Business Standard

BJP GAINS, BUT CONGRESS AHEAD

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The B ha ra ti ya Jan at a Party( B JP) won 36.2 percent of the votes in the K ar nat aka election—its highest since the party first contested the state polls in 1983.

However, its rivals— the Janata Dal( Secular) or JD(S) with a 18.3 percent vote share and the Congress with a 38 percent vote share—have a combined vote share of 56.3 percent.

The vote share of the JD( S ), the results show, was its lowest in nearly two decades since 1999 when it had a vote share of 10.4 percent.

The Congress’ vote share is the highest among the three parties and the highest the party got since the 1999 elections when it had a vote-share of 40.8 percent.

Although the BJP’s vote share was 1.8 percentage points lower than the Congress’, the former is 26 seats ahead of the incumbent Congress in this election,

according to leads and results. This is because elections in India follow the first-past-the-post system: The candidate with the highest number of votes wins the seat.

In keeping with a 33-year-old trend, Kannadigas voted against the incumbent government in the 2018 elections as well, according to analysis of election data. From winning 122 seats to emerge as the single-largest party in 2013, the Congress lost 26 seats in the 2018 election, mainly to the BJP, according to leads. In states where the BJP is in power, such as Maharashtr­a, Jammu & Kashmir, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, the party, in its ascent to power, made inroads into the stronghold­s of regional parties. Going against this trend, in Karnataka, the JD(S) has largely retained its influence, winning 37 seats—three fewer than the 40 it wonin2013. This, despite the party recording a vote share of 18.3 per cent in the 2018 elections, down from 20.2 percent in 2013.

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 ??  ?? JD (S) leader H D Kumaraswam­y with Congress’ D K Shivakumar
JD (S) leader H D Kumaraswam­y with Congress’ D K Shivakumar

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