Assam looks set to give Himanta Biswa Sarma a second term as Chief Minister
May 2, 2021, 22:34 IST
The magic number in the north-eastern state of Assam is 64. Bharatiya Janata Party’s Himanta Biswa Sarma, representing the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) — and the state’s incumbent Chief Minister — is well past that mark, leaving behind the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) led by the Indian National Congress. As of 10:30 PM, the Election Commission showed leads and wins in 78 constituences for the NDA.
The election in the politically volatile Assam was held in three phases between March 27 and April 6. The Citizenship Amendment Act, which became a national controversy over a year ago, is one of the biggest election issues there. However, the state looks at the Act differently than most other parts of the country.
The history of resistance to ‘outsiders’ (irrespective of their religion) by the people who consider themselves as native Assamese is decades long.
So BJP’s detractors in rest of India got angry with the party for trying to discriminate against Muslims, the people of Assam got angry with the party for trying to accommodate Hindus. The issue is a lot more ethnic and a lot less religious in Assam.
While the exit polls are giving the NDA the lead, Chief Minister Sarma fought the election aggressively. Sometimes, even at the expense of ignoring a pandemic that was taking lives. With his refusal to wear a mask made an abominable offence of setting the wrong example for millions of his supporters.
Today’s result show whether the Congress — with its alliance of ten parties including All India United Democratic Front (AIDUF) and the Bodoland People's Front (BDF) — was able to convert these setbacks into votes and seats. However, it wasn't good enough to cross the halfway mark..
There was a third contender called United Regional Front, where parties like Lurinjyoti Gogoi's Assam Jatiya Parishad and Akhil Gogoi's Raijor Dal have come together, were looking to chip away votes from the two leading coalitions. But the BJP and Sarma have held their sway in the North Eastern state one more time.
SEE ALSO:
MK Stalin and DMK expect majority in Tamil Nadu Assembly election 2021 after staying out of power for 10 straight years
Mamata Banerjee’s fate in West Bengal Assembly election 2021 will be sealed today
As Pinarayi Vijayan looks at a historic comeback while Kerala’s BJP cadre can only hope for a higher vote share
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Coalition | Seats in 2016 | Seats in 2021 (Leads/Wins) | Gain/Loss |
NDA | 86 | 78 | -14 |
UPA | 26 | 48 | +22 |
Others | 13 | - | - |
The election in the politically volatile Assam was held in three phases between March 27 and April 6. The Citizenship Amendment Act, which became a national controversy over a year ago, is one of the biggest election issues there. However, the state looks at the Act differently than most other parts of the country.
Party | Vote share in 2016 | Vote share in 2019 | Vote share in 2021 |
NDA | 41.9% | 36.5% | Over 40% |
UPA | 31% | 35.4% | Over 38% |
Others | 13% | 7.8% | About 20% |
The history of resistance to ‘outsiders’ (irrespective of their religion) by the people who consider themselves as native Assamese is decades long.
So BJP’s detractors in rest of India got angry with the party for trying to discriminate against Muslims, the people of Assam got angry with the party for trying to accommodate Hindus. The issue is a lot more ethnic and a lot less religious in Assam.
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Today’s result show whether the Congress — with its alliance of ten parties including All India United Democratic Front (AIDUF) and the Bodoland People's Front (BDF) — was able to convert these setbacks into votes and seats. However, it wasn't good enough to cross the halfway mark..
There was a third contender called United Regional Front, where parties like Lurinjyoti Gogoi's Assam Jatiya Parishad and Akhil Gogoi's Raijor Dal have come together, were looking to chip away votes from the two leading coalitions. But the BJP and Sarma have held their sway in the North Eastern state one more time.
SEE ALSO:
MK Stalin and DMK expect majority in Tamil Nadu Assembly election 2021 after staying out of power for 10 straight years
Mamata Banerjee’s fate in West Bengal Assembly election 2021 will be sealed today
As Pinarayi Vijayan looks at a historic comeback while Kerala’s BJP cadre can only hope for a higher vote share