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New Delhi:

The public mood is tough to read this time and while the BJP will get majority, one can expect the unexpected: This was what a group of experts at NDTV concluded this evening as the massive celebration of democracy in the country draws to a close. There will be tough fights, some in the BJP bastions of the north but the ruling party will gain from non-BJP states, including Telangana, Odisha and Bengal, the experts said. As for the 370-seat target, it could represent an  ideal, said one of the experts at NDTV Battleground, anchored by Editor-in-Chief Sanjay Pugalia.

The 2024 election has bucked the trend of the last 10 years, because of an absence of any wave or public anger, the experts agreed. What has hit the country instead is a sense of discontent, which the Opposition has failed to capitalise on.

Senior journalist and political expert Neerja Chowdhury said this election has been “complex” and “difficult to decode”.

“At some level, we are not seeing that Modi wave. On a different level, there are some fence-sitters. Modi Wave cannot control the Opposition, who have local issues. The Opposition is giving a fight but that doesn’t equal victory,” she added.

Pointing out that a wave is seen “after an election”, political strategist Amitabh Tiwari said,  “Voting is an emotional decision. There’s discontent. Last time, the BJP got 40 per cent votes… But converting discontent to anger is important (for the Opposition). It’s not easy to understand the psyche of the voter”.

Public mood after six phases

This election had started with some issues but deviated from them soon enough. The BJP had started the polls with a focus on national issues, but ended up responding to the Opposition agenda including change in constitution, said Sanjay Kumar, psephologist from CSDS.

But barring the noise on social media, there is also the silent majority that makes up is mind about which way to go even before the election begins. Asked whether the Opposition has got got sidetracked and misled by the illusion created by social media, Mr Tiwari agreed.

“One has to think what is the issue at the heart of every election,” he said. “People vote for the bright future of themselves and their children… There are two key sections missing from the social media chatter — women and the beneficiaries of welfare projects. These are the two sections who have decided which way many of the elections went,” he added.

The BJP is hoping to win 370 seats in the ongoing election, which has reached the last stretch. The party has given its NDA allies a target of 30-plus seats, which will take the score of the ruling alliance to 400-plus.

The last phase of election will be held on June 1, the counting of votes will take place on June 4.



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Highlights: NDTV Battleground – Public Mood After 6 Phases Of Election https://artifex.news/live-updates-ndtv-battleground-public-mood-after-6-phases-of-election-5757864rand29/ Mon, 27 May 2024 14:15:59 +0000 https://artifex.news/live-updates-ndtv-battleground-public-mood-after-6-phases-of-election-5757864rand29/ Read More “Highlights: NDTV Battleground – Public Mood After 6 Phases Of Election” »

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NDTV Editor-In-Chief Sanjay Pugalia and political analysts discuss the big election.

New Delhi:

One more phase to go for the Lok Sabha elections 2024 to end, what’s the public mood? NDTV Editor-In-Chief Sanjay Pugalia and political analysts discuss the big election. Prime Minister Narendra Modi is looking to win a third term, while the Opposition is counting on a very slim chance of anti-incumbency.

Here are the Highlights of NDTV Battleground on public mood after 6 phases

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NDTV Editor-In-Chief Sanjay Pugalia and political analysts discuss the big election

Neerja – Congress and other parties are promising voters to give this or that. Middle class think is to too much that’s happening with the 400 mark promise

Sanjay – 400-mark promise fell flat on its face. 

Sandeep – There was expectation before elections to achieve 400 mark but after phase 1 they felt whether it is achievable or nor. Elections are often an emotional response. There are small waves in states and we’ll see the impact in states.

Amitabh – Karnataka could be an outlier state. There’s consensus that BJP will come to power but how much will it get is a discussion. 

NDTV Editor-In-Chief Sanjay Pugalia and political analysts discuss the big election

Neerja – Except Nehru, no other PM remained popular after 10 years. We have to understand the changing India. Opposition is fighting this time and not giving up compared to last time. BJP has a leader and a strong party that can convert sentiment to vote. 

Sandeep – Opposition chose the correct strategy to not fight it with a face but the problem was there was no common strategy. 

