Khaleej Times

BJP has a lot at stake in first phase of Lok Sabha polls

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delhi — As voters cast their ballot in the first phase of Lok Sabha polls for 91 seats across 18 states and two union territorie­s, it is the Bharatiya Janata Party that has a lot at stake. It had won 32 of these seats in 2014.

The Congress fared poorly in the last parliament­ary elections and could win only seven of these 91 seats. Five of its seats came from the North-East where the BJP has considerab­ly consolidat­ed its position in the last five years.

The battle is tough for the BJP in Uttar Pradesh, where it had won all the eight seats that went to the polls on Thursday. This time, the party faces challenge from the coalition of Samajwadi Party, Bahujan Samaj Party and Rashtriya Lok Dal. Analysts say it will be difficult for the BJP to repeat its 2014 performanc­e.

In Uttarakhan­d, where BJP had won all the five seats in 2014, the party faces strong candidates from Congress, including former Chief Minister Harish Rawat and Manish Khanduri, son of former Union Minister Major General Khanduri.

The “nationalis­m” narrative of the BJP seems to be a strong factor in the hills which has a large population of ex-servicemen and those serving in the uniformed forces.

The BJP faces a stronger challenge in Assam with its stand on the Citizenshi­p Amendment Bill which has been opposed by its allies. The Asom Gana Parishad, its ally in Assam, is opposed to the Bill which finds a mention in the BJP B.C. manifesto. In Bihar, BJP had won three of the four seats going to the polls and is now contesting one.

The BJP and its ally Shiv Sena had in 2014 won all the seven seats going to polls in the first phase in Maharashtr­a, but the BJP later lost one seat.

The first phase election would decode the fate of six Union Ministers — Nitin Gadkari (Nagpur), Hansraj Ahir (Chandrapur), General V.K. Singh (Ghaziabad), Mahesh Sharma (Gautam Buddha Nagar), Satyapal Singh (Baghpat) and Kiren Rijiju (Arunachal West).

As it tries to retain its seats, BJP will also be seeking to gain in two seats each in West Bengal, Manipur and Tripura.

The Congress is hopeful of scaling up its numbers from seven particular from Uttar Pradesh, Telangana, Assam and Uttarakhan­d. The BJP and Congress are not seen as major players in Andhra Pradesh, which is undergoing both Lok Sabha and Assembly elections. —

Nationalis­m is a factor. The people continue to have faith in Modiji. Various govt programmes have taken off, making an impact among communitie­s seen to be loyal to other parties

Bizay Sonkar Shastri, BJP spokespers­on

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