions showed the saffron party’s popularity after a comfortabl­e victory in the state polls earlier this year.

SK Srivastava, a political observer in UP, said: “The BJP’S victory in Azamgarh and Rampur Lok Sabha constituen­cies, considered strong SP forts, will set the tone for the 2024 Lok Sabha elections. Despite the Modi wave in the 2014 and 2019 Lok Sabha elections, the BJP failed to win the Azamgarh Lok Sabha seat then. Though the BJP bagged the Rampur seat in the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, it lost the seat in 2019. Riding on the Yadav-muslim alliance, the SP won both Azamgarh and Rampur seats (in 2019).”

In Azamgarh, SP candidate Dharmendra Yadav was involved in an argument with security personnel during counting of votes over alleged denial of entry in the strongroom. He alleged that an attempt was made to change EVMS and that is why he was not allowed entry inside. Election officials denied his allegation­s.

Dharmendra Yadav blamed an “alliance” between the BJP and Mayawati’s Bahujan Samaj Party for his defeat. “As far as the defeat (in the bypoll) is concerned, I will congratula­te the alliance between the BJP and the BSP for my defeat, which has become evident in the presidenti­al election. A number of conspiraci­es were hatched by the BSP, BJP, the UP government and the Centre,” he said.

defeated a “dictatoria­l mindset” through democratic means.

As with his other speeches at similar gatherings of the Indian diaspora in foreign countries, Modi highlighte­d India’s growth and developmen­t initiative­s by his government.

“In the last century, Germany and other countries benefited from the third industrial revolution. India was a slave then and that’s why it could not leverage the benefits. But now India will not be left behind in the fourth industrial revolution, it’s now leading the world,” he said.

Crores of Indians have achieved big goals together and every village is open defecation free and has electricit­y, while 99% of villages have clean cooking fuel; India has been providing free rations to 80 crore poor people for the past two years, he said.

technology is being used in numerous fields, and at places, fertiliser­s are being sprayed by drones, he said. The Swamitwa Yojana has been launched to map the land in Indian villages with drones.

“This list of achievemen­ts is very long. If I keep speaking, your dinner time will be over. When a country takes correct decisions with correct intentions on time, it is destined for developmen­t,” he said, amid chants of “Modi Modi”.

India has also achieved its initiative­s to generate 40% of power from non-fossil fuel sources and to blend 10% of ethanol in fuel well ahead of the targets, while 40% of all digital transactio­ns around the world are from India, Modi said.

India is also setting new records in data consumptio­n and is among the countries where data is the cheapest, he added.

“Today, India believes in itself and its capabiliti­es. That’s why we’re breaking old records and achieving new goals,” he said.

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