Bangladesh Politics. Politics of Bangladesh. Bangladesh Politics News - http://politics.com.bd
Congress hails India poll victory
http://politics.com.bd/articles/923/1/Congress-hails-India-poll-victory/Page1.html
Super Admin

 
By Super Admin
Published on Saturday 16th 2009
 

The leaders of India's Congress party have thanked the people for returning them to power with a "massive mandate".


The leaders of India's Congress party have thanked the people for returning them to power with a "massive mandate".

Congress President Sonia Gandhi said they had made the "right choice" and PM Manmohan Singh vowed the party would "rise to the occasion".

Earlier the main opposition BJP and the Third Front conceded they had lost.

State television says the Congress's alliance has won or is ahead in 260 seats, compared with the BJP's (161), the Third Front (58) and others (64).

Congress should now find it easier to form a stable government.

Mr Singh said: "I express my deep sense of gratitude to the people for giving us this massive mandate, for having reposed their faith in the party."

Mrs Gandhi said: "The people of India know what's good for them and have made the right choice."

INDIAN ELECTION AT A GLANCE
Eligible voters: 714 million
Polling centres: 828,804
Voting days: 16, 23, 30 April; 7, 13 May
Vote counting: 16 May

Earlier Rajnath Singh, president of the Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, told reporters it had not expected this kind of result. "We will sit together later today, once all the results are out, and analyse what happened," he said.

Senior BJP leader Arun Jaitley said: "Something certainly did go wrong... Our performance was not up to expectation."

Prakash Karat, the leader of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), the key mover in the Third Front, accepted Congress had won.

"The CPM and the Left parties have suffered a major setback," he said.

The BBC's Chris Morris in Delhi says that a small crowd gathered early outside Congress headquarters to celebrate, banging drums and chanting slogans. There have been celebrations in Mumbai and elsewhere.

Our correspondent says several days of backroom deals still lie ahead but the prospect of a very weak and unstable government has receded.

There were earlier reports that Home Minister P Chidambaram had lost his seat in Tamil Nadu, but a recount has now been ordered there.

'People's verdict'

Counting began at 0800 local time (0230 GMT) and with electronic voting machines being used the first trends were quickly available.

Congress confounded predictions, particularly in Uttar Pradesh, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and Gujarat.

Left-wing parties appear to be suffering major reverses in West Bengal and Kerala and the party of Dalit leader Mayawati, also in the Third Front, has underperformed in Uttar Pradesh.

Senior leftist leader Sitaram Yechury said: "It's the people's verdict."

One high-profile winner was former UN diplomat Shashi Tharoor for Congress in Kerala's capital, Trivandrum.

The BJP office in Delhi
The main BJP office in Delhi appeared deserted

Since polling ended on Wednesday, the two main parties have been involved in a series of political meetings, scrambling to gain pledges of support in a predicted hung parliament.

The BBC's Sanjoy Majumder in Delhi says there had been suggestions that both the Congress and BJP were losing relevance in India, ceding political space to smaller, local parties.

But this defeat for the BJP's LK Advani should certainly spell the end of his political career, he says.

The main thrust of the Congress manifesto has been on economic recovery and boosting growth, while the BJP focused on easing taxation and recovering money illegally stashed abroad.

Security has been tight in a number of areas ahead of the results announcement.

Meetings of five or more people have been banned across Rajasthan and victory processions barred in Uttar Pradesh.

Turnout for the election has been put at about 60%, compared with 58% in 2004.

Security has so far generally been considered a success, although about 60 people lost their lives, mostly in Maoist violence.

India's new 543-seat parliament, with a new government in place, is supposed to sit by 2 June.


Source: BBC News