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India
votes for stability, Manmohan is PM again
People of India has delivered a resounding verdict for stability giving the
ruling Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) coalition five more
years to rule the world’s largest democracy with economist turned
politician Manmohan Singh at the helm. The margin of victory has also
stunned poll pundits, who were predicting a hung parliament.
As the Congress party was poised to win 206 seats in the 545-member Lok
Sabha, confounding all expert predictions, Manmohan Singh appealed to all
political parties to support his “secular government”.
Even as the politically underrated Manmohan Singh, equanimous in victory,
spoke at the 10 Janpath residence of Congress president Sonia Gandhi,
thousands of frenzied supporters shouted slogans, danced and exploded
firecrackers on the streets.
“We have an obligation to the people of India to provide a stable and
secular government,” he added, underlining the two core themes that helped
the Congress retain power in one of most fiercely fought electoral battles
since independence 62 years ago.
The thumping victory was widely credited to the unassuming Manmohan Singh,
who only five years ago propelled to the top post after the Italy-born
Gandhi refused the prime minister’s job. With this, Manmohan Singh has
achieved the distinction of becoming the first prime minister after
Jawaharlal Nehru to be returned after completing a full term in office.
The Congress sweep surprised foes and friends. It shocked the main
opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which had hoped to return to power
after a five-year gap, and also the Communist-led Third Front and groups
that had ditched the Congress at the eleventh hour.
At end of day, the BJP and its allies in the National Democratic Alliance (NDA)
finished with 163 seats — far less than the Congress individual tally and
also far below what they had won in 2004 and, as party general secretary
Arun Jaitley said, “below our expectations”.
The Third Front, made up of the Communists and regional parties, was
crushed, marginalizing politicians who had till this morning nurtured fond
hoped of dislodging the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA).
The verdict, which followed five rounds of elections in April-May involving
over 420 million voters, gave the Congress an overwhelming say in the
multi-party UPA, reducing many of its troublesome partners to virtual
non-entities.
The Congress pulled off a spectacular revival in Uttar Pradesh, managing 22
of its 80 Lok Sabha seats, three more than the ruling Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP)
of Chief Minister Mayawati who found her national dreams dashed - at least
for the moment.
The Samajwadi Party (SP) got 23 seats in a result that was seen to be
influenced by the tireless efforts of Congress general secretary Rahul
Gandhi.
The Congress also improved dramatically in Kerala, where the party-led UDF
had just one seat in 2004, by winning 16 seats and virtually decimating the
Left Democratic Front.
The four Left parties, which managed only 24 seats overall, a sharp fall
from its 2004 tally of 60-plus, also got a drubbing in West Bengal where the
Trinamool Congress-Congress combine got 25 of the 42 seats.
In a dramatic turnaround for the Left parties, which till the counting
begins were expected to play a key role in government, Communist Party of
India-Marxist (CPI-M) general secretary Prakash Karat admitted on that it
had suffered “a major setback”.
“The CPI-M and the Left parties have suffered a major setback in these
elections,” he said, reading out a prepared statement. “This
necessitates a serious examination of the reasons for the party’s poor
performance.”
The Communist Party of India (CPI) was expected to win just four seats —
its worst showing since the country’s first general elections of 1952.
CPI’s D Raja admitted: “We need to do some introspection.”
The BJP was also forced to concede defeat.. Its prime ministerial candidate
LK Advani, who won Gandhinagar in Gujarat by over 120,000 votes, called
Manmohan Singh to congratulate him. There were reports that a humbled Advani
was planning to quit politics and had offered to step down as Leader of
Opposition.
“The UPA has come out as the biggest alliance, so the mandate is in their
favour. The BJP accepts this mandate of the people with full respect,”
Jaitley said, while refusing to point out the exact reasons behind the
party’s poll debacle.
The DMK, a key Congress ally that was predicted to do badly because of its
belated response to the Tamil humanitarian crisis in Sri Lanka, did well to
come on top in Tamil Nadu, which accounts for 39 valuable seats. DMK leaders
said voters had not been swayed by emotions raised over the war against the
Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka.
The Biju Janata Dal (BJD), which only in March divorced the BJP after 11
long years, swept Orissa. In Andhra Pradesh, actor Chiranjeevi’s newly
formed Praja Rajyam Party put up a strong showing, undercutting both the
Congress and the main opposition Telugu Desam Party.
The Congress swept Uttarakhand, Delhi, Haryana, Rajasthan and Punjab in the
north. It also had the upper hand in Maharashtra along with the NCP.
The BJP was on top in Karnataka and in Bihar with its ally the Janata Dal-United
(JD-U).
Among the prominent candidates set to get elected to the 15th Lok Sabha were
former UN under secretary General Shashi Tharoor, central ministers Kamal
Nath and Pranab Mukherjee of the Congress, BJP president Rajnath Singh,
Trinamool Congress supremo Mamata Banerjee and Janata Dal-Secular leader and
former prime minister HD Deve Gowda.
Amongst those who lost were Lok Janshakti Party chief Ram Vilas Paswan, who
was a union minister for Steel, and fellow union ministers Mani Shankar
Aiyar and Renuka Chowdhury.
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