Counting of votes begins in Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim, Tripura

The counting for two Lok Sabha seats in Arunachal Pradesh, two in Manipur, two in Meghalaya, one in Mizoram, one in Nagaland, one in Sikkim and two in Tripura started at 8 AM on Thursday. 

A total of 12 candidates are in the fray from two parliamentary seats of Arunachal Pradesh. Arunachal West is one of two Lok Sabha constituencies in the north-eastern state of Arunachal Pradesh – the other being Arunachal East. Arunachal West registered 72.89 percent voter turnout, while the total voter turnout recorded in Arunachal East was 83.52 per cent. The voting for both these seats took place in the first phase on April 11.

The two Lok Sabha seats in Manipur are Inner Manipur and Outer Manipur. A total of 12 candidates are in the fray from Inner Manipur, while eight candidates contested from Outer Manipur. The voting for both these seats took place in the first phase on April 11.

In Meghalaya, the two parliamentary constituencies are Shillong and Tura. Shillong registered 65.47 percent voter turnout in 2019. A total of 6 candidates are in the fray from this seat. Tura registered 81.08 percent voter turnout this time. The voting for both these seats took place in the first phase on April 11.

Six candidates are in the fray for lone Lok Sabha seat in Mizoram which went to polls in the first phase on April 11. Mizoram registered 63.06 percent voter turnout. The total number of electors in the constituency is 787,777 while the total voter turnout was 496,733. Nagaland constituency is the only Lok Sabha seat in Nagaland. The Nagaland Parliamentary constituency comprises of all the 60 Assembly segments. A total of four candidates are in the fray from this seat.

Sikkim Lok Sabha constituency covers the entire area of Sikkim. The voting in the lone constituency of Sikkim was conducted on April 11. A total of 11 candidates are in the fray from this seat.

The two Lok Sabha seats in Tripura are – Tripura East and Tripura West. Tripura East seat is reserved for the scheduled tribe. A total of 10 candidates are in the fray from this seat, including Jitendra Chaudhury (CPM), Maharaj Kumari Pragya Debburman (INC) and Rebati Tripura (BJP). Tripura West registered 83.21 percent voter turnout this time. The total number of electors in the constituency is 1,347,381 while the total voter turnout is 1,121,138. A total of 13 candidates are contesting from this seat.

Key contests

In Arunachal Pradesh, all eyes will be on Union Minister Kiren Rijiju, 47, who is facing stiff challenge from National People Party’s Khyoda Apik, Congress candidate Nabam Tuki, and Jarjum Ete of the JD(S). Tuki is seen as the strongest challenger for Rijiju because he was once the chief minister of Arunachal Pradesh and he enjoys a good support of voters. In Meghalaya’s Tura, ikman G Momin of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is up against Mukul Sangma of the Congress and Agatha Sangma of the National People’s Party (NPP). Agatha Sangma is the daughter of PA Sangma, the former chief minister of Meghalaya. 

Exit polls predictions 

According to India Today-My Axis exit polls prediction, the BJP is expected to sweep Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur and Tripura – holding two seats each. Congress may maintain control over Nagaland and Mizoram seats. It may also win one seat in Meghalaya. The regional parties may win the second seat in Meghalaya and the lone seat in Sikkim. CVoter and TimesNow-VMR have predicted that Congress and NPP will win one seat each in Meghalaya but Jan Ki Baat has predicted that Congress may win both seats. CVoter and TimesNow-VMR have predicted that BJP will win both seats in Tripura. India Today-My Axis exit poll has also predicted that BJP will win both seats in the state. 

The seven-phase Lok Sabha election started on April 11 and concluded on May 19. Counting for all 542 seats is set to take place on Thursday. Voting in Vellore parliamentary constituency of Tamil Nadu was deferred by Election Commission over allegations of misuse of money power. The outcome of this general election 2019 will choose the 17th Lok Sabha and pave way for the formation of next government.


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Punjab Lok Sabha 2019 Results: BJP-SAD Alliance Ahead in 4 Seats, AAP’s Bhagwant Mann Leads in Sangrur

Punjab Lok Sabha Election Results 2019: Akali Dal’s husband and wife duo of Sukhbir Singh Badal and Harsimrat Kaur Badal are now in healthy leads in Firozpur and Bathinda Lok Sabha seats respectively, according to the ECI website. SAD now leads in two seats, while its alliance partner BJP is also leading on two seats, Sunny Deol in Gurdaspur and Som Parkash in Hoshiarpur.

Sunny Deol told News18.com, that he “wont disappoint the people of Gurudaspur. I am happy with the ‘Modi Wave’. He’s shown confidence in me. I will start work with the farmers and work tpwards winning the battle against drugs”.


