The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) scored an emphatic victory in all the three municipal corporations in Delhi, despite allegations of corruption and dismal performance, as well as strong anti-incumbency.
Of the 270 seats in the east, south and north municipalities, the BJP won 181 — the highest since the civic body was trifurcated in 2012. In the election that year, the BJP had won 138 seats of the 272 that went to polls.
The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), which for the first time contested all the seats, finished second with 48. The Congress, which has suffered massive electoral losses across the country since the 2014 general election, was further decimated. Its tally came down to 30 seats, from 77.
There are at least two ways in which the election results can be inferred. First, Delhi voters ignored the dismal performance of sitting councillors despite a record outbreak of dengue and chikungunya in the national capital last year. People voted for the BJP ostensibly because of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s growing popularity and party president Amit Shah’s personal handling of the elections.
Shah repeated the Gujarat style in Delhi by replacing all the sitting councillors and quelled internal feuds among leaders. The BJP extensively used its star campaigners and focused on the city’s large migrant population.
“Much credit goes to the BJP’s senior leadership,” said Delhi Congress chief Ajay Maken after the results. The Congress had failed to get its seniors, including former Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit, to canvass.

“Kejriwal was only criticising Modi. It is time the AAP does some introspection,” said Delhi BJP chief Manoj Tiwari.
It is believed that the AAP’s recent failure to capture Punjab and Goa in Assembly elections has changed peoples’ perception about the party as a strong alternative to the BJP and Congress.
Though the AAP’s policies to regulate school fees and reduce power rates helped it to win 48 seats, promises such as waiving property tax didn’t cut much ice.

Workers put up a hoarding outside Delhi BJP headquarters on Wednesday. Photo: PTI
The biggest challenge for the AAP would be to keep its flock together and avoid early Assembly elections.
AAP legislator from Bawana Ved Parkash, who recently quit the party to join the BJP, claimed 35 legislators are ready to switch to the BJP. Besides, 21 AAP members of legislative assembly are facing a disqualification threat for allegedly violating ‘office of profit rules’.
The victory would enthuse the BJP to keep up its winning trajectory for the next Assembly elections in Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh.