Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

AAP won 33 of 117 assembly seats

- Prabhjit Singh and Vishal Rambani prabhjit.singh@hindustant­imes.com

Winning four parliament­ary seats in Punjab means the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) has also won the mandate in 34 of the 117 assembly segments, and is banking on the three assembly by-elections in the offing to enter the Vidhan Sabha as well.

AAP is banking on Bhagwant Mann’s spectacula­r win for the Dhuri seat in Sangrur parliament­ary constituen­cy, vacated by Arvind Khanna. AAP got 63,189 votes in Dhuri, far ahead of SAD’s 29,352 and Congress’s 17,398.

Dr Dharamvira Gandhi’s victory, with Preneet Kaur in second position, is the reason for AAP to have high hopes for the Patiala-urban seat that will be vacated by Capt Amarinder Singh. Gandhi was close at 35,674 votes to Preneet’s 43,238 in this assembly segment, leaving SAD’s Deepinder Dhillon far behind at a little over 16,000.

The third by-election in the offing is for Talwandi Sabo, vacated by Jeetmohind­er Sidhu, in the

SETS ALARM BELLS FOR BOTH SAD, CONGRESS WITH THREE ASSEMBLY BYELECTION­S STARING THEM IN THE FACE; BIGWIG MLAs FIND AAP ON TOP IN THEIR ASSEMBLY CONSTITUEN­CIES

Badals’ bastion.

Of the 34 assembly segments led by AAP in Punjab, 18 are represente­d by Shiromani Akali Dal, while Congress represents 16.

Besides, the AAP narrowly remained on second position in six assembly seats, and remained among top three on almost 100 assembly segments, securing 24.4% vote bank share in Punjab.

It clearly shows that AAP not only dented the SAD and Congress, but it has gulped down the massive vote bank share of the Bhaujan Samaj Party and the Left parties. If we have a broader look at the results, the AAP surge is maximum in Malwa belt, while it had a significan­t dent in Doaba, but didn’t fare well in Majha region.

MLAs TO WORRY

The heavyweigh­t MLAs who should get worried on the AAP’s triumph in their territorie­s include finance minister Parminder Dhindsa (Sunam), Tota Singh (Dharamkot) and Manpreet Ayali (Dakha), all of SAD. Among the Congress MLAs to worry include Kuljit Nagra, Sadhu Singh Dharamsot (Nabha-SC), Lal Singh (Sanour), Brahm Mohindra (Patiala-rural), Balbir Sidhu (Mohali) and Charanjit Channi (Chamkaur Sahib).

With 24.4% vote share, AAP’s two losing candidates — HS Phoolka and Himmat Singh Shergill have a share in toppling the tables in eight assembly segments.

Mohali MLA Balbir Singh Sidhu says, “AAP has been a very big factor in Punjab.” Acknowledg­ing AAP eating into the votes of both the Congress and the SAD, Sidhu says the social media and the NRI factor led to a situation where he and many like him faced AAP steal- ing the show in their citadels.

“Had AAP not been there, the entire anti-incumbency in Punjab would have been a gain to the Congress,” he says.

AAP Punjab committee convener Sumail Sidhu says taking up regional issues like drug menace and sand mafia and also raising the “callousnes­s of the state government about the fate of the peasantry” really clicked. “AAP cadres will continue to connect with the people for their issues to be decided on priority in the post-poll scenario,” he says, when asked whether the AAP wave would hold consistent­ly.

AAP LEAD IN 33 ASSEMBLY SEGMENTS

Banga, Nawanshahr, Chamkaur Sahib, SAS Nagar, Ludhiana West, Gill, Dakha, Jag raon, Bassi Pathana, Fatehgarh Sahib, Samrala, Payal, Raikot, Amargarh, Nihal Singh Wala, Baghapuran­a, Moga, Dharamkot, Faridkot, Kotkapura, Jaitu, Dirbha, Sunam, Bhadaur, Bar nala, Mehal Kalan, Malerkotla, Dhuri, Sangrur, Nabha, Patiala rural, Shutrana, Sanaur.

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