The SAD-BJP alliance is thus leading on four seats and AAP on one (Bhagwant Mann from Sangrur). Congress is leading on the remaining eight seats. The Aam Aadmi Party has finally opened up a lead in Punjab; state unit president Bhagwant Mann has established a lead in Sangrur Lok Sabha seat, where he is the incumbent MP. After initially trailing Akali Dal’s Prem Singh Chandumajra, Congress’ Manish Tiwari is now leading in Anandpur Sahib. In first leads from Punjab, Preneet Kaur, wife of Chief Minister Amarender Singh, is leading from Patiala Lok Sabha seat. Kaur is up against AAP’s Neena Mittal and Akali Dal’s Surjit Singh Rakhra on the seat. Punjab is one of few states where Congress is going in confident of a convincing win. Punjab CM Captain Amarinder Singh has run a tight ship in the state and the grand old party is hoping for a dominant performance. Also leading is Bollywood star and BJP newcomer Sunny Deol from Gurdaspur seat. Deol is up against Congress’ Sunil Kumar Jakhar and AAP’s Peter Masih.

Early signs seem to be in Congress’ favour; Gurjeet Singh Aujla (from Amritsar), Mohammad Sadique (from Faridkot), Amar Singh (from Fatehgarh Sahib), Santokh Singh Chaudhary (from Jalandhar), Jasbir Singh (from Khadoor Sahib) and Ravneet Singh Bittu (from Ludhiana) are leading. Akali Dal seems to be holding its seats; Sukhbir Singh Badal is leading from Firozpur.

The Lok Sabha election results for all 13 seats in Punjab will soon be clear as counting begins. Several key candidates are in the poll fray in Punjab, namely actor and BJP newcomer Sunny Deol from Gurdaspur, Congress’ Manish Tiwari from Anandpur Sahib, former CM Sukhbir Singh Badal from Ferozepur, AAP state president Bhagwant Mann from Sangrur and AAP rebel Sukhpal Khaira from Bhatinda.

Congress is strong in the state and AAP, which had won four seats in Punjab in 2014 Lok Sabha polls, is on the decline. The AAP has been riddled with factionalism and rebellion, but the party might still have a role to play in the outcome. The BJP-SAD alliance would be hoping to gain advantage from AAP’s losses and give Congress a good fight in the state.

Follow all the live updates of Lok Sabha Election results here: 

Here are ten key developments you need to know ahead of Punjab Lok Sabha election results:

1) Former cricketer, Congress leader, star campaigner and Punjab cabinet minister Navjot Singh SIdhu has been causing his party discomfort. His recent comments on the denial of a ticket to his wife and inaction over desecration of Guru Granth Sahib and police firing on protestors during Akali Dal regime has angered Congress and CM Singh. Captain went on to say the Sidhu has CM aspirations and has criticised the leader for destabilising the party just ahead of polls and results.

2) Exit polls have, however, predicted a comfortable win for Congress in the state. The News18-IPSOS exit poll has given the party an edge with 10 seats. As per the survey, the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) will win two and the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) a single seat.

3) While Congress’ prospects look good, AAP, which had shocked everyone by winning four seats in 2014, is in disarray. Several of its state leaders have quit the party and formed a third front. The party has lost considerable ground ahead of polls and state president Bhagwant Mann faces an uphill battle to restore AAP’s identity in Punjab.

4) AAP rebel Sukhpal Khaira formed his own Punjabi Ekta Party and formed a third front called Punjab Democratic Alliance. The PDA is in alliance with BSP, Left and Lok Insaaf Party and is contesting all 13 seats in the state. Khaira had derided Kejriwal when he quit AAP, calling the party president an arrogant man. The PDA is part of the national Mahagathbandhan and has supported Mayawati as the next PM.

5) The BJP-SAD alliance cannot be disregarded and is still a formidable unit in the state. After a humbling defeat in Assembly polls, the alliance is looking to regain lost ground in the state. SAD has lost a sizable section of voters due to the sacrilege of Guru Granth Sahib and firing on protestors in 2015. The SAD is contesting on 10 seats, while the BJP is contesting on the remaining three in the state.

6) SAD has also been dealing with internal factionalism as well. The infighting in Akali Dal led to the formation of the breakaway Taksali group. The anger among Sikh voters over the desecration of the holy scripture and the subsequent police firing at protesters is still a simmering issue. The Taksali group has formed an alliance with the AAP in the state.

7) In Gurdaspur, actor Sunny Deol is the BJP candidate. Previously, Vinod Khanna had held the seat for BJP. The party has only won the seat with a star candidate. Khanna had first won from Gurdaspur in 1998. He went on to win three times in a row. After Khanna’s death, BJP fielded a local who lost. So BJP is banking on Deol’s star appeal to sail him through.

