Wednesday, 13 December 2017

Gujarat Assembly Elections - Second phase LIVE: BJP bigwigs caste their votes, EVM glitches reported

Written by Surjit S Bhalla | Updated: December 14 2017 8:02 am Eight opinion polls have been conducted for the Gujarat election. Of the four polls conducted in December two have the BJP winning 134 seats (more than 70 per cent of the seats) in a 182-seat legislature and two polls have the BJP winning 102 seats. Make no mistake about it. The Gujarat election result is important and particularly so for the Congress. A close fight will signal its revival and signal to the BJP that Modi s personal popularity will no longer dominate the vote as the electorate gets increasingly concerned about a slow growth economy https://kkbacklinks.weebly.com/. First some important and necessary caveats. Election forecasting is a hazardous occupation and has felled all experts at one time or another. Our political models have worked rather well over the last decade and we were the only analyst to get both the surprise loss of BJP in Bihar 2015 and the surprise win in UP 2017 right. Which means that the odds are against us getting the Gujarat election right. Nevertheless we must continue until we get an election very wrong. So here goes. What do the opinion polls say? Eight opinion polls have been conducted for the Gujarat election. Of the four polls conducted in December two have the BJP winning 134 seats (more than 70 per cent of the seats) in a 182-seat legislature and two polls have the BJP winning 102 seats. The worst case (for BJP) opinion poll is the one conducted by CSDS which has both the BJP and the Congress tied in vote share with 43 per cent each. However whether CSDS wants to hedge its forecast or their models actually show this equal vote share of the two sides but despite the BJP being an incumbent for the fifth time it is forecast to win by 11 seats 95 to 84 with an equal vote share (CSDS does not make any seat forecasts the television network ABP News uses CSDS voting data to make forecasts). There is a hint here that CSDS does not expect the BJP to lose the election. There is evidence from actual polling to suggest that the BJP will win in a non-tight race. For those who study turnouts there is the broad result that increase in turnout helps the challenger a decline in turnout helps the incumbent. In the first phase of Gujarat polling held on December 9 turnout was lower by 3 to 4 percentage points compared to the previous 2012 assembly election. This suggests that the 2017 result will favour the BJP. The table reports the opinion polls to date (as well as our own forecast). Note that of the eight opinion polls conducted both the outlier results are by the same organisation CSDS. In their first survey (August 31) the CSDS poll expected BJP to repeat their 2014 Lok Sabha success (when the BJP won 160 assembly constituencies). In their latest December poll also an outlier CSDS expects BJP to win only 91-99 seats. The other six polls done at very different times and by different organisations all have a near identical range for the BJP 115-130 seats. The Lokniti-CSDS tracker poll has been showing a consistent decline with the passage of time. CSDS is a reputed survey organisation; however its forecasts over the last three Modi years have broadly been characterised by a small bias against the BJP. While all pollsters have biases (they are human) the fact remains that reputations can also be affected by bad forecasts. In other words the latest CSDS forecast should be taken seriously. According to the media there are four reasons to infer that the latest CSDS report is genuine (i) Congress s dynasty candidate (equivalent to a Kennedy running in the late 60s) Rahul Gandhi had a successful tour of the US speaking at colleges etc. Most mainstream US publications and mainstream English media in India emphasised that Rahul Gandhi had turned a corner and was seen by ordinary people (both in India and abroad) as now ready to take on the leadership of the Congress . (ii) By all accounts Rahul Gandhi has run a mature political campaign and one which has constantly emphasised the bad state of the economy. It has been almost explicitly patterned after Bill Clinton s It is the economy stupid campaign of 1992. (iii) The economic facts support Rahul Gandhi s appeal. GDP (more accurately GVA) has grown by a low 5.6 and 6.1 per cent in the last two quarters considerably lower than the 8 per cent growth of 2015/16. (iv) Two big economic shocks have hit the economy over the last 12 months demonetisation and introduction of GST. This has disrupted business and has hurt the assumed solid base of the BJP in Gujarat the trading community. Historical data also surprisingly points to a BJP win. (i) Anti-incumbency: If BJP wins Gujarat 2017 it will have done so for the sixth consecutive