Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

What the bypoll results reveal

The losses suffered by the SP and AAP prove that no election can be taken for granted

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Bypolls are usually local in nature. With little impact on the overall stability of the state or central government, the interest of the electorate is largely muted, the incumbents hold an advantage, and turnouts are usually low. Hence, any extrapolat­ion of the results of a particular by-election to statewide or even national politics must be done cautiously. Even with these caveats, it will not be an exaggerati­on to say that the results of the bypolls to three parliament­ary constituen­cies across two states and seven assembly constituen­cies across four states spelt bad news for India’s Opposition parties, while cementing the stature of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) as the central pole of Indian politics.

The results of the seven assembly bypolls were largely in keeping with expectatio­ns, with the ruling party in the particular state emerging the winner. In Andhra Pradesh, Jharkhand and Delhi, the ruling party won the assembly seat on offer, and in Tripura, the incumbent BJP won three of the four seats that went to the polls, with the other going to a popular Congress candidate. But the results of the three parliament­ary polls threw up surprises. In Uttar Pradesh, the BJP trounced the Samajwadi Party (SP) in its pocket boroughs of Azamgarh and Raipur, and in Punjab, veteran Panthic leader Simranjit Singh Mann snatched the Sangrur seat away from the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP). The twin victories hold significan­ce because Azamgarh was represente­d by SP chief Akhilesh Yadav, and his father Mulayam Singh Yadav before him. It is a seat the family didn’t lose during the 2014 and 2019 general election even as it was routed across the state. For the party to suffer a defeat in a seat it won by 250,000 votes in 2019 is a significan­t setback. In Rampur, too, the perceived alienation of senior leader Azam Khan, who held the seat, appeared to have contribute­d to the party’s loss in a seat it won by more than 100,000 votes in 2019. But the biggest surprise of the day came from Sangrur in Punjab where Mr Mann managed to snag chief minister (CM) Bhagwant Mann’s seat, and defeat the AAP in the CM’s assembly constituen­cy. The shock defeat is a wake-up call for the ruling party that swept to power in March, and a reminder that in politics, no election, howsoever small, can be taken for granted.

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