Sanjay – The election started from somewhere but headed into a different direction. 

Amitabh – People vote for a good future. In the last 5 years, through covid, cash income schemes, people from SC/ST communities got access to mobile phone and these 2 communities are deciding the elections and this helped BJP to use social media for communications.

NDTV Editor-In-Chief Sanjay Pugalia and political analysts discuss the big election

Sanjay Kumar – BJP wanted to fight elections on national issues like abrogation of Article 370, but the Opposition continued to raise the issue of inflation and unemployment and change in the constitution.

Neerja – Except Nehru, no other PM remained popular after 10 years. We have to understand the changing India. Opposition is fighting this time and not giving up compared to last time. BJP has a leader and a strong party that can convert sentiment to vote. 

Sandeep – Opposition chose the correct strategy to not fight it with a face but the problem was there was no common strategy. 

Sanjay – The election started from somewhere but headed into a different direction. 

Amitabh – People vote for a good future. In the last 5 years, through covid, cash income schemes, people from SC/ST communities got access to mobile phone and these 2 communities are deciding the elections and this helped BJP to use social media for communications.

NDTV Editor-In-Chief Sanjay Pugalia and political analysts discuss the big election

Amitabh – Today the opposition is fighting to bring BJP below 272 and not win the elections and it’s a defeatist attitude. 

Neerja – Congress might gain in Karnataka, BJP will lose. BJP will compensate in Telangana, Odisha, there are 2 opinions in Bengal. If you’re losing the 303 mark but your gaining somewhere. 

Sanjay – In 2019, BJP got more than 50% vote on 224 seats. The discussion is not about whether BJP is losing or not? Now is it about whether BJP will get 300 or not. Even if BJP is losing then it’s not much to create a diff in its tally.

Amitabh – When BJP gave the 400 target, there was an ambition to break Rajiv Gandhi’s 1984 record. If the opposition is losing then they’ll look for the gains in that defeat for their supporters.

NDTV Editor-In-Chief Sanjay Pugalia and political analysts discuss the big election

Amitabh – To covert discontent into anger was somehow missing in the Opposition’s campaign

Professor CSDS Sanjay Kumar – Discussion is not about BJP will lose, but the discussion is about will the BJP get 370 plus seats

Sanjay –  Do you see BJP tally’s going below 300 or above 

Lokniti Network National Coordinator Sandeep Shastri – For BJP to cross 300 plus mark depends on Maharashtra West Bengal. There won’t be much change in Uttar Pradesh 

NDTV Editor-In-Chief Sanjay Pugalia and political analysts discuss the big election

Senior journalist Neerja Chowdhury – It’s difficult to decode this election. The election is complex. At some level, we are not seeing that Modi wave, on a different level there are some fence-sitters. Modi Wave cannot control the opposition, who have local issues. Opposition is giving a fight but that doesn’t mean they are equal to BJP.

NDTV Editor-In-Chief Sanjay Pugalia – There are some states where BJP performed well in 2014, 2019 looks weak this time but is expected to do well in states where it didn’t do well earlier. It looks like a waveless election.

Sandeep – There are small waves in states. 

Political analyst Amitabh Tiwari- Voting is an emotional decision, there’s discontent. Last time BJP got 40% votes but converting discontent to anger is important. There was one-sided election in Dec 2023 polls. Wave is seen after election. It’s not easy to understand the psyche of the voter.



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S Jaishankar On NDTV Battleground https://artifex.news/bjps-370-target-not-a-random-number-s-jaishankar-on-ndtv-battleground-5730405rand29/ Thu, 23 May 2024 15:45:32 +0000 https://artifex.news/bjps-370-target-not-a-random-number-s-jaishankar-on-ndtv-battleground-5730405rand29/ Read More “S Jaishankar On NDTV Battleground” »

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The minister said the BJP’s focus, if re-elected, will continue to be on a developed India.

New Delhi:

With the Lok Sabha elections winding down to a close, NDTV’s Battleground saw a trio of heavyweights speaking on a range of issues, including predictions for the next government, employment and India’s rising stature on the world stage. 