8) The proposed Kartarpur corridor also remains a topic of discussion in Punjab. The relations between India and Pakistan have been especially fraught since the Pulwama terror attack in February and the retaliatory Balakot air strikes. Pakistan hopes to resume talks with India over the corridor once Lok Sabha election results are declared and a new government is in place. The Kartarpur corridor, once operational, would link Gurudwara Darbar Sahib in Pakistan’s Narowal to Dera Baba Nayak shrine in Gurdaspur district in Punjab. The corridor will provide visa-free access to the shrines in either country for Sikh devotees.

9) Farmer unrest is a lingering issue in Punjab. Recent loan waivers and farmer friendly measures under the current state government have not left much impact on the growing farm distress. Farmers in Punjab today are disillusioned with elections and many dismiss all parties as one and the same.

10) Punjab went to polls in the seventh and final phase of Lok Sabha elections on May 19 and saw a voter turnout of 65.77 %, down from 70.69 % in 2014 elections. Singh, the CM, said the turnout numbers were indicative of people’s resolve to to uphold democratic ethos of the country. Singh also rejected exit poll numbers and said the Congress was going to do better at both state and national level.
(Get detailed and live results of each and every seat in the Lok Sabha elections and state Assembly elections in Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim to know which candidate/party is leading or trailing and to know who has won and who has lost and by what margin. Our one-of-its-kind Election Analytics Centre lets you don a psephologist’s hat and turn into an election expert. Know interesting facts and trivia about the elections and see our informative graphics. Elections = News18)


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All Deve Gowda Family Members Trailing Except 1, BJP Races to Leads in 23 Seats: Quick 6 from Karnataka Election Result

Karnataka Lok Sabha Election Results 2019: The outcome might spell heartbreak for the HD Deve Gowda family with the former PM trailing in Tumkur, his grandson Nikhil Kumaraswamy, son of CM HD Kumaraswamy, trailing in Mandya. The silver lining is his other grandson, Prajwal Revanna, who is leading in Hassan. It’s trouble also for the Kumaraswamy government with the opposition BJP leading in 23 of the 28 seats across the state. The Congress is leading in four and the JD(S) in one. Tejaswi Surya is also leading from Bangalore South. Cracks had already started appearing in the coalition government after exit polls predicted a successful outing for the Narendra Modi and Amit Shah led BJP in the state. JD(S) spokesperson Tanvir Ahmed has threatened “trouble” for the coalition if numbers don’t favour the alliance today while Congress leader Brijesh Kalappa replied in the same coin, saying poll results 2019 are bound to have an impact on the coalition.

Massive BJP support in Karnataka could mean end of JDS-Congress alliance.


Follow all the live updates from the Lok Sabha elections results here: Here’s all you need to know about result and counting day in Karnataka: The BJP is leading in 23 seats, including in Deve Gowda’s constituency of Tumkur, Tejaswi’s Bangalore North, Bangalore South, Uttara Kannada where Ananth Kumar Hegde is contesting as the party’s candidate and Shimoga where Madhu Bangarappa, son of Sarekoppa Bangarappa who served as the chief minister for about two years in the 90s is contesting.

Deve Gowda’s grandson, Prajwal Revanna, is leading in Hassan.

Tejaswi Surya who is making his political debut as a BJP candidate from Bangalore South is currently leading with a margin of over 1 lakh votes. The other candidate who is leading with a margin of over a lakh is B Y Raghavendra, son of former CM Yeddyurappa, who is contesting from Shimoga.

Today, is also an acid test for the ruling JDS-Congress government whose fate rests on winning at least 15 seats so as to ensure stability in their rule.

According to the seat-sharing agreement, the Congress is contesting 21 of 28 Lok Sabha seats in the state, while the JDS is fighting on seven.

As for the BJP, its main challenge is to retain the 17 seats it won in the 2014 general elections given that Karnataka remains the saffron party’s only ray of hope as far as the southern states are concerned.
(Get detailed and live results of each and every seat in the Lok Sabha elections and state Assembly elections in Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim to know which candidate/party is leading or trailing and to know who has won and who has lost and by what margin. Our one-of-its-kind Election Analytics Centre lets you don a psephologist’s hat and turn into an election expert. Know interesting facts and trivia about the elections and see our informative graphics. Elections = News18)


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A Bellwether Seat, North West Delhi May Have Voted for Modi, Not Singer Hans Raj

New Delhi: The Lok Sabha constituency of North West Delhi voted in the sixth phase of the 2019 general election on May 12. As per the News18-IPSOS exit polls survey, Hans Raj Hans, the BJP candidate is likely to win the seat. The survey also predicted 6-7 seats for the BJP in the capital, with the Congress possibly winning one and Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) drawing a blank.