election. It will then be the second-most victorious state election winner ever (omitting very small states in Northeast India like Tripura). The record for the most consecutive wins seven is held by the CPM in West Bengal 1977-2006. (ii) BJP s margin of victory has averaged around 10 per cent in each of the elections since 1995 the minimum margin was 9 per cent in 2012 and the maximum margin in 2007 11.1 per cent. PM Modi was the BJP state leader and chief minister in each of the election years 2002 2007 and 2012. (iii) In state elections subsequent to 2014 the BJP has increased its share by an average of 6 per cent. Thus what the historical record reveals is that even if Gujarat is an exception to this increased vote pattern and the BJP does not gain any additional vote share it can still expect to win around 115 seats. So what will likely happen in Gujarat 2017? The table contains our forecast based on opinion polls different models and different assumptions. All indicators (including turnout mentioned above) suggest the following big conclusion it will be a mega upset if the BJP were to lose Gujarat. It would be a major surprise if the BJP got less than 105 seats. The median forecast of our various models is that the BJP romps home comfortably with 120-130 seats. Obtaining 150 seats as BJP President Amit Shah has predicted has the same non-zero chance as the BJP obtaining less than 100 seats. It is now conventional wisdom that if the BJP were to win by less than a 100 seats it would be seen as having lost the election. If this happens it is a safe bet that the economy vikas will be the talking point of post-match analysis in the media among politicians and among economists. It is likely that the RBI/MPC will come in for stinging criticism from all quarters (excepting the political opposition). It will be argued that demonetisation and GST were expected to temporarily derail the economy but why did the RBI have to aid the decline in the economy (and jobs) by pursuing an excessively high real interest rate policy? Recall that the Finance Bill authorising the creation of the MPC states AND WHEREAS the primary objective of the monetary policy is to maintain price stability while keeping in mind the objective of growth . Even if the BJP wins comfortably (our base-line forecast) the economy is the only weapon that the political opposition has. Demonetisation is now more than a year old and GST will likely improve in tax collection. The RBI expects the economy to recover to 7.8 per cent in the next three months. If it does the Opposition will have lost their most potent weapon against PM Modi s popularity. If it doesn t the Opposition will remain in battle. The writer is contributing editor The Indian Express and senior India analyst at Observatory Group a New York-based macro policy advisory group. Views are personal For all the latest Opinion News download Indian Express App Tags: BJP Congress Gujarat Assembly Election 2017
ALSO READ Parliamentary panel questions Rs 2 000 cap on political donations Have Indian elections funded by invisible money become dirtier? SC asks Centre to apprise it on issue of NRI voting in polls Too much information Fast-track courts for MPs MLAs: Is SC encroaching legislature s domain? span.p-content div id =div-gpt line-height: 0px; font-size: 0px; Violation of Section 126 (1) (b) of The Representation of the People Act 1951 by certain TV Channels. Election Commission today received Reports & Complaints to the effect that some of TV channels in Gujarat have displayed interview given by Sh. Rahul Gandhi of Indian National Congress in which Sh. Rahul Gandhi has been talking about election to Legislative Assembly of Gujarat which are currently in progress and https://kkbacklinks.splashthat.com/for which 2nd phase of poll is scheduled to be taken tomorrow i.e. 14th December 2017. Such display falls within the definition of election matter under Section 126 (3) of Representation of the People Act 1951 and display of such election matter within 48 hours ending with hour fixed for conclusion of poll in the poll going arears amounts to violation of Section 126 (1)(b) of Representation of the People Act 1951. The Commission after due deliberations has therefore directed the Chief Electoral Officer of Gujarat to initiate necessary action by filing FIR against those who have violated the above mentioned provisions in phase 2 Districts in Gujarat going to poll tomorrow i.e. 14th December 2017. Further those TV channels which are violating the provisions of Section 126 (1)(b) by displaying said election matter in phase 2 district in Gujarat have been directed to forthwith stop the display of such matter. Election Commission of India New Delhi :13th December 2017 RM/(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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