Foreign policy was a big part of the discussion because one of the three panellists in the show, hosted by NDTV’s Editor-in-Chief Sanjay Pugalia, was External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar. The BJP and the opposition’s prospects in the election were addressed by both Mr Jaishankar and economist, author and former member of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council, Surjit Bhalla.

The third member of the panel, Manish Sabharwal – vice-chairman of TeamLease Services, one of India’s biggest employers – helped dissect the economy and bust unemployment myths.

Another important talking point through the hour-long show was Lutyens’ Delhi – a reference to the traditional elite – and its dwindling importance in the India of today. The “Lutyens’ Gang” is,in fact, how the discussion started with Mr Jaishankar saying it is a way of thinking and not necessarily a factor of where people live. 

Mr Jaishankar said he had been to 12 states and spoken to people from all walks of life and different age groups. He said the BJP’s target of 370 was not a random number, but thought and analysis had gone into it.

“For the middle-aged and senior citizens, the government’s record in the past 10 years is very important, they feel their lives have been changed. When the youth talk about the government, they talk about Prime Minister Narendra Modi and believe a lot can be done now. They are optimistic about their future. So, for some it’s hope, for others, it is the record. One thing I will say, though, is the level of people’s interest in foreign policy has been a surprise… even in small cities,” he said.

Vote Share Significantly Up?

Responding to some people saying that this is a waveless election, Mr Bhalla said he did not think there was a wave in 2019 as well. 

“A wave is when there is an outlier, there is an extreme. The biggest issue is how much people’s welfare has improved, and this is true for every country. By that yardstick, the changes, progress, welfare of the people in the past 10 years – and I am not talking about Lutyens’ alone, I am talking about 95-99% of the people – this has not been seen before. If the BJP’s vote share reaches 42-43%, then I will say there will be a wave,” he said. 

“I think it could be 42% for the BJP, up from 37% in 2019. People compare it to 1952 and 1957, when the Congress had a vote share of between 45 and 48%. But now you have to talk about BJP and allies, because the BJP is not contesting all the seats. The NDA, well within the realm of possibility, may have a vote share between 46 and 48 per cent,” the economist added.

BJP’s Prospects

Asked what number he would choose if he had to place a bet on the number of seats the BJP would get in the upcoming polls, Dr Jaishankar said he would leave the exact number to experts like Mr Bhalla. He said he felt pro-incumbency in several states. 

“I went to Kerala several times last year. I went to Telangana for the election. These are not the BJP’s traditional states. I sensed an emerging energy there. I can say that the trend in our favour is very positive. I feel our vote share could go up by five percentage points from what it was in 2019, it could even be more than that. On the basis of my experience, I think our numbers will go up, not down,” he said.

On the BJP’s claims that it will perform well in Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Odisha and West Bengal, the external affairs minister said the BJP is a “professional, serious” party and does not rely on guesswork. 

“We analyse at the booth level and move upwards. When we say we will get this number of seats in this state, a lot of thought has gone into it. You have said the (BJP’s) target of 370 seats is a slogan. I don’t think PM Modi has randomly mentioned a number. Some thought has gone into it. It is clear that we will be able to hold our position in several states. In some states, such as Bengal, Odisha, Telangana, Andhra Pradeh, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Uttar Pradesh, we will increase our seats,” he said.

Problems With Maldives Exaggerated?

To a question on foreign policy challenges in the neighbourhood despite India’s rising stature globally, Mr Jaishankar said, “Yes there are challenges, they will remain. The neighbourhood itself is a reason for the challenges. We have to increase our capabilities at home and also to compete abroad. Foreign policy is a competitive activity, no one will help you or do you a favour.”

“There is some amount of exaggeration as well, some people say everything has gone wrong with the Maldives. Yes, there are some problems but I don’t think the situation is so bad or relations have changed so much. If you compare, an Indian company had been removed from the airport earlier (in 2012). In Sri Lanka, our image has changed. In Bangladesh, terrorists and separatists used to operate from there, now that is over. The Nepal that used to say it will never export electricity to India is very enthusiastic,” he said.

Mr Jaishankar said that sometimes there are attempts to mislead and spread propaganda as well. He emphasised that the government’s effort is to strengthen the neighbourhood and make countries believe that they also stand to benefit from India’s progress. 