The constituency, reserved for Scheduled Castes, has the highest number of voters in the national capital (23.78 lakh) and the lowest number of candidates fighting election in any Delhi Lok Sabha seat this time.


Here, the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) candidate, Hans Raj Hans, was engaged in an electoral battle with the Congress’ Rajesh Lilothia and Aam Aadmi Party’s (AAP) Gugan Singh, both former MLAs. A bellwether seat, North West Delhi has voted for the winning party in 10 out of 11 Lok Sabha elections since 1977. North West Delhi is predominantly rural and dotted by unauthorised colonies with a sizeable population of Muslims and Dalits. Both the Congress and AAP are looking at these vote blocs, as their rival is hoping for a division of anti-BJP votes.

While sanitation, lack of employment options, unauthorised colonies and law and order are some of the issues plaguing the constituency, the nationalism fervour among most of the voters could mean that the saffron camp has an advantage.

The sitting MP, Udit Raj of the BJP, wasn’t given a ticket this time following which he joined the Congress.

For Hans Raj, who hails from Punjab, the battle would be tough as he was pitted against local politicians and is fighting with an outsider tag. However, many in the constituency believed that Hans would have got the votes not for himself, but for Modi.

Many residents also agree with the BJP’s decision not to field the incumbent MP. They claim that even the ‘Modi wave’ could not have possibly saved Raj from losing.

“Raj is selfish. First, he did not work, and then left the party on being denied a ticket,” says Ved Prakash, a Jat and a retired elderly resident of Mundka.

In the 2014 Lok Sabha election, Raj had won the seat with a margin of 106,802 votes. Raj had bagged 629,860 votes as against AAP’s Rakhi Birla who got the second spot with 523,058 votes. Congress leader Krishna Tirath was pushed to the third spot with just 157,468 votes.

Most of the North West constituency is dominated by members of the Jat community. It also has a sizeable SC population (about 19%), according to various surveys.

The constituency has thousands of migrant workers settled in unauthorised colonies, JJ (jhuggi jhopri) clusters and slums spread across Mangolpuri, Sultanpuri and Sultanpur Majra. While Jats form a large vote bank, middle and upper-middle classes have a presence in areas like Rohini.

Attached to Haryana, most habitats of the area are Haryanvi Jats. The Delhi Metro has connected the border area with the rest of the capital.

“Even Swachh Bharat Abhiyan has not arrived here. We are tired of raising this issue with the leaders, be it the MLA or the councillor,” says Daya, a local resident of Tikri Border.

Om Prakash, 65, a Jat, who claimed to be an ex-servicemen was sitting at the Tikri Bus Depot. The Modi-fan, however, has complaints against the present government. “There is neither cleanliness nor proper roads. There is no water connection to the houses either. We get water from tankers that come from Nangloi once in a week. Residents fight with each other to fill their pitchers,” says Prakash.

An important area of this constituency is Mundka, also referred to by many as the capital of pollution in Delhi.

This is a concern for some, including first-time voters. Shivam, 21, says, “The government allows pollution-causing factories to run.”
(Get detailed and live results of each and every seat in the Lok Sabha elections and state Assembly elections in Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim to know which candidate/party is leading or trailing and to know who has won and who has lost and by what margin. Our one-of-its-kind Election Analytics Centre lets you don a psephologist’s hat and turn into an election expert. Know interesting facts and trivia about the elections and see our informative graphics. Elections = News18)


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Rajasthan Lok Sabha Election Results 2019 Live Updates: Saffron whitewash; BJP leads on all seats

Lok Sabha Election Result 2019: Counting for 25 seats Lok Sabha seats is underway in Rajasthan. Election trends show BJP establishing a massive lead in all seats of the state. In 2014 Lok Sabha Election results, the Bharatiya Janata Party won all the seats. a feat it seems to be repeating in 2019. In the first phase of polling held on April 29 for 13 seats, 68.22 per cent voting was recorded while in the second phase on May 6, 63.78 per cent voting was registered on 12 seats.

Lok Sabha election results 2019: Congress vs BJP in Rajasthan as trends and winners pour in

Live TV

Stay tuned with Zee News for the latest updates as poll results pour in from Rajasthan: 

* “Once again people have reposed their confidence in BJP and Modi in a big way. The trends indicate unambiguously that grammar of politics is under transformation,” says BJP’s vice president Vinay Sahasrabudhe.

* The Parliamentary Board of BJP will meet today evening. PM Modi is likely to address the party workers here at 5.30 pm.

* Lok Sabha Election Results 2019: Woke up to ModiAaRahaHai, tweets Rajyavardhan Rathore

*

* “There’s no alternative to this new politics. The entire credit goes to team captain,” says BJP’s Rajyavardhan Rathore. He is leading from Jaipur Rural.

