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Showing posts with label leads show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leads show. Show all posts

Indian Election Results 2019 Live: BJP sweeps Indian polls, leads show



New Delhi: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi looked on course Thursday for a major victory in the world’s biggest election, with early trends suggesting his Hindu nationalist party will win a bigger majority even than 2014.
Right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of Indian PM and allies are currently leading on 340 seats, NDTV reported Thursday.
Main opposition party, Indian National Congress along with allied parties are far behind the ruling coalition with 91 seats in the house of 542. While, the non-aligned parties were leading on 111 seats.
In Lok Sabha, the lower house of Indian Parliament, support of 272 members is needed to form the government.
If confirmed -- no actual results have been published yet -- this would push the Hindu nationalist BJP over the 272 seats needed for a majority on its own, and beat its tally of 282 when Modi swept to power in the world’s biggest democracy in 2014 with the first majority in 30 years.
Having risen strongly since exit polls on Sunday had pointed to a Modi victory, Indian stock markets on Thursday hit record new highs shortly after opening, with the Sensex and the Nifty indices both up more than two percent.
After an exercise not short of staggering statistics, the 600 million votes cast in purportedly the world’s most expensive democratic exercise -- costing more than $7 billion, experts say -- were set to be counted in just one day.
Rahul Gandhi of the Congress party, hoping to become the fourth member of the Gandhi-Nehru dynasty to lead India, had on Wednesday dismissed the exit polls.
"Don’t get disappointed by the propaganda of fake exit polls," Gandhi, 48, told the party faithful on Twitter.
Early trends also suggested that Gandhi was in a tight race in his constituency of Amethi in Uttar Pradesh state, a seat held by his family for generations.
Indian exit polls are notoriously unreliable. In 2004 they pointed to a BJP victory but the results told a different story, bringing a Congress-led government to power.
Results in several regions such as Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state which formed the core of Modi’s support in 2014, and West Bengal in the east, will be key.
- Insults and fake news -
The vast size of India stretching from the Himalayas to the Tropics, taking in polluted megacities, deserts and jungles, meant the election stretched over six weeks.
The campaign was awash with insults -- Modi was likened to Hitler and a "gutter insect" -- as well as fake news disseminated on social media in Facebook and WhatsApp’s biggest markets.
Gandhi, 48, tried several lines of attack against Modi, in particular over alleged corruption in a French defence deal and over the desperate plight of farmers and the lacklustre economy.
Unemployment is reported to be at a four-decade high with Asia’s third-biggest economy growing too slowly to create jobs for the million Indians entering the labour market every month.
Modi’s shock cash ban in 2016 -- not even his cabinet were informed before his televised address to the nation -- disrupted livelihoods. Foreign investment has however increased.
Modi, a former cadre in the militaristic hardline Hindu group Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and chief minister of Gujurat in 2002 when riots killed more than 1,000 people, most of them Muslims, is also seen as divisive.
Lynchings of Muslims and low-caste Dalits for eating beef and slaughtering and trading in cattle have risen, adding to anxiousness among the 170-million-strong Muslim population, the world’s second biggest.
Under Modi several cities with names rooted in India’s Islamic Mughul past have been re-named, while some school textbooks have been changed to downplay Muslims’ contributions to India.
Vinod Bansal, a spokesman for the Hindu nationalist Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), told AFP he wants a "complete ban" on the slaughter of cows, sacred to most Hindus.
"If Modi again comes to power we are doomed," Hassan Khalid Azmi, a retired chemistry professor in the northern city of Azamgarh, told AFP earlier this month.


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