HomeNewsAssembly Election 2024sKarnatakaKarnataka Assembly Elections 2023: Exit polls give Congress the edge, with BJP close behind

Karnataka Assembly Elections 2023: Exit polls give Congress the edge, with BJP close behind

Karnataka Assembly Elections 2023: However, in the event of a hung assembly, which some of the exit polls indicate is a possibility, it is the JD(S) with its likely modest numbers that could once again become the king or the kingmaker.

May 11, 2023 / 13:26 IST
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Elections to the Karnataka Assembly were held on May 10 and the votes will be counted on May 13.
Elections to the Karnataka Assembly were held on May 10 and the votes will be counted on May 13.

The Congress appears set for a comeback in Karnataka with most exit polls giving the party an edge in the Assembly elections held on March 10. The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is in second place, while the Janata Dal-Secular (JDS), which has been making noises about forming the government on its own, is a distant third, a position it has made its own over many polls now. But even so, if the exit polls are wrong and Karnataka has a hung Assembly, as some of the polls suggest, the JD(S) could once again end up becoming the king or the kingmaker. This is despite no exit poll giving it more than 33 seats.

Of the nine exit poll predictions, seven have put the Congress ahead of the others. India Today-My Axis India has given a clear majority to the Congress with a prediction of 131 (mid-range), with the BJP in second spot with 71 seats and the JD(S) at 22 seats.

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ABC-CVoter has given the Congress 100 to 112 seats, short of a simple majority, the BJP 83 to 95 seats, JD(S) 21 to 29 and others 2 to 6. Today’s Chanakya survey predicted the Congress would get 120 seats, the BJP 92 and JD(S) 12, while TimesNow has given the Congress exactly 113 seats, the magic figure to form the government, with the BJP at 85, JD(S) at 23 and others with 3 seats.

Elections to the Karnataka Assembly were held on May 10 and the votes will be counted on May 13. A high-voltage campaign by all three parties ensured a voter turnout of 72.67 percent, excluding postal ballots and home voting (for senior citizens and the disabled) according to the Election Commission. In 2018, the turnout was 73.13 percent.