* BJP has allied with Hanuman Beniwal’s Rashtriya Loktantrik Party (RLP) in a bid to woo the Jat community in the state. Beniwal is leading from Nagaur.

* Bharatiya Janata Party leading on 24 seats, Rashtriya Loktantrik Party on one.

* EC Trends At 9:30 – Leading Candidates (Evm Votes)

Ajmer: Bhagirath Chaudhary, Bharatiya Janata Party

Alwar: Balak Nath, Bharatiya Janata Party

Banswara: Kanakmal Katara, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Barmer: Kailash Choudhary, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Bharatpur: Abhijeet Kumar Jatav, Congress 

Bhilwara: Subhash Chandra Baheria, Bharatiya Janata Party

Bikaner: Arjun Ram Meghwal, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Chittorgarh: Chandra Prakash Joshi, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Churu: Rahul Kaswan, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Dausa: Jaskaur Meena, Bharatiya Janata Party

Ganganagar: Nihal Chand, Bharatiya Janata Party

Jaipur:  Ramcharan Bohra, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Jaipur Rural: Col. Rajyavardhan Rathore, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Jalore:  Devaji Patel, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Jhalawar-baran: Dushyant Singh, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Jhunjhunu: Narendra Kumar, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Jodhpur: Gajendra Singh Shekhawat, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Karauli-dholpur: Manoj Rajoria, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Kota: Om Birla, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Nagaur: Hanuman Beniwal, Rashtriya Loktantrik Party 

Pali: PP Chaudhary, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Rajsamand: Diya Kumari, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Sikar: Sumedhanand Saraswati, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Tonk-sawai Madhopur: Sukhbir Singh Jaunapuria, Bharatiya Janata Party 

Udaipur: Arjunlal Meena, Bharatiya Janata Party 

* Official EC trends show BJP leading from 3 seats. 

* BJP’s Rajyavardhan Rathore leading from Jaipur Rural. He’s pitted against Congress candidate Krishna Poonia.

* BJP now leading on 16 seats, Congress on one

* Early trends show BJP leading in 17 seats, Congress on one

* Congress takes early lead, ahead in one seat in Rajasthan

Lok Sabha Election Result 2019: Counting begins at 8 am in Rajasthan

* Read – Lok Sabha Election Result 2019: Congress vs BJP verdict in Rajasthan today

* Exit polls suggest a massive win for the BJP in Lok Sabha election result 2019 from Rajasthan. Republic-CVoter has predicted 22 seats out of 25 for NDA and three seats for UPA while ABP-CSDS says BJP is likely to win 19 seats in Rajasthan and Congress may get the remaining six seats. News 18-IPSOS has also predicted 22-23 seats for the saffron party and 2-3 seats for Congress. India TV-CNX says BJP will win 21 seats while Congress will win four. Aaj Tak-Axis says BJP will win with 23 to 25 seats while just two seats are likely to go to Congress.

* The electoral process was largely peaceful baring a few incidents of violence on the second day of polling in the state. Four places saw poll boycott over demands on development but voters were later persuaded to vote. Two incidents of damaging ballot units were reported in Barmer and Ajmer. Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) supporters along with few members of Kalbi community allegedly pelted stones at the vehicle of the Congress’ Jalore candidate, Ratan Dewasi.

* Voting for the all 25 seats took place in two phases – on April 29 (fourth phase) and May 6 (fifth phase). The state witnessed a total of 66.07 per cent polling with 3,22,53,046 persons (out of 4,88,19,246 registered voters) casting their votes. Ganganagar (SC) constituency recorded the highest voter turnout of 74.39 per cent, followed by Barmer with 73.12 per cent and Banswara (ST) with 72.81 per cent.


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Setback for Oppn Day Before Election Results as Poll Panel Refuses Change in Process of Counting Votes

New Delhi: In a major setback to the Opposition just a day before results of the Lok Sabha elections are announced, the Election Commission has turned down their demand to tally the VVPAT (Voter Verified Paper Audit Trail) slips before the Electronic Voting Machines (EVMs).

A delegation comprising representatives of opposition parties had asked the commission to conduct the VVPAT verification process before the counting of votes begins. They also demanded that if any discrepancy is found during VVPAT verification, 100 per cent counting of the paper slips of VVPATs of all polling stations of that particular Assembly segment should be done and compared with the EVM results.


