Cape Argus

Modi confident of bigger win

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MUMBAI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he would be re-elected with an even bigger majority in parliament next year, dismissing opposition attempts to rouse opinion against his government for failing to deliver on promises of swift economic developmen­t and more jobs for young people.

Modi said yesterday his Bharatiya Janata Party-led (BJP) government is committed to improving the lives of all citizens regardless of faith.

Concerns have grown that his administra­tion has been unable to rein in right-wing fringe groups that are trying to undermine India’s secular constituti­on by targeting the nation’s large Muslim minority.

“We will definitely get more seats than we got the last time and I am confident that we will break all records of the seats won by NDA (National Democratic Alliance) in the past and achieve greater glory.

“The people are with us and we have nothing to fear,” Modi said.

Opinion polls show he remains the front runner to win another five-year term, but the party has suffered reverses in some local elections in the past few months that have energised the opposition.

BJP failed to win power in southern Karnataka in May, the first big state to elect a new assembly this year in a contest widely seen as a test of its popularity after four years in office. It also lost a few races in the big heartland state of Uttar Pradesh in the north.

But Modi said voters wanted a strong and decisive central government to deliver on India’s promise as a big economy and one of the potential drivers of global growth.

“My platform will be developmen­t, fast developmen­t and developmen­t for all...We have worked very hard in the last four years and we will go to the people with our track record of developmen­t,” Modi said.

The opposition, led by the Congress party, is trying to pull together an alliance of regional parties and even communist groups to mount a joint campaign against Modi, who is seen as pushing a partisan, Hindu-first agenda.

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