“We have to take this belief forward. I think a lot has been done in 10 years,” he said. 

Constitution Changing?

Mr Jaishankar also took the opposition’s allegation of the BJP intending to change the Constitution and used it to take a dig at the Congress. 

Reiterating the BJP’s claims that the UPA government was run by remote control and senior Congress leader Sonia Gandhi was actually taking all the important decisions, the minister said, “Let me remind you of the record on the Constitution. Nearly 85% of the amendments made so far have been made by the Congress. There is no reservation on the basis of religion in the Constitution. Which section has a provision for remote control? But that was done during 10 years of the UPA government. So, they violate the Constitution.”

Mr Jaishankar also took a jibe at Congress leader Rahul Gandhi and his recent statement of being an insider in the system. 

“He said there was discrimination during the time of his grandmother (Indira Gandhi), father (Rajiv Gandhi) and the UPA. I agree with that. But he hasn’t been in the system for 10 years, so he has no experience, he has no information (about those years),” he said.

Circling back to the Lutyens’ Delhi, the minister said, “Look at the President, the PM, the cabinet ministers, the MPs, can’t you see a change? Can you see the same elitists? There used to be talk of a Doon School gang, now there is possibly be no one from the Doon School in Parliament.”

Third Term Plans

On the roadmap for a possible third term of the Modi government, the external affairs minister said the upcoming election is a national one. 

“There may be local problems, but people will vote based on whether they believe in Modiji or someone else… and there is no other face. We have shown the country an optimistic future and people believe in us. We speak about Viksit Bharat (a developed India), the other side tries to scare,” he said. 

“We were told months ago to plan for the third term. even during elections, we get feedback from the Prime Minister on this. When the PM says the past 10 years were a trailer, don’t take it lightly. There will be a focus on education, skill development, employment opportunities, technology, sunrise industries, and manufacturing. People say manufacturing can’t happen In India, but I am certain it can. PM Modi has the vision as well as the talent to make it happen. This is his speciality,” he said. 

Mr Jaishankar stressed that the overall atmosphere for investors will also get better. 

“Investors look at political stability. Whenever a government comes in the second term, they make corrections based on the experiences in the previous two terms. A Centre-state alignment will also happen after the elections. Even if the state does not have an NDA partner, they will adjust because they also stand to gain. Some people are part of an alliance that they know has no future. They will also be normal after the election,” he said. 

Welfare Politics

Making a strong statement on welfare politics and the lessons that can be learnt from developing countries, Mr Jaishankar said, “For the foreseeable future, the government has to provide basics to people, like ration, housing, power, health and medicines. We should take a lesson from developed countries, who are not being able to manage their health system, where urban poverty is now growing. Our commitment is to keep schemes like Mudra loan yojana, anna yojana (free ration scheme) and housing going at least for the next five years. 

“We should not look at the Western definition of welfarism. We need welfare for now, but efficient welfarism, without leakage. This has been good for the economy. The rural economy has grown because of the anna yojana. Farmer income has also grown,” he said.

Mr Sabharwal also said that the welfare state will have to stay and that there is no such thing as poor people, but “people in poor places”.

“Three poor places are not places per se, it’s which sector you are working in, which firm and what skills you have. Agriculture employs 42% of labour force, but accounts for 14% of GDP. IT sector is worshipped but it’s a rounding error in terms of labour force – about 1% – yet accounts for 8% of GDP. Firms have a difference of 25 times in terms of productivity.”

For poor places, he said, welfare state will have to stay. 

“Because we can’t move 42% out of agriculture. It’s not a bulb that goes on, it’s a gentle sunrise, done over 10-20 years. So if a patient is in the ICU, you must give triage, but if a patient comes every day, somebody has to tell him to lose weight or quit smoking or do something. Therefore, the economy is being put through some short-term pain for long-term gain,” he stressed. 

‘Employed Poverty’

On unemployment being a major issue in the elections, Mr Sabharwal said the real challenge is “employed poverty”.

