HomeNewsPoliticsAssam Elections 2021 | How Muslims of the state, one-third of electorate, voted in 2016 and 2019

Assam Elections 2021 | How Muslims of the state, one-third of electorate, voted in 2016 and 2019

In the last general elections, 70 percent of Assam's Muslims voted for the Congress, followed by 20 percent for the AIUDF, a post-poll study suggested.

March 31, 2021 / 23:09 IST
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AIUDF President and Lok Sabha MP from Dhubri, Badruddin Ajmal with his son and Jamunamukh MLA Abdur Rahim Ajmal (File Image: PTI)
AIUDF President and Lok Sabha MP from Dhubri, Badruddin Ajmal with his son and Jamunamukh MLA Abdur Rahim Ajmal (File Image: PTI)

In Assam, the Muslim community is considered as electorally significant as they account for around one-third of the state's population. At least 33 out of the 126 constituencies of Assam are 'Muslim-dominated', and the community - if it votes en-bloc - is decisive in determining the poll results in 18 other seats, analysts claim. Here is how they voted in 2016 and 2019.

In the last assembly polls, the dominating victory of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led alliance was partly attributed to the division of Muslim votes between the then incumbent ruling party Congress and the All India United Democratic Front (AIUDF).

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Badruddin Ajmal, the perfume baron-cum-politician who heads the AIUDF, had claimed ahead of the 2016 polls that the Congress "would be blamed" if the BJP succeeds in forming the government. His remarks came after the Congress refrained from sealing a pre-poll alliance with the party.

The post-election survey of Lokniti-CSDS confirmed the division of minority votes, along with a drift in ethnic Assamese and Bengali community votes towards the BJP.