HomeNewsOpinionAssam Polls | Can NDA repeat its 2016 performance?

Assam Polls | Can NDA repeat its 2016 performance?

Assam is bracing for the most interesting assembly polls ever held in the state. The ruling BJP’s 100-seat target could be difficult to achieve. Here’s why 

March 09, 2021 / 12:56 IST
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Representative image
Representative image

Mixed signals are emanating from Assam ahead of the assembly polls. This is unusual for this Northeastern state if previous elections are evaluated.

Since 1977, the outcome of the state elections had been by and large predictable; occasionally the Lok Sabha polls have thrown unexpected results. The uncertainty this time around has been triggered by a three-cornered contest involving 14 parties and the spate of resignations by candidates denied tickets.

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Sample this: Sum Ronghang, a current minister who was among the 11 sitting party legislators, joined the Congress after he was denied a ticket by the Bharatiya Janata party(BJP); the Left parties are unhappy with the Congress over the sharing of seats; and, there is no consensus between the newly-formed Assam Jatiya Parishad (AJP) and the Raijor Dal over many seats. In Golaghat, the candidates are the same as in the election of 2016 but they have switched parties.

Assam is bracing for the most interesting assembly polls ever held in the state. The ruling BJP’s aim of increasing the tally from 87 seats to 100 seats, from a total of 126 seats in the assembly, could be difficult. Like in the previous polls, the national party’s focus is on eastern Assam which has a majority of Assamese, tea tribes and Bengali Hindu communities; here it is expected to perform well. But the region west of Guwahati could be tougher like the Bengali-dominated Barak Valley where the Congress-led alliance has an edge.