The commission had then asked for time to consider the issue but after a meeting on Wednesday, the demand was rejected. The EC, which has been facing criticism from the Opposition over free and fair conduct of polls, had on Wednesday dismissed allegations that the voting machines used in the Lok Sabha election were being switched with fresh ones ahead of counting of votes on May 23. The EC also set up a 24-hour control room to monitor complaints relating to EVMs. “The complaints related to storage issues at strong-rooms, security of strong-rooms, permissions to candidates to post their agents at strong-rooms, CCTV monitoring, movement of any EVMs, and any complaints during counting related to EVMs can be informed at control room, number is 011-23052123 (with 5 hunting lines),” it said in a statement.

The issue of tallying VVPAT slips rose when the Opposition contended after the 2017 assembly polls in Uttar Pradesh that voting machines were tampered to favour the BJP.

As the issue went to the Supreme Court, it asked the Election Commission to increase random matching of VVPAT slips with EVMs from one to five polling booths per assembly segment in Lok Sabha polls.
(Get detailed and live results of each and every seat in the Lok Sabha elections and state Assembly elections in Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim to know which candidate/party is leading or trailing and to know who has won and who has lost and by what margin. Our one-of-its-kind Election Analytics Centre lets you don a psephologist’s hat and turn into an election expert. Know interesting facts and trivia about the elections and see our informative graphics. Elections = News18)


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With Exit Polls Predicting Big Win for BJP in Rajasthan, Will Congress Finally Deliver in Churu?

Despite Congress’ recent gains in Rajasthan, most Lok Sabha exit polls on May 19 predicted a clean sweep for the BJP in Rajasthan, with some exit polls handing them all 25 seats in the state.

The News18-IPSOS exit poll said the BJP is set to get 22 to 23 seats in the desert state, while the Today’s Chanakya exit poll predicted all 25 seats to fall in BJP’s kitty.


If the exit poll numbers turn out to be true, Rajasthan would represent a disappointing performance for the Congress, which had formed the government in the state after winning Assembly elections in December last year. The state saw several pitched battles in various constituencies, with the BJP primarily campaigning in the name of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a stable government and national security, and the Congress dragging the attention to local issues and failures of the BJP at the centre. Among interesting seats in the fray, Churu threw up a challenge for the Congress as the party had not won the Lok Sabha seat in two decades. Churu, part of the Shekhawati belt in Northern Rajasthan that also comprises neighbouring Sikar and Jhunjhunu districts, has a sizeable Muslim population of 12.24 per cent. The 2011 Census places Muslim population in Churu and Ratannagar, two cities in the district, at 43.33 and 40.88 per cent respectively. Four other towns have a Muslim population 30 per cent. Additionally, Churu district’s Dalit population, 22.1 per cent, is one of the highest in all the districts in Rajasthan. The Northern region of the state also has a considerable Jat population.

Despite such favourable social demographics, Congress has failed to win the Churu Lok Sabha seat in 20 years. The gateway to the Thar has been held by the Bharatiya Janata Party since 1999; in fact the seat has been held by one family.

A Jat leader from the BJP, Ram Singh Kaswan, was elected from the constituency thrice — 1999, 2004 and 2009. In 2014, with the ‘Modi wave’ in his sails, Kaswan’s son Rahul Kaswan was elected to Parliament from the seat. The BJP has once again fielded him from Churu seat, which went to polls on May 6 — the fifth phase of the Lok Sabha elections — seeking re-election against Congress’ Rafique Mandelia, the only Muslim candidate from the two major national parties in the desert state.

Congress’ subpar performance in Churu becomes starker if you look at the Assembly elections in the state since 1999. The Churu parliamentary constituency comprises eight Assembly segments — Sadulpur, Taranagar, Sardarshahar, Churu, Ratangarh, Sujangarh, Nohar and Bhadra. In 2003 Assembly polls, Congress won three seats of the total eight Assembly segments in Churu; in 2008, it won only two. Five years later, the grand old party was reduced to a single Assembly seat in the region.

The reasons for the Congress’ failure to organise support in Churu, however, go further back. According to Narayan Bareth, former BBC journalist and political analyst, prominent farmer leaders Daulatram Saran and Kumbharam Arya had considerable influence in Churu, a region that has been an epicenter of various farmer protests. “Saran and Arya were anti-Congress and they influenced Jats in the rural belt, pushing them away from Congress,” Bareth said. “In Urban areas, Jan Sangh — BJP’s precursor — had influence.”

While Saran and Arya became influential, Congress too did not assert itself to strengthen its ideology and organization in the region, Bareth said. “Their existence (in Churu) was ad hoc,” he added.

On one hand, the Congress failed to put down roots in Churu, on the other, the BJP worked consistently to assimilate support. The saffron party installed Hari Shankar Bhabhra, an MLA from Ratangarh in Churu, as Deputy Chief Minister of Rajasthan in 1994. With his elevation, a sizable section of Brahmin voters in the region sided with the BJP. Rajendra Rathore, a six-time Legislator from Churu Assembly seat, brought the influential Rajputs in BJP’s kitty. And Ram Singh Kaswan, three-time Member of Parliament from Churu, wooed the Jats for the party. As Bareth puts it, the BJP planned it well.

