NEW DELHI: The high decibel campaign by political parties for the first phase of the crucial Lok Sabha elections has ended on Tuesday. Ninety-one parliamentary constituencies spread over 18 states and two Union Territories will go to the polls under the first of the seven-phase general elections.
The first phase involves all the 25 Lok Sabha constituencies of Andhra Pradesh, and 17 from Telangana. The others states and union territories going to the polls in this round are: Arunachal Pradesh (2), Assam (5), Bihar (4), Chattishgarh (1), Jammu and Kashmir (2), Maharashtra (7), Manpur (1), Meghalaya (2), Mizoram (1), Nagaland (1), Odisha (4), Sikkim (1), Tripura (1), Uttar Pradesh (8), Uttarakhand (5), West Bengal (2), Andaman and Nicobar (1) and Lakshadweep (1).
In 2014, the BJP had won 32 out of the 91 seats set to go to polls in the first phase. The TDP secured 16, TRS 11 and the YRS Congress nine. The Congress had won seven of these seats.
Among these 91 constituencies, the BJP has never won 48 seats since its inception in 1980.
The subsequent polling dates are April 18 (97 Lok Sabha constituencies), April 23 (115), April 29 (71), May 6 (51), May 12 (59) and May 19 (59). The votes would be counted on May 23.
Winner in 2014: 91 seats in the first phase
BJP – 32 seats
TDP – 16 seats
TRS – 11 seats
YSR Congress – 9 seats
Congress – 7 seats
BJD – 4 seats
Shiv Sena – 2 seats
Trinamool Congress – 2 seats
CPM – 1 seat
LJP – 1 seat
NCP – 1 seat
NPEP – 1 seat
NPF – 1 seat
PDP – 1 seat
SDF – 1 seat
AIMIM – 1 seat
Key Facts and Figures
Uttar Pradesh
Two seats out of eight seats in the first phase – Noida and Ghaziabad are near Delhi.
BJP is getting tough fight from SP-BSP and RLD in eight seats of Western UP this time.
Congress party is also in fray.
Uttar Pradesh is key to BJP's plan to return to power as the state has 80 Lok Sabha constituencies.
Why UP is important for the BJP: The BJP led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) had won 73 out of total 80 Lok Sabha seats in the 2014 general elections. It also formed government in the state in 2017 assembly elections.
Issues: Sugarcane payments are a bigger problem in the western UP.
Bihar
Main fight: Bihar is set to see a contest between the BJP-JD(U)-LJP alliance and the Grand Alliance which includes the RJD, Congress, RLSP, HAM and VIP.
Uttarakhand
Main contest is between BJP and Congress.
Issues: crumbling healthcare, migration from states.
Maharashtra
Main contest is between BJP-Shiv Sena alliance and Congress-NCP led alliance.
Issues: Farm distress and joblessness.
Andhra Pradesh
The forthcoming election will be the first to be held after the bifurcation of the state.
Main fight: Telugu Desam Party (TDP) vs. YSR Congress (YSRC) Party. BJP and Congress are also contesting in Andhra Pradesh.
Andhra Pradesh chief minister and Telugu Desam Party (TDP) chief Chandrababu Naidu has been making a strong pitch for his consecutive second term.
Naidu, a former BJP ally, walked out of the tie-up in 2018 saying the Narendra Modi government had failed to keep its promise of granting special category status to the state.
Present government in the state: Chandrababu Naidu of TDP
Arunachal Pradesh
Contest - The state is set to witness a three-cornered fight between the ruling BJP, NPP (which is a member of the BJP-led Northeast Democratic Alliance) and the Congress.
Present Government in the state: BJP government in the state led by Chief Minister Pema Khandu is seeking re-election.
In 2014, the Congress had emerged victorious after winning 42 seats. The party lost power after many of its MLAs joined PPA. They eventually joined the BJP.