“Unemployment has never been a challenge. It’s been between 4-8% since 1947. Our problem is employed poverty – people have jobs but not the salaries they want. If there would have been 45% unemployment, price of labour would have fallen exponentially. The only information in an economy are votes and prices, everything else is a model. The price of labour has gone up everywhere. I have employees in 5,000 cities and the average salary now is Rs 28,000. If 300 million had left the labour force, how would that happen,” he asked. 

“The price of labour does not suggest unemployment is a very important labour market issue or political issue,” the TeamLease vice-chairman said. 

Mr Jaishankar also responded to the opposition’s claim of rising unemployment and emphasised that 46 crore people have taken Mudra loans and 28 km of highways and 14 km of railway lines are built in a day.

“If all this is happening, someone must be working, some must have taken loans. Hence, saying so many crore people are unemployed or there is so much unemployment… Like he (Mr Sabharwal) said, there are only two firm indices, votes and prices,” the minister said. 

“When we go to meet the public, we ask ‘are you getting ration?’. 81 crore people get free ration, without leakage, every month. People in Lutyens’ Delhi have got all these basic necessities so they don’t give them any weight, for them it’s taken for granted.  Four crore people have got houses. The average family size in India is 4.8 – so, 19 crore people have got houses after 2014 and they thank Modiji for it,” he stressed.

Mr Bhalla said employment has grown the most between 2014 and 2024 and between 1999-2004, both under NDA governments. Jobless growth, on the contrary, happened most between 2004 and 2011, he claimed. 

‘Once In A Country’s Lifetime’

Sharing an interesting anecdote illustrating India’s rise, Mr Sabharwal said, “In 1994 when I went to the US, there was a front page copy in the Wall Street Journal saying India is more interesting than important. I hope the journalist is eating the paper on which he wrote that.”

“Because, what is happening in the country is not once in a decade or once in a millennium, it is once in the lifetime of a country, because 50% of the FDI since 1947 has come in the last five years. In 2021, we exported more software than Saudi Arabia did oil. The next 25 years for India will be very different than the past 25 years, not because of luck, but because of what has happened,” he said.  



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Will BJP Be Able To Sustain Its Surge In Uttar Pradesh: NDTV Battleground https://artifex.news/will-bjp-be-able-to-sustain-its-surge-in-uttar-pradesh-ndtv-battleground-5678866rand29/ Thu, 16 May 2024 15:39:03 +0000 https://artifex.news/will-bjp-be-able-to-sustain-its-surge-in-uttar-pradesh-ndtv-battleground-5678866rand29/ Read More “Will BJP Be Able To Sustain Its Surge In Uttar Pradesh: NDTV Battleground” »

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Varanasi:

The battle for Uttar Pradesh — which sends the maximum number of members to the Lok Sabha — could turn out to be an existential one for the Congress and Mayawati. For Akhilesh Yadav’s Samajwadi Party, it would be crucial since the politics in Uttar Pradesh is turning out to be bipolar one, where the regional party is playing the role of the main opposition. These were the conclusions of political experts participating this evening in NDTV’s special show Battleground, hosted by Editor-in-chief Sanjay Pugalia.

Since 2014, the BJP has made Uttar Pradesh its own, sweeping the state not only that year but in every subsequent election — Lok Sabha or assembly. The party has built a 50 per cent vote bank in the state, in which Varanasi, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s constituency, had a big role to play. This depended on several factors – including the city’s magnificent cosmopolitan background and the position it enjoys as the country’s oldest and holiest pilgrim centre.

“In 2014, when the BJP was planning a strategy, they needed a great performance and they had to perform in UP to reach the majority mark,” said Sandeep Shastri, the national coordinator of Lokniti Network.

In that circumstance, it was felt that if the Prime Ministerial candidate fights from UP as well as his seat in Gujarat, it could provide the big push the party needs in the state.

“Fighting from Varanasi also had an impact on the areas nearby. Varanasi’s cultural significance has been a factor. Since 2014, there has been a lot of development that has happened,” he added.  

What has also made a difference is the shift in the Muslim vote. “The BJP, which used to get single digit vote per cent, now gets double-digit Muslim vote per cent. Unfortunately, if Muslims vote for BJP, they are called Sarkaari Muslims,” said Yashwant Desmukh, the Founder-Director of CVoter.