Bhanwarlal Meghwal, a veteran Congress leader from the region and five-time MLA from Sujangarh since 1980, has different reasoning for Congress’ weak showing in Churu. For Meghwal, who serves as the Minister for Social Justice and Empowerment in the current Ashok Gehlot government in the state, it is all down to the candidate.

“Look, Congress’ Narendra Budania was MP for three terms — two of them consecutively — from Churu. In 1999, after serving two back-to-back terms as a parliamentarian, he couldn’t win and BJP’s Ram Singh Kaswan took over,” Meghwal reasoned. “Then, in 2004 Congress fielded Balram Jakhar, but the opposition labeled him as an outsider and he could not get the votes. In 2009, Rafique Mandelia (who is contesting this time as well) was fielded. He actually lost by a very small margin of around 12,000 votes. Then in 2014, Congress fielded a weak candidate (Pratap Singh),” Meghwal said.

Pratap Singh, Congress’ 2014 Lok Sabha candidate from Churu, finished third with a vote share of 15.63 per cent, behind BJP’s Kaswan (52.63%) and BSP’s Abhinesh Maharshi (26.59%).

Mandelia, the Congress candidate in Churu this election, said the party did not put its faith in one candidate in Lok Sabha elections and hence was unsuccessful in the seat for 20 years. “The main reason is that the party kept changing its Churu candidate after losing. It has changed in every Lok Sabha election since 1999. I contested in 2009 and lost by a very small margin, but didn’t get a ticket in 2014,” Mandelia said. This, according to him, weakened five years’ worth of work in the field.

In state polls held in December last year, however, the grand old party’s fortunes in Churu turned. Congress went from winning one Assembly segment in Churu Lok Sabha constituency in 2013 to five in 2018. The results were in line with the massive anti-incumbency against the Vasundhara Raje government in the state. “The farmer movement in neighboring Sikar also impacted polling in Churu. Churu’s farmers had participated in the protests,” Bareth said.

Congress, on the back of its 2018 state election showing in Churu Assembly segments, is confident of its chances in the region and is hoping for the Schedule Caste and minority votes to consolidate in its favour. “Mandelia is in a good position this time,” Meghwal said. “I think it is a close contest.”

Churu, however, remains a big challenge for Congress and now looks increasingly insurmountable in light of exit poll predictions. But, Mandelia believed all communities in Churu would vote for him. The Congress cadre is strong this time as well, he said. From party leaders to party workers, all have worked in unison. The Assembly polls result should also impact the mood of voters, he believes. “For sure, things will be different,” Mandelia said. “The people supported me fully in 2009 too. I feel, this time, Churu belongs to Congress.” ?
(Get detailed and live results of each and every seat in the Lok Sabha elections and state Assembly elections in Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim to know which candidate/party is leading or trailing and to know who has won and who has lost and by what margin. Our one-of-its-kind Election Analytics Centre lets you don a psephologist’s hat and turn into an election expert. Know interesting facts and trivia about the elections and see our informative graphics. Elections = News18)


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Twitter Records 5.6 Lakh Tweets in 24-Hour Span Related to Lok Sabha Election Exit Polls

New Delhi: As majority of exit polls predicted victory for the BJP-led NDA at the Centre, Twitter recorded nearly 5.6 lakh tweets related to exit polls in 24 hours, the company said on Tuesday.

“Twitter saw 560K Tweets talking about the Exit Polls in 24 hours, between 6:30pm on Sunday 19th until 6:30pm on Monday 20th May, across news commentators, opinion makers and Indian citizens,” the micro-blogging platform said.


Twitter recorded 45.6 million tweets on its platform during a one-month period in the run-up to the polls, registering 1.2 million tweets on the first day of voting. The Narendra Modi-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) is all set to return to power winning 287 seats in Lok Sabha elections, but the Bharatiya Janata Party may fall short of half-way mark on its own as it is expected to win 236 seats, according to the IANS-CVoter exit poll. The IANS-VOTER prediction is based on a sample size of around 5 lakh across the country.

The results of the seven-phase general elections would be declared on May 23.

