HomeNewsAssembly Election 2024sKarnatakaKarnataka Elections: The results are a morale booster to disheartened Congress cadres but chalking national strategy is crucial

Karnataka Elections: The results are a morale booster to disheartened Congress cadres but chalking national strategy is crucial

If Congress can create local and miniature versions of Siddaramaiah, DK Shivakumar and Mallikarjun Kharge in each of the 209 Lok Sabha seats across 19 states where it is in a direct fight with BJP and leave many of the remaining seats for regional parties, the political winds may shift in 2024

May 13, 2023 / 20:51 IST
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Buoyed by massive electoral victories in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh in 2003, the then BJP-led National Democratic Alliance government went for early general elections in May 2004 to capitalise on the "feel good" factor created by these victories.

But this "feel good" factor did not translate into winning seats in the Lok Sabha elections. Voters gave the BJP a huge drubbing, and its main allies, the Telugu Desam Party and the Janata Dal (United), failed to achieve even single-digit results.

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This was not the story of 2004 alone. Repeatedly, Indian voters have shown that their preferences for assembly elections and Parliament are different. In Delhi, where the Aam Aadmi Party has won assembly elections since 2013, it failed to repeat that result in the Lok Sabha in 2014 or 2019. The BJP's victory in Karnataka did not help the party nationally in the 2009 Lok Sabha elections, which the Congress-led UPA won.

Therefore, the Congress party's victory in Karnataka this time may not mean spring has come for the party, which has endured a political winter since 2014. But the "feel good" factor it has generated will prove a morale booster for disheartened cadres across the country.