5 reasons
why BJP could lose Delhi assembly polls
What exactly did go wrong in the
BJP’s calculation? Here are five reasons why BJP will find it hard to get
majority in the Delhi assembly elections:
Kiran Bedi as CM face
Since the day party chief Amit Shah
declared her as the chief ministerial candidate, the state unit has been
witnessing discontent within. Though many senior party leaders in Delhi have
dismissed talk of resentment against the decision, the lack of involvement
among the workers and party is visible. In fact, on January 20 BJP workers had
protested outside the BJP Delhi office on Pandit Pant Marg questioning the
decision and openly dismissing the nomination of a ‘parachute CM’.
In addition to that, the former IPS
officer despite being a popular personality in the city, has barely managed to
pull any crowd at her rallies. A close aide to party president Amit Shah
revealed that he is worried about the lack of support that Bedi is receiving
from the people of Delhi. Political commentators too are uncertain whether
naming Bedi as CM candidate is a master stroke by the BJP or their biggest
blunder.
Unfair ticket distribution
If naming Bedi as the CM candidate
wasn’t bad enough, the situation between the party leaders and workers got
worse with the party inviting and encouraging former Congress and AAP leaders
to contest instead of their own.
East Delhi is facing the worst
outrage with former Congress MP Krishna Tirath, former AAP MLAs Vinod Kumar
Binny and MS Dhir and Okhla candidate Brahma Singh Bidhuri, who defected from
the Bahujan Samaj Party.
“We have so many local leaders who
have been relentlessly working for the party for decades. Residents here love
them and would definitely support them. Then what is the point to getting
defected candidates of other parties,” a BJP district president from East
Delhi, said.
Saffron self-goal
The activities of the Hindutva
forces, so far seen as the secret ally of the BJP, have made it progressively
worse for the party since it came to power last year. Be it Union Minister
Sadhvi Niranjan Jyoti’s controversial comment “Ramzada or Haramzada” or BJP MP
from Uttar Pradesh Sakshi Maharaj’s accusations about madarsas teaching
terrorism to a number of communal comments by the RSS leaders. All of this is
likely to have alienated urban population of Delhi in addition to causing loss
in terms of minority votes, including 12 percent Muslim and 2 percent Christian
votes.
Though, Prime Minister Narendra
Modi may have on several occasions discouraged the communal commentary and
the party too has issued show cause notices to such leaders in the party, but
the damage done will be hard to undo. “Most of the youth, between the age group
of 18 and 30 have a secular mindset and are likely to be alienated from
supporting a party with such a primitive mindset,” UK-based Indian
psychologist, Aparna Kapoor, said.
AAP workforce
To make matters worse for the BJP,
the Aam Aadmi Party cadre has a two-month head start over the BJP when it comes
to campaigning at the ground level. While AAP declared most of its candidates
by early December last year, their campaigning started way back in November. As
a matter of fact, BJP declared its candidates a week ago, not even a month
before the elections, giving them very little time for door-to-door
campaigning.
In addition to that, the AAP has
also mobilised workers from other states. Thousands of AAP members have come to
Delhi from Bangalore, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Punjab and Haryana to assist the party
in the Delhi elections. Their innovative campaigning style is not only getting
the attention of the public but also diminishing the Modi wave.
Opinion polls favouring AAP
Though the ABP-Nielsen opinion
poll in November last year gave BJP a clear majority estimating that the
party would win 46 seats out of 70 in the upcoming assembly elections, a lot
seems to have changed since then. A more recent pre-poll survey, conducted by Hindustan
Times and C Fore Survey revealed that AAP may have caught up in the rat
race. According to the survey, AAP’s vote share has gone up by 9 percent from
24.9 percent in the 2013 assembly elections; the party is estimated to get 33.9
percent in the upcoming one.
Meanwhile, the BJP has only managed
to raise their vote share by 5 percent bringing them from 33 percent in 2013 to
38 percent in 2015. Though, it may still be higher than AAP’s vote share, but a
lot could change in the next week or so.
The interesting aspect to take into
account is that in both the opinion polls, AAP Chief Arvind Kejriwal has
stood out to be the city’s favourite among all chief minister candidates. In
the ABP-Nielsen opinion poll, 39 percent of Delhi’s electorate wanted AAP chief Arvind
Kejriwal as the next chief minister, highest amongst his competitors.
Similarly, the C Fore Survey also revealed that 43 percent of Delhiites want
Kejriwal as their next CM, while 39 percent want Bedi and 12 percent want the
Congress candidate Ajay Maken.
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