First vote setback: Modi faces Delhi election defeat

Exit polls show Aam Aadmi Party in comfortable lead


Afp February 08, 2015
Exit polls show Aam Aadmi Party in comfortable lead. PHOTO: AFP

NEW DELHI:


India’s Narendra Modi was forecast to suffer the first major setback of his premiership Saturday as exit polls showed his party had been defeated in elections to Delhi’s state assembly by a self-styled anarchist.


Five exit polls released after voting ended indicated that the Aam Aadmi Party of the capital’s former chief minister Arvind Kejriwal had comfortably beaten Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), with four of them forecasting an overall majority.

While polls have been wide of the mark in the past, victory would be particularly sweet for the anti-corruption champion, trounced by Modi when they both battled for the seat of Varanasi in May’s general election.

Most pundits had written off Kejriwal after he resigned following a chaotic 49-day spell in charge of the Delhi state government last year and then saw his party win just four seats in the general election.

But after apologising for leaving voters without an elected government for a year, Kejriwal has been the star of the campaign, outshining former policewoman Kiran Bedi who was the BJP’s pick for chief minister.

A steady stream of voters could be seen outside polling booths throughout the day and the electoral commission put the provisional figure for final turnout at an impressive 67 per cent, a new record.

“People want a corruption free and bribery free Delhi and I’m hopeful they will vote accordingly,” Kejriwal told reporters as he went to vote.

“I am confident the people will win and that the truth will win.”

Rattled by Kejriwal’s popularity, Modi headlined several major rallies, portraying his rival as a ‘backstabber’ who betrayed voters last time round by quitting so early.

Having invested an unusually large amount of political capital in a state election, observers say a defeat will be a significant setback for a prime minister who has enjoyed an extended honeymoon with voters since his landslide general election victory. “It (Aam Aadmi) appears to be a credible challenger to the Modi juggernaut,” said an editorial in The Hindu newspaper Saturday.

Bedi, who had been hoping Modi’s strong support would be decisive, refused to throw in the towel after the exit polls were released.

“We must wait until February 10 for the results. I can assure you truth will win and the exit poll results will change,” she told reporters.

A former reality TV show host, Bedi is a seasoned media performer. But Kejriwal has proved his pulling power among working class and minority voters, with impromptu appearances drawing thousands. Kejriwal’s campaign has been based around promises of lower utility bills and free wifi for Delhi’s 17 million residents, as well as pledges to counter corruption.

In a press conference Friday, Modi’s finance minister and top lieutenant Arun Jaitley said Aam Aadmi’s rule had been “nightmarish”

“Delhi needs an administrator and not an anarchist,” he said. 

Published in The Express Tribune, February 8th, 2015.

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