(Get detailed and live results of each and every seat in the Lok Sabha elections and state Assembly elections in Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim to know which candidate/party is leading or trailing and to know who has won and who has lost and by what margin. Our one-of-its-kind Election Analytics Centre lets you don a psephologist’s hat and turn into an election expert. Know interesting facts and trivia about the elections and see our informative graphics. Elections = News18)


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Lok Sabha Election Results 2019: What is NDA and a Look at All the Parties that Form the Alliance

The Lok Sabha Election Results will be out on Wednesday, drawing a curtain on the world’s largest democratic exercise conducted in seven phases from April 11 and May 19. Although exit polls have already suggested a big win for the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA), the opposition is hoping the ruling dispensation falls short of the magic number so that it can cobble up an alliance. Here is a look at three parties which left the NDA, joined the alliance or share an uneasy relationship with the BJP

RSLP


Upendra Kushwaha-led Rashtriya Lok Samta Party (RLSP) pulled out of the NDA in December 2018 after weeks of fuming over the BJP’s seat-sharing deal with Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar. The party joined the Congress-led UPA after accusing the BJP of “arrogance” for preferring to keep Nitish Kumar happy at the expense of smaller allies. AIADMK The party, which ironically played a key role in the collapse of the Atal Bihari Vajpayee-led NDA government within a year of its coming to power in 1998, officially forged an alliance in February this year with the BJP for the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, following a seat sharing arrangement.

Shiv Sena

The Shiv Sena allied with the BJP for the Lok Sabha elections in January 2019 after the two parties contested the 2014 Maharashtra polls separately. Despite being in alliance at the Centre and in Maharashtra, the two parties share an uneasy relationship due to differences that cropped up in the wake of the 2014 polls. In fact, following the BJP’s defeat in Assembly elections in five states last year, the Shiv Sena had said the outcome was a clear introspection call for the ruling party.

(Get detailed and live results of each and every seat in the Lok Sabha elections and state Assembly elections in Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim to know which candidate/party is leading or trailing and to know who has won and who has lost and by what margin. Our one-of-its-kind Election Analytics Centre lets you don a psephologist’s hat and turn into an election expert. Know interesting facts and trivia about the elections and see our informative graphics. Elections = News18)


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‘Your Demand for Special Assembly Session Based on Imaginary Facts’: Kamal Nath Slams Leader of Oppn

Bhopal: Hours after accusing the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of engaging in horse trading to topple his government, Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Kamal Nath shot a letter to Leader of Opposition Gopal Bhargava claiming that perhaps the latter wasn’t aware of ground realities of the government’s schemes in the state.

Putting the stability of the Congress government under a cloud, Bhargava had on Monday urged Governor Anandiben Patel to convene a special session of the Assembly to discuss ‘urgent issues of public welfare’ as the same had been stopped by the Congress government.


Nath accused Bhargava of writing to the governor on the basis of estimates and imagination. Stating that he was always available for addressing any doubt over governance-related issues, the chief minister said the Congress was ever-ready to debate on issues of public interest. On Tuesday evening, Nath wrote to Bhargava that his government had immediately undertaken public welfare measures after assuming office on Dec 17, 2018, and continued them till March 10, 2019, when the Model Code of Conduct came into effect. In the two-and-a-half months before imposition of poll code, the welfare schemes undertaken by the Congress dispensation included farm loan waivers. It has written off farm loans of 21 lakh farmers despite inheriting an empty coffer from the BJP government.

“We continued offering bonus on wheat and payments under the Bhavantar yojana,” said Nath, while alleging the saffron camp of trying to confuse farmers over wheat and gram procurements and payments.

Stating that Sambal and other schemes have also continued unhindered all this while, Nath offered the amount of funds sanctioned under the various programmes.

The beneficiaries in Gadhakota (Bhargava’s hometown) and Rehli (constituency presented by Bhargava) too have befitted from the schemes, Nath told the LOP.

He also mentioned the slashing of electricity bills by half under the Sambal scheme and claimed sufficient budget was allocated for availability of water. Law and order is also under control, he wrote further.

Meanwhile, Bhargava accused Nath of offering a superficial reply on the issues brought to light by him.

Underlining parliamentary proceedings as a strong medium to address public issues, the LOP urged Nath not to use political spectacles to see his demand for a special assembly session and instead take it as a constructive and pious initiative to raise and solve public issues.

He urged Nath to take an immediate decision in public interest.

BJP state president Rakesh Singh said Bhargava had only urged the Governor for an assembly session to discuss public issues and did not mention about floor test.

“The Congress, apprehensive of the fate of its government, misinterpreted his views and levelled baseless allegations,” Singh said.
(Get detailed and live results of each and every seat in the Lok Sabha elections and state Assembly elections in Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, Arunachal Pradesh and Sikkim to know which candidate/party is leading or trailing and to know who has won and who has lost and by what margin. Our one-of-its-kind Election Analytics Centre lets you don a psephologist’s hat and turn into an election expert. Know interesting facts and trivia about the elections and see our informative graphics. Elections = News18)


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