Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Make no mistake, Gujarat elections were really close

The number of assembly constituen­cies where victory margin is under 10% of total votes polled is highest since 1990

- Samarth Bansal and Roshan Kishore letters@hindustant­imes.com

The BJP has a comfortabl­e lead in terms of both vote share and seat share in the results that were declared on Monday. This does not mean that Gujarat 2017 was not a closely contested election. Here are four charts which prove this.

None of the above (NOTA) has polled more votes than the victory margin in 30 assembly constituen­cies (See Map 1)

Party-wise distributi­on of these seats is 15, 13 and two in favour of the BJP, the Congress and Independen­ts, respective­ly. The NOTA option was only introduced in 2013. Had it not been there, the overall seat tally could have been very different.

The number of assembly constituen­cies where the victory margin is under 10% of total votes polled is the highest since 1990 (see chart 1).

Almost half of Gujarat’s seats have been decided with a margin of under 10% votes.

This is also true for number of seats where the victory margin is under 5% of total votes polled. This is 30% of the total seats in the assembly.

Narrow victory margins are also reflected in the overall median victory margin in the 2017 Gujarat assembly elections.

This is the lowest since 1990 (see chart 2).

The close contest is only a rural story though.

The median victory margin in urban areas is almost thrice that in rural ones.

The BJP’s huge lead over the Congress in urban areas explains this gap.

Both the BJP and the Congress have improved upon their median victory margins in the urban areas in comparison to 2012.

The BJP’s median victory margin in urban areas exceeds that of the Congress by more than 22 percentage points.

This is despite the Congress marginally improving upon its 2012 median victory margin in urban areas.

In the rural areas, the BJP suffered a three percentage point decline in its median victory margin compared to 2012. Both the BJP and Congress are neck and neck in terms of median victory margins in rural areas (see chart 3).

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