The Asian Age

Cong upbeat after Kerala, Punjab bypoll victories

In some consolatio­n, BJP wins over Cong mantri in Himachal

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

It was a day of mixed fortunes for the Congress on Sunday. While the party was jubilant over its electoral victories in Punjab and Kerala bypolls, in Himachal Pradesh it received a jolt with former union minister Sukh Ram and his son and sitting state minister Anil Sharma, switching loyalties to the BJP.

Interestin­gly, the Congress is in a jubilant mood after the two massive bypoll wins. Many leaders have started openly saying that this is the beginning of the downfall of the BJP.

In Punjab, the Congress trounced the BJP by winning the Gurdaspur Lok Sabha seat with a margin of 1,93,219. Sunil Jhakhar, Punjab Congress chief and the Congress candidate from Gurdaspur wrested the seat from the BJP. Sitting MP of the BJP Vinod Khanna had passed away and the seat had fallen vacant.

Speaking to reporters after the victory in Gurdaspur, Punjab minister and actor-turnedpoli­tician Navjot Singh Sidhu said, “This (victory) is a big slap on the face of jija-saala (SAD chief Sukhbir Badal and his brother-in-law Bikram Singh Majithia). Today BJP will realise that Akali Dal in Punjab has become a burden. Time and again people have reprimande­d them. It will be demoralisi­ng and send them (SAD-BJP) packing.” Chief minister Amarinder Singh hailed the Congress win as a total rejection of BJP’s anti-people policies of

Continued from Page 1 the BJP and its ally the SAD and said it underlines the “political annihilati­on” of the AAP.

In Kerala, the Congress-led UDF’s ally Indian Union Muslim League won the Vengara Assembly berth by 23,310 votes. It may be recalled with its eye on the Assembly bypoll the BJP had intensifie­d its rallies and meetings in the state.

Recently, BJP chief Amit Shah had kicked off a yatra against the ruling LDF government’s alleged “reign of terror” and “political violence” against party and RSS workers.

A battery of senior BJP leaders and central ministers had toured Kerala, agitating against the ruling LDF government.

In the Vengara bypoll, the BJP candidate K. Jayachandr­an Master came fourth with 5,728 votes. In the 2016 Assembly elections, the BJP candidate had come third.

On a day of setbacks, the BJP got a shot in the arm in Himachal Pradesh where a sitting minister quit the Congress and joined the saffron party.

The Virbhadra Singh government’s rural developmen­t minister Anil Sharma joined the BJP to contest the Nov. 9 Assembly poll from Mandi. Mr Sharma, son of former Union Communicat­ion Minister Sukh Ram, alleged he and his father were being sidelined and ignored in the Congress.

However even after the jolt, the chief minister and Congress chief ministeria­l candidate Virbhadra Singh remained unfazed.

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