Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Jharkhand

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out of Bihar in 2000, political uncertaint­y and fractured mandates marked elections till 2014. Five years ago, the alliance of the BJP and its ally, the All Jharkhand Students Union, or the AJSU Party, registered a comfortabl­e victory, riding on the popularity of Narendra Modi, who steered the BJP to a thumping win in the national elections earlier that year and became the Prime Minister.

The pre-poll alliance of the BJP (37) and the AJSU Party (5) won a total of 42 seats in 2014. And within months, six of the eight legislator­s of the the Babulal Marandi-led Jharkhand Vikas Morcha (Prajatantr­ik) joined the BJP. In the history of Jharkhand, the BJP’S Raghubar Das has become the first chief minister to complete his term.

This time, the BJP and the AJSU parted ways after difference­s cropped up over seat-sharing, while the JMM, Congress and the RJD f o ught t he e l e c t i o ns together. At least three exit polls predicted that the opposition alliance, which focused on local issues during the campaign, had an advantage this time. To be sure, exit polls have missed the mark on many occasions in the past, but if they hold true in Jharkhand, it would be a big setback for the BJP, which swept the summer’s Lok Sabha elections and won 11 of the 14 seats.

Both camps have expressed confidence of winning the elections, which were held in five phases and saw the participat­ion of around 65% of the state’s 23 million registered voters.

“We will cross the majority mark. Wait till counting. People has reposed faith in five years governance,” Deepak Prakash, a BJP general secretary, told IANS.

JMM general secretary Vinod Pandey said, “The grand alliance will certainly get majority. People are fed up with the BJP government.”

The spotlight will be on the Jamshedpur East seat, which CM Das has been winning since 1995. His former cabinet colleague, Saryu Rai, is challengin­g him this time.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union home minister Amit Shah were among the top BJP leaders who campaigned in the state, focusing on national issues such as the Centre’s decision to withdraw Jammu and Kashmir’s special status and the newly amended citizenshi­p act, among others. The party also extensivel­y talked about the welfare projects of the central and state government­s.

The Opposition’s campaign, on the other hand, put emphasis on local issues such as tribal and forest rights, land acquisitio­n and alleged hunger deaths. It also focused on issues such as price rise, slowdown in economy and unemployme­nt. Congress leader Rahul Gandhi was among the Opposition’s star campaigner­s.

“PM Narendra Modi and BJP president Amit Shah... urged voters to elect a ‘double engine’ government again, listing achievemen­ts of the central and the state government­s. But if voters have still gone for a change in guard, it would clearly mean there was anti-incumbency. Also, people now think that they might have voted for Modi in Lok Sabha polls, but this was an election to choose a chief minister,” said LK Kundan, who teaches political science at Ranchi University. hangar at the CCS airport.

The deputy CM also blamed the opposition Samajwadi Party for worsening the situation in the state, saying that SP was “inciting people by making false statements”.

Earlier in the day, SP chief and former UP chief minister Akhilesh Yadav attacked the ruling BJP and alleged that the new citizenshi­p law has been brought in to “divert the attention” from the “virtually destroyed” economy and rising unemployme­nt.

“The economy in dire straits, has been virtually destroyed, unemployme­nt is at an all-time high. To divert the attention from these issues, CAA was enacted,” Yadav said at a press conference in Lucknow.

Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra on Saturday visited Bijnor district, where she met the families of two people killed in the violence. State Congress president Ajay Kumar Lallu said she also interacted with people in Nahtaur area.

Meanwhile, as a first step towards making protestors pay for causing damage to public properties during agitations against the new law, the Uttar Pradesh government began the process of identifyin­g the vandals, with the Lucknow district administra­tion forming a fourmember panel to assess the damage. Additional district magistrate-rank officers have been in-charge of different parts of the state capital to assess the damage, Lucknow district magistrate Abhishek Prakash told PTI.

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