The Asian Age

Pre- poll survey shows Cong is ‘ inching ahead’ in K’taka

Projects 92- 102 seats for Cong, 79- 89 for BJP & 34- 42 for JD- S

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

With barely five days left for the Karnataka Assembly elections, a pre- poll survey — the Lokniti- CSDS- ABP News poll — indicates the Congress is “inching ahead” and increasing the gap with its main rival, the BJP.

A big dampener for the Congress, however, is the survey’s finding that the Siddaramai­ah government’s move to play the Lingayat card by recommendi­ng minority religion status for that dominant community has not helped much in drawing Lingayat voters away from the BJP, their preferred party in past elections.

Interestin­gly, a Jain University- LoknitiCSD­S poll done earlier had indicated the contest was extremely close, with no party likely to secure a majority on its own. But once the selection of candidates was completed and the campaign got into full swing, the Congress appears to have secured an edge over its rivals, BJP and JD( S), says the survey, done in the last week of April and the first few days of May.

What should warm hearts in the Congress camp is the seat projection done by Rajeeva Karandikar of the Chennai Mathematic­al Institute, based on the Lokniti- CSDS data, which indicates the Congress is ahead of the BJP and is likely to win 92- 102 seats in the 224member Assembly, though it will still be

short of the halfway mark by a few seats. The BJP is set to win 79- 89 seats while the JD( S) will be a distant third, with 34- 42 seats. seems to

The ruling party have an edge in all

regions of the state — Hyd e r ab a d - K a r nat a k a , Coastal Karnataka and Mumbai- Karnataka — except the Old Mysuru region in south Karnataka, where it is trailing behind the JD( S), led by former Prime Minister H. D. Deve Gowda.

Interestin­gly, in the earlier Jain University- Lokniti- CSDS poll, the BJP was reported to be in the lead in Coastal Karnataka and MumbaiKarn­ataka, while the current poll shows that the Congress has wrested the initiative in both regions.

A factor that is likely to help the Congress is the clear split in the anti- Congress vote between the BJP and the JD( S). The Kuruba vote ( of Siddaramai­ah’s community) is with the ruling party as is the minority, dalit and tribal vote, says the survey. While the JD( S) is the preferred choice for a significan­t chunk of Vokkaliga voters, the Congress has made some inroads into this dominant caste group too.

The Congress’ move to secure minority religion status for the Lingayat community does not seem to have impacted voters of this dominant caste, who still appear to prefer the BJP. The survey also indicates that in the state Assembly poll, voters give priority to state issues.

When it comes to the most preferred choice for CM, the Congress again seems to have an edge, with the most preferred choice being incumbent CM Siddaramai­ah, who has a six- percentage point lead over the BJP’s CM nominee B. S. Yeddyurapp­a. The JD( S) nominee, H. D. Kumaraswam­y, is third with five percentage points.

Given the important role that Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is now on a poll blitzkrieg across Karnataka, could play in the campaign, the survey sought public opinion on his and Siddaramai­ah’s popularity ratings, and found the PM was ahead by four percentage points.

Seven of every 10 respondent­s were satisfied with the performanc­e of the state government. However, respondent­s think corruption and prices of essential commoditie­s have increased in the past five years, while the Congress government’s record in generating employment opportunit­ies too does not seem to have found favour with the people.

With the BJP asserting that its real campaign will revolve around the Prime Minister’s election speeches, it remains to be seen if the trend will change in the week before the election.

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