The Borneo Post

India’s ruling party set to lose key state

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NEW DELHI: India’s ruling party looked set to lose power in at least one of three traditiona­l stronghold states releasing election results yesterday, in a blow to Prime Minister Narendra Modi ahead of national polls in 2019.

Early election results in the central state of Chhattisga­rh indicated the main opposition Congress party of Rahul Gandhi would win 59 seats compared to just 11 for Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party.

The Hindu nationalis­t BJP has ruled Chhattisga­rh for the past 15 years.

The race looked closer in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh, two other traditiona­l stronghold­s of Modi’s BJP that were also counting votes following elections in the states this month and last.

In central Madhya Pradesh, home to 73 million people, early results put the BJP neck-and-neck with Congress, as observers said it was too early to call the result either way.

Similarly in the western desert state of Rajasthan — ruled by the BJP’s Vasundhara Raje, a maharani or princess — Modi’s party was predicted to win 74 seats compared to 97 for Congress.

Television footage showed Congress workers bursting firecracke­rs and dancing at regional party offices in both states.

Yesterday’s results are being seen as a referendum on 68-yearold Modi, who will be seeking a second term in the office in national elections due by May 2019.

Defeats in Chhattisga­rh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan would dent his invincible image and put the party on the back foot.

It would also strengthen 48year- old Gandhi — scion of the Gandhi-Nehru dynasty — with Congress having lost more than a dozen states to the BJP since Modi became prime minister in 2014.

The BJP currently rules 19 out of 29 Indian states either outright or in alliance with local parties. Congress rules just two states, including one in alliance with a regional partner.

Political commentato­rs have linked the BJP’s apparent dwindling support to growing rural distress and unemployme­nt rates in the country.

Nearly 55 per cent of India’s 1.25 billion population is directly or indirectly dependent on agricultur­e, and farmers form an important voting bloc for parties.

In two other states also releasing results yesterday, Telangana in the south and remote Mizoram in the northeast, regional parties looked to be leading.

Gandhi’s Congress is leading efforts to stitch a larger alliance of regional parties to take on the BJP next year, convening a meeting to this effect on Monday in Delhi. — AFP

 ??  ?? India’s Congress party supporters celebrate outside the party headquarte­rs in New Delhi as vote counting in five Indian states began. — AFP photo
India’s Congress party supporters celebrate outside the party headquarte­rs in New Delhi as vote counting in five Indian states began. — AFP photo

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