The Hindu (Bangalore)

Congress has not won an LS seat in city after 1999, but it is hopeful of turning the tide

Even when the party outdid BJP in Assembly polls thrice, it didn’t win an LS seat here, indicating a schism in voters’ preference­s for State and Centre

- K.V. Aditya Bharadwaj

Congress has not won a Lok Sabha seat in Bengaluru city after 1999. the BJP has won all the Lok Sabha seats in the city since 2004 — two seats in 2004, and three since 2009 after delimitati­on of seats in 2008.

This has been the case even when Congress outdid the BJP in Assembly polls thrice — 2004, 2013 and 2018 — indicating a schism in voters’ preference­s in Bengaluru for the State and Centre.

A senior Congress leader from the city who has unsuccessf­ully contested Lok Sabha polls twice said the city has preferred BJP for Lok Sabha even when Congress found favour in the Assembly elections. “The best example was the 2004 polls. Both Assembly and parliament­ary polls were held on the same day, in the same booth. While Congress won seven out of eight Assembly seats in Bengaluru South Lok Sabha constituen­cy, BJP won the Lok Sabha seat. This essentiall­y means the same voter voted for a Congress MLA and a BJP MP, not even a minute apart,” he said.

South citadel

In fact, Bengaluru South was one of the šrst Lok Sabha seats to be won by the BJP in Karnataka in 1991 along with Mangalore (now Dakshina Kannada), Bidar and Tumakuru seats. Of them, the party has retained Bengaluru South and Dakshina Kannada seats since then.

“In 2009, when the United Progressiv­e Alliance did very well in all urban centres across India, BJP won all three seats in Bengaluru. Even when we šelded an icon (Infosys cofounder Nandan Nilekani) in 2014, BJP won that seat. BJP has always šelded outsiders in Bengaluru North seat, and yet won it consistent­ly since 2004,” the Congress leader said.

A senior Congress minister from the city said that voters in Bengaluru had generally tilted right since the 1990s. The Congress had been able to break this only in Assembly polls due to a strong slate of candidates and anti-incumbency. “It is a fact that we do not have a strong slate of candidates for the Lok Sabha seats in Bengaluru. We have never had stable faces for each of these constituen­cies. We have changed candidates in almost every election,” he said.

Bengaluru’s senior BJP leader and Leader of Opposition in the Karnataka Legislativ­e Assembly R. Ashok claimed that the issue of national security, relatively less corruption during NDA government tenures in Delhi, and the developmen­t plank of the party has historical­ly struck a chord with the city’s voters. “Modi factor has also boosted BJP and held us steady in the city since 2014,” he said.

When BJP was drubbed in the 2023 Assembly polls in Karnataka, the party increased its vote share by 5.4% compared to its performanc­e in 2018. Prime Minister Narendra Modi had led roadshows, collective­ly adding up to 36 km, in Bengaluru in the run-up to the polls.

However, leaders of Congress, presently leading the government in Karnataka,

said the elections this time could throw a surprise.

‘Modi fatigue’

“Electoral patterns will always be broken some day, and new patterns emerge. We are conšdent that this time, there is a Narendra Modi fatigue and anti-incumbency against BJP MPs in the city. For instance, in the Bengaluru North seat, there are rumblings within the BJP. Our feedback is that we stand a chance to win two seats this time,” said Revenue Minister Krishna Byre Gowda whose Assembly constituen­cy is in north Bengaluru.

Another senior Minister Ramalinga Reddy, whose daughter and former Jayanagar MLA Sowmya Reddy, is the party’s candidate in Bengaluru South seat, said: “People seem to be catching up with the lies and maladminis­tration of Narendra Modi.”

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