Since February 2016, Arunachal Pradesh has seen three chief ministers and President’s Rule — making the state’s political landscape unstable. However, Khandu has led a largely stable government since early 2017.
Assam
Main fight – BJP (alliance with AGP and Bodoland Peoples Front) vs. Congress.
Protests across Assam against the proposed Citizenship (Amendment) Bill had cast a shadow on the NDA’s prospects in the North-East, but with the AGP back in the NDA fold after severing ties with them, the BJP will hope to regain its momentum in the region.
Badruddin Ajmal’s AIUDF is one of the key players in the state, besides the Congress.
Issues: Citizens Amendment bill, Illegal immigration
West Bengal
West Bengal is not a happy hunting ground for the two big national parties - BJP and Congress.
It is dominated by a regional party - the Trinamool Congress, and by one person - Mamata Banerjee.
The Contest: Four cornered contest and Trinamool is up against resurgent BJP. Left parties and Congress are also contesting.
In 2019, Mamata Banerjee has bigger ambitions, hopes to defeat Narendra Modi-led NDA.
BJP had edged past the Congress and the Left Front in the panchayat elections last year.
BJP hopes to ride the anti-incumbency factor and alleged appeasement politics of Mamata Banerjee to position itself as the main opposition party.
Issues: Illegal migration from Bangladesh is also a polarising issue in the state, Citizenship bill, fake currency and cow smuggling.
Chhattisgarh
Naxal hit Bastar Lok Sabha constituency will go for elections in the first phase.
Issues: Unemployment is one of the biggest issues in Chhattisgarh for the urban voters and polls will revolve around them and tribal welfare policies, Naxalism.
Jammu & Kashmir
Among the two constituencies going to polls in the first phase — Baramulla (mutli-cornered contest) and Jammu (contest between BJP and Congress).
Issues: National security, corruption by national parties and regional parties have kept protection of the state's special status as their key poll plank.
Telangana
It appears to be mainly a three-cornered contest between the ruling TRS, Congress and the BJP.
All India Majlis-e-Ittehad-ul-Muslimeen (AIMIM) is strong in Hyderbad seat
TRS has the backing of Asaduddin Owaisi, which is expected to help the party get minority votes.
TRS can play a key role at the Centre and ensure a better deal for Telangana if it wins 16 seats.
Telugu Desam Party (TDP), the ruling party in neighbouring Andhra Pradesh, has decided not to field candidates for the Lok Sabha seats in Telangana, a first since its formation in 1982.
Having suffered a drubbing in the Assembly elections (winning only one seat among 119), BJP is contesting all the seats on its own. The party is banking heavily on the popularity of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Issues: Farming distress
Odisha
Odisha will head to polls in four phases throughout April.
Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik for 19 years now, will head to polls simultaneously along with the general elections.
BJD has dominated Odisha's political discourse for the past two decades.
The BJD was in alliance with the BJP for nine years from 2000, but Patnaik pulled out of the alliance before the 2009 polls.
The Congress, meanwhile, has been effectively sidelined. Once a bastion, Congress is now a pale shadow of itself in the state.
The BJD even managed to dodge the 'Modi wave' of 2014 to retain the state.
The BJP had set its eyes on Odisha from as far back as 2014, when it got 10 seats in the assembly polls and one seat in the Lok Sabha polls.
Tripura
The third smallest state in India.
Tripura is located near Bangladesh in the Northeastern part of India.
Sikkim
The main fight is expected to be between the ruling Sikkim Democratic Front and the Sikkim Krantikari Morcha.
Hamro Sikkim Party launched by former Indian Football captian Bhaichung Bhatia is also contesting.
BJP hasn't tasted success in 48 of 91 LS seats going to polls in first phase
ABP News Bureau
Updated at:
09 Apr 2019 05:20 PM (IST)
The 17th Lok Sabha elections will be held in seven phases beginning April 11 and the votes will be counted on May 23.
BJP supporters, wearing masks of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Photo: PTI
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