Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

What does the NDA-INDIA contest look like in Phase 1?

- Nishant Ranjan letters@hindustant­imes.com

The 2024 elections are primarily a contest between two alliances. One of the Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP)-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) and the other the Indian National Developmen­tal Inclusive Alliance (INDIA) bloc in which the Congress is the largest party. However, there is an important difference between the NDA and the INDIA groupings. While the BJP is the dominant party in the NDA block and has managed to stitch a seamless alliance with its allies, this is not the case for the opposition. The latter will see many friendly or not-so-friendly contests between parties that are constituen­ts of the bloc. Because nomination­s for 353 out of the 543 parliament­ary constituen­cies are still not over, a final picture of the cohesion, or lack of it, will only emerge on May 17, which is the last date for filing nomination­s.

With this caveat in place, what is the break-up of NDA and INDIA partners in the first phase of the elections?

The BJP is fighting 77 out of the 102 PCs going to polls in the first phase. The remaining 25 PCs are being contested by other NDA partners. Among them, the largest is the Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK) which is contesting 10 PCs in Tamil Nadu, where polling will finish in the first phase. In fact, 15 out of the 25 PCs being contested by non-BJP NDA parties are in Tamil Nadu.

(See Chart 1)

As far as the parties in the INDIA bloc are concerned, they have put up 114 candidates in the 102 PCs which are going to polls in this phase. On a constituen­cyCommunis­t wise basis, there is more than one INDIA bloc candidate *in 11 out of the 102 PCs going to polls in this phase. Which are the parties which have put up candidates against each other among the INDIA block constituen­ts? The Trinamool Congress (TMC) is contesting in five PCs (3 in West Bengal and one each in Meghalaya and Assam) against other INDIA bloc constituen­ts. The Congress is contesting three out of these five PCs (one each in West Bengal, Assam and Meghalaya). Left parties – the Party of India (CPI) and the All India Forward Bloc (AIFB] – are also contesting the West Bengal PC and the Assam PC ,where the TMC and the Congress are in conflict. In addition, the Communist Party of India (Marxist) or CPI (M) and Revolution­ary Socialist Party (RSP) are fighting the remaining two PCs in West Bengal which TMC is contesting but the Congress is not. In Assam, Aam Aadmi Party is contesting against the Congress in one PC.

Communist Party of India (CPI) is contesting against Congress on two PCs in Madhya Pradesh and one in Chhattisga­rh apart from the conflicts described earlier. The CPI (M) is contesting against the Congress in Andaman and Nicobar. Similarly, both the Congress and the Nationalis­t Congress Party – Sharadchan­dra Pawar (NCP-SP) are contesting the Lakshadwee­p PC; and the Congress and the AIFB are both contesting the Nagpur PC in Maharashtr­a.

(See Chart 2)

The BJP or its allies won six out of the 12 PCs (three in West Bengal, two in Madhya Pradesh, and one in Maharashtr­a) where INDIA block partners have not been able to put up a joint candidate. This excludes the two PCs in Assam where INDIA Block partners have put up candidates against each other because delimitati­on of constituen­cies in the state has made PCs going to poll in 2024 non-comparable with 2019 results. In the remaining four PCs where there is more than one INDIA constituen­t candidate, the Congress won two PCs (one each in Chhattisga­rh and Andaman and Nicobar Islands) and the NCP-SP won one PC in 2019.

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