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Contest Of Fine Margins Between BJP, Trinamool In Bengal https://artifex.news/ndtv-battleground-contest-of-fine-margins-between-bjp-trinamool-in-bengal-5589210rand29/ Sat, 04 May 2024 16:16:17 +0000 https://artifex.news/ndtv-battleground-contest-of-fine-margins-between-bjp-trinamool-in-bengal-5589210rand29/ Read More “Contest Of Fine Margins Between BJP, Trinamool In Bengal” »

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Of the state’s 42 seats, 22 were won by the Trinamool Congress in 2019 and 18 by the BJP.

Kolkata:

West Bengal’s 48 seats make it the third-largest contributor of MPs to the Lok Sabha but what has made the state even more important and interesting in these Lok Sabha elections is the keenly fought contest between the Trinamool Congress and the BJP, with neither side willing to give any quarter. 

At NDTV’s special show ‘Battleground’ on Saturday, hosted by Editor-in-Chief Sanjay Pugalia, a panel of experts and spokespersons from the BJP and TMC dissected every issue that could play a role in either party getting an upper hand and also shared their thoughts on what drives violence during elections in West Bengal  

While Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee – and a Presidential-style contest between – them dominated the discussion, the two other main points that got a lot of attention were the Sandeshkhali controversy and the welfare push by both parties. 

Everyone, barring the spokespersons of course, seemed to agree that the contest in the state is going to be a neck and neck one and the battle is going to be one of fine margins.

Of the state’s 42 seats, 22 were won by the Trinamool Congress in 2019 and the BJP had made huge inroads and achieved victory in 18. Far from resting on its laurels, the BJP has been relentless in its quest to increase its vote share since then. but the Trinamool Congress has also fought tooth and nail to hold on to its turf.

Pointing to how razor-thin the margins are in the state, Sanjay Kumar, Professor at the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS) said, “West Bengal is a state where the regional party is very strong but the BJP is putting up a fierce contest. The BJP has defeated the Congress in many states but it seems to be on the back foot when it comes to contesting against regional parties, but Bengal is an exception. I think there is a neck-and-neck fight. This is a battleground in the real sense.”

“There is a contest in every seat. In 2019, the difference in vote share between the parties was just three per cent. The difference in seats was also of only four. If the votes swing by 2 per cent either way… if the BJP’s vote share goes up by 2-3 per cent, the TMC can lose 7-8 seats and if the opposite happens and the BJP loses 4-5 per cent of votes it can be reduced to single digits,” he said.

‘Violence Vitiates Society’

Mr Pugalia pointed out there is a dichotomy in the sense that while Bengal is considered a leader in terms of culture and self-respect it is also one of the most violent states when it comes to political violence. To this, political analyst Swapan Dasgupta said the violence is a legacy of the Left, which ruled Bengal for decades and even the Trinamool was a victim of this when it was fighting the CPM.

“Some of those rough-and-ready methods, unfortunately, have become the new normal in West Bengal and I think this is something that, regardless of which side you prefer, there has to be unanimity on stopping the violence. This vitiates society,” he said.

Pointing to an interesting statistic, Mr Dasgupta said no national party has ever won a majority of seats in the Lok Sabha from West Bengal in 1971. He also said that caste, in addition to  class – which was the CPM’s dominant narrative – has also made an entry in Bengal in 2019. 
 



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NDTV Battleground: Modi Factor vs Congress Guarantees https://artifex.news/ndtv-battleground-modi-factor-vs-congress-guarantees-what-karnataka-wants-5335804rand29/ Fri, 29 Mar 2024 17:05:06 +0000 https://artifex.news/ndtv-battleground-modi-factor-vs-congress-guarantees-what-karnataka-wants-5335804rand29/ Read More “NDTV Battleground: Modi Factor vs Congress Guarantees” »

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The BJP had won 25 of the state’s 28 seats in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.

