Baltimore Sun

Exit polls indicate Modi winning reelection in India

- By Joanna Slater

NEW DELHI — Prime Minister Narendra Modi appeared poised to win reelection in the world’s largest democracy, according to exit polls released after voting ended Sunday in India’s marathon national election.

Official results will be released Thursday. Exit polls in this nation of more than 1.3 billion people have a patchy record: Surveys have both underestim­ated and overestima­ted the strength of the winning party in the past.

But Sunday’s exit polls suggested that Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party and its allies would win a majority of seats in the lower house of Parliament.

Modi, the most popular and polarizing politician in India, ran a campaign highlighti­ng his tough stance on national security and making forthright appeals to patriotism.

Over the past five years, the Modi government has instituted a handful of economic initiative­s, rolled out schemes to assist poor Indians and launched a nationwide cleanlines­s drive. But it failed to deliver on its core promise to create jobs: The unemployme­nt rate surged last year to a 45-year high.

The exit polls seemed to indicate that Modi’s campaign strategy had paid dividends. Seven polls suggested that the BJP and its allies would garner between 287 and 340 seats, well above the 272-seat threshold for a parliament­ary majority.

Two exit polls predicted that Modi’s coalition would fall short of that mark.

The polls showed main opposition Congress party and its allies winning between 70 and 164 seats. Observers expected that opposition parties would try to cobble together a coalition of their own if Modi’s party stumbled.

Some members of the opposition parties emphasized the unreliabil­ity of exit polls and the potential for surprises when results are announced Thursday.

Sunday was the seventh and final polling day in an election with nearly 900 million eligible voters that began April 11. The battle was bruising, as election authoritie­s repeatedly stepped in to discipline candidates for violating rules on poll rhetoric.

The overall voter turnout was 66 percent, the same as in the 2014 national poll. In that election, Modi appealed to the aspiration­s of voters, promising developmen­t for all and the advent of “achhe din,” or good days.

The current campaign was less about hope than fear: Modi projected himself as the only leader who could ensure the nation’s security, pointing to the airstrikes he ordered in February on an alleged militant training camp inside Pakistan.

Meanwhile, senior BJP leaders engaged in antiMuslim rhetoric. Amit Shah, the party’s president, called Muslim migrants who enter the country illegally “termites.” Yogi Adityanath, the radical Hindu priest who leads country’s largest state, said opposition parties were infected with a “green virus” (green is a color traditiona­lly associated with Islam).

The election was largely peaceful until its final days. In West Bengal, one of the most populous states in the country, the BJP was engaged in a bitter contest for votes with the local party that governs the state, the Trinamool Congress.

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