Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Dropping incumbents part of poll strategy, says BJP leader

- Parvez Sultan parvez.sultan@hindustant­imes.com

Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on Thursday said it will present a ‘vision document’ for improving urban life to the voters during the MCD election campaign.

Party’s national vice president and Rajya Sabha MP Vinay Sahasrabud­dhe said, “We will try to emulate successful projects implemente­d in the 72 municipali­ties ruled by the BJP such as Pune, Indore, Lucknow, Bengaluru, and Jalandhar.

Sahasrabud­dhe said dropping incumbents has been a “part and parcel of the BJP strategy for long” and has been followed in the past elections in Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan.

“We look at these (municipal) elections with an innovative approach. We work with a perception to improve urban life. We have done a lot of good work in several municipali­ties where we are in power. We will motivate our councillor­s to emulate them,” he said

He said the BJP campaign will highlight the Central government’s initiative­s for the betterment of Delhi and the work by party councillor­s in the last five years.

“The party will make the voters aware about the negativity spread by the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP). We will expose them by telling people about their politics of creating hurdles. People of Goa and Punjab have brought them down. We will finish the remaining task here,” Sahasrabud­dhe said.

Party president Amit Shah had appointed Sahasrabud­dhe with three central ministers Nirmala Sitharaman, Jitendar Singh, and Sanjeev Balyan to monitor municipal elections in the national capital. This is the first time that the BJP has sent a team of senior leaders to manage civic polls in the city. Sitharaman has been given the charge of South Corporatio­n and Singh will look after East. Balyan has been assigned north civic body.

Reacting to the unease among the sitting councillor­s over the issue of ticket distributi­on, he said their feelings are “justified and such decision would evoke different reactions”.

“They were little hurt and dishearten­ed. But, denial of an opportunit­y at a particular point of time does not mean end of the road. They are responding positively. Things are pretty normal,” he said.

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