Blow to BJP ahead of 2019 Lok Sabha polls (News Analysis)

IANS  |  New Delhi 

The results in the Hindi heartland states of Madhya Pradesh, and came as a major shock for the (BJP), which has won all the major states barring Delhi, Bihar, and in elections held after the sweeping 2014 victory.

In Rajasthan, where opinion polls had written off the BJP, and put in extra efforts, besides on the hardcore image of Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, to take the to the Congress, but still lost.

The BJP, however, managed to open its account in Mizoram, where the Mizo (MNF) ousted the ruling partty, but saw its numbers fall from five to one in Telangana, where the swept the polls.

The results of these five states, which were dubbed the semifinals ahead of the next in April-May 2019, could be a factor in the between the BJP-led and the Congress-led opposition.

The major issues raked up by Congress, specially the farm loan waiver amid an agrarian crisis across the country, employment and anger among upper caste, seems to have worked in its favour and could haunt the ruling dispensation if remedial measures are not taken.

The BJP is not ready, however, to accept the defeat as a referendum on the

said issues in state elections are entirely different. The BJP won Madhya Pradesh, and in 2003 but lost the elections next year, he pointed out.

The in 2019, he added, would be fought around Modi's performance, with people voting for a tried and tested leadership instead of a non-ideological opposition coalition which is bound to collapse sooner than later.

The Congress, which had a disastrous performance in the 2014 elections and suffered successive defeats in various Assembly elections, smiled for the first time after defeating the BJP in a direct contest in the three crucial states in

Party Rahul Gandhi, who campaigned vigorously, said the Assembly election results were a referendum on Narendra Modi's non-performance on issues of unemployment, agrarian distress, corruption and negating the ill-effects of demonetisation.

Out of total 678 Assembly seats in the five states in the current round of elections, the has won close to 300 seats while the BJP managed to win over 200 seats. In the 2013 Assembly polls, the BJP had won 377 seats in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh and while the had won only 122 seats in these states.

In the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, the BJP had won 62 out of total 83 Lok Sabha constituencies of Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh, Telangana and Now the three Hindi heartland states will be ruled by Congress and the its impact would definitely be felt in the 2019 Lok Sabha polls.

In the first instance of a party getting majority on its own in 30 years, BJP won 282 seats in Lok Sabha in 2014. The BJP-led NDA had won 336 seats out of 543.

Its allies include the Shiv Sena, which has been on the war path for a while. Similarly, N. Chandrababu Naidu's and Upendra Kushwaha's (RLSP) have walked out of the NDA.

Since 2014, BJP has managed to retain just six Lok Sabha seats in by-polls. It won Lakhimpur in Assam, Shahdol in Madhya Pradesh, Beed and Palghar in Maharashtra, in and Shimoga in

In the last four years, the party has lost Lok Sabha by polls in Ratlam in Madhya Pradesh, Gurdaspur in Punjab, Alwar and Ajmer in Rajasthan, Kairana, Phulpur and Gorakhpur in Uttar Pradesh, Bhandara-Gondiya in and Bellary and Mandya constituencies in

The BJP, however, maintained the verdict was a mandate against the state governments and not against the

"The results in five states clearly show there is no uniform trend across the country and local factors determined the outcome in each state. This is evident from the fact that even Congress suffered massive defeats in and Telangana.

"Despite 15 years of anti-incumbancy in Madhya Pradesh, the BJP has put up a fight in and has a major comeback in Rajasthan. The BJP's and Congress' vote share in both the states in Mandhya Pradesh and Rajasthan is almost tied which clearly show that the BJP has the potential to comeback with big victories in 2019 Lok Sabha polls," BJP Spokeperson G.told IANS.

He also said whenever Congress has tied up with a regional party, it cost them votes.

(Brajendra Nath Singh can be contacted at brajendra.n@ians.in)

--IANS

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First Published: Wed, December 12 2018. 10:02 IST