Bengaluru:

With its 28 Lok Sabha seats, huge contribution to the country’s GDP and as the home of the IT capital of India, success in Karnataka would be high on every party’s wishlist for the upcoming elections based on these factors alone. But what makes the state even more important is because the BJP sees it as the gateway to South India and is hoping to make inroads into the region based on its consistently good performances in Karnataka while the Congress is looking to push the party out by eating into its seats in the state itself. 

At NDTV’s special show ‘Battleground’ on Friday, a panel of experts discussed the key issues for the people of Karnataka and its capital, Bengaluru, and whether the Modi Factor will play a bigger role in the Lok Sabha elections or Congress’ guarantees, which contributed to the party sweeping the state in the Assembly polls last year. 

The BJP had won 25 constituencies in Karnataka in the 2019 Lok Sabha polls and has got the most number of seats of any party in the state every time since the 2004 general elections. Another interesting statistic, revealed by CSDS surveys, is that while one in three voters who cast their ballots for the BJP in other states in 2014 and 2019 said they had done so because of Narendra Modi, the proportion for Karnataka was nearly 55 per cent.

Psephologist and educationist Sandeep Shastri – one of the panellists on the show anchored by NDTV Editor-in-Chief Sanjay Pugalia – said, “Of the 130 seats in the South, the NDA won 30 in 2019… Voters in Karnataka cast their ballots differently in the Assembly and the Lok Sabha elections… At one level, the Modi factor is the key to the BJP’s campaign. What they are doing is bringing caste and class together. Much of their politics is caste-based, but class inclusive.”

Mr Shastri said the BJP’s candidates will appeal to people and say they are not voting for individuals but actually giving another seat to PM Modi. At the same time, he said, the party will also focus on caste and class at the local level. 

“The Congress, on the other hand, is focusing on local issues. So this election will be a contest between the national narrative and the local narrative,” he added.

Senior journalist and author Sugata Srinivasaraju said, “I am looking at the 2024 election, especially the south, from the point of view of whether the BJP is going to go beyond Karnataka and make an imprint in other states… and also the Congress has pegged a lot of hope on the south. So, for these two factors, the south is going to be important for both parties.”

“This time the Congress (in Karnataka) is in a reasonably better position. Last time they had one seat, so obviously they will do better than one seat… The narrative that the Congress is trying to build on unemployment may become very important in this election… But the Congress does not have a cultural narrative and makes a technocratic argument, and that may not work in a general election like this,” he said.

On the Congress’ guarantees, which helped the party win 135 of the state’s 234 seats in the 2023 Assembly polls, TV Mohandas Pai, Chairman, Aarin Capital Partners, said people will probably give PM Modi’s guarantee a chance this time. 

“Out of 96 crore voters, 55 crore are below the age of 40, so how they vote this time will be important. In Karnataka, people have got all the guarantees from (Chief Minister) Siddaramaiah and the Congress. The state has no more money. Now they want Modi’s guarantee,” Mr Pai said.

“People want PM Modi’s development. He has made sure almost every Indian has a bank account, food on the table, a roof over their head and health insurance, et cetera. Deprivation is less. And this can be seen, it is there on the ground,” he claimed. 

‘Focus On Entrepreneurship’

Another panellist, Nooraine Fazal, Founding Managing Trustee And CEO of Inventure Academy, said India was aspirational even when her generation was growing up, but it lacked the confidence. 

“Today, no matter where you go in the world as an Indian, you can go with your head held high. When I first went out as a student, people would ask ‘do you have tigers where you live, how is your English so good?’ Now, that has changed thanks to Bengaluru. People now ask ‘do you work in IT, do you come from the Silicon Valley of India?'” she pointed out. 

Ms Fazal said her focus in the elections will be on which party is looking at fixing the educational system and harnessing India’s potential. “We need to embrace policies such as the new educational policy… We need to focus on employability, entrepreneurship and enhancing ease of doing business,” she said.

YourStory Founder Shradha Sharma said she is from Bihar and Bengaluru had welcomed her with open arms. 

“The people know everything. Young India and women know everything. India is no longer apologetic. Young India is looking at the next 10 years. When you see startups like Ola, Zerodha, Flipkart and others, they are proud that they are creating employment. Their focus is on understanding which government will ensure that the next 10 years will be India’s decade,” she said.



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