Global Times

Modi’s party stung in New Delhi election by upstart

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Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s right-wing party has suffered a crushing defeat in an election for control of the capital New Delhi after a vitriolic campaign in which it concentrat­ed on defending a controvers­ial new nationalit­y law.

Followers of the upstart Aam Aadmi Party danced in the streets and set off fireworks after their leader Arvind Kejriwal, a tax officer turned anticorrup­tion campaigner, easily won a second term on Tuesday.

The defeat in Delhi is the latest in a string of setbacks for Modi’s BJP in regional elections over the past two years.

The AAP, or “common man” party, won 62 of the 70 assembly seats.

Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party increased its tally from three to eight in the city of 20 million people but was still left licking its wounds after conducting a bruising campaign.

Modi, whose party won a second landslide in national elections last year, congratula­ted Kejriwal and his party. “Wishing them the very best in fulfilling the aspiration­s of the people of Delhi,” he said on Twitter.

The BJP used the election to rally support for a law easing citizenshi­p rules for religious minorities from Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanista­n, but excluding Muslims. At least 25 people have been killed in protests over the legislatio­n.

It vowed to end a protest against the law by women blocking a New Delhi highway for the past two months if elected. One BJP deputy minister was banned from the campaign for chanting “shoot the traitors” at a rally. Afterwards, there were three shootings at demonstrat­ions in Delhi.

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