Maharashtra: Local bodies’ elections
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For the 25 zilla parishads, BJP won 397 of the 1,509 seats.It was followed by the NCP with 336, Congress with 293 and Shiv Sena with 259. MNS got one and others 147. Results of 76 seats were still awaited. | For the 25 zilla parishads, BJP won 397 of the 1,509 seats.It was followed by the NCP with 336, Congress with 293 and Shiv Sena with 259. MNS got one and others 147. Results of 76 seats were still awaited. | ||
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+ | ==2017: Mumbai divided by language?== | ||
+ | [http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/mumbai/bmc-poll-results-reveal-linguistic-polarisation-claims-bjp-leader/articleshow/57333833.cms Feb 24, 2017, BMC poll results reveal 'linguistic polarisation', claims BJP leader: The Times of India] | ||
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+ | '''HIGHLIGHTS''' | ||
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+ | Lower middle class and the working class among Marathi-speakers voted largely for the Shiv Sena, claims BJP leader Soumen Mukharjee | ||
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+ | 'The upper middle class and areas with large number of Gujarati-speakers and North Indians voted for the BJP' | ||
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+ | MUMBAI: The results of the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation polls+ hint at polarisation along linguistic lines between the BJP and the Shiv Sena+ , claimed a BJP leader. | ||
+ | The bickering alliance partners in Maharashtra, who parted ways ahead of the civic body elections, seemed to have divided the voters on regional or linguistic lines, going by the voting patterns, said Soumen Mukharjee, co-convener of BJP's media cell. | ||
+ | Lower middle class and the working class among Marathi-speakers voted largely for the Shiv Sena, while the upper middle class and areas with large number of Gujarati-speakers and North Indians voted for the BJP, the voting patterns show, said Mukharjee. | ||
+ | Also, the 'old Mumbai' city seemed to have supported the Shiv Sena, while the BJP, which attained its highest-ever tally by winning 82 out of 227 seats, only two less than the Sena, gained more in suburbs, especially the western ones. | ||
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+ | "The polarisation has taken place over the linguistic base. Non-Marathi speaking voters have largely voted for the BJP. On the other hand, the old city areas have voted the Shiv Sena because of its strong network of party workers developed over the last so many years," Mukharjee said. | ||
+ | As per the data given by the State Election Commission, of the 114 seats in the western suburbs from Bandra to Dahisar, which have a sizeable population of North Indians and Gujarati-speakers, the BJP won 52 and the Sena 38. | ||
+ | The exception to this pattern was Bandra East, where Shiv Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray lives. BJP did not win a single seat here, while the Sena won five and AIMIM won remaining one seat. | ||
+ | A Sena leader pointed out, speaking on the condition of anonymity, that though Mumbai BJP chief Ashish Shelar represents the Bandra constituency in the state Assembly, in the BMC elections+ his party drew a blank in the area. | ||
+ | The eastern suburbs had a neck-and-neck contest between the BJP and the Sena. Of the 57 seats, the Shiv Sena won 18 and the BJP 17. Rest went to the NCP, Congress and others. | ||
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+ | However, the exception was the suburban Mulund area, a stronghold of BJP MP Kirit Somaiya who had targeted the Sena leadership aggressively during the campaign. In Mulund, which has a sizable Gujarati-speaking population, the BJP won all the six seats. | ||
+ | In old Mumbai, which has slums, tenements (chawls) and old 'waadis' (old one-two storey settlements), Sena had an upper hand. Out of the 56 seats, it won 28, while the BJP won 13, Congress 11, MNS two, SP one and the Akhil Bhartiya Sena one. This area comprises Sion-Koliwada, Wadala, Dharavi, Mahim, Worli, Shivdi, Byculla, Mumbadevi, Malbar Hill and Colaba. | ||
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+ | The BJP did not win a single seat in Dharavi, known as Asia's largest slum area, Worli and Shivdi. | ||
+ | "Sena's appeal to 'sons of soil' (native Maharashtrians) received a good response in the Mumbai city area. On the other hand, the BJP's plank of development and transparency was appreciated by western and eastern suburbs," Mukharjee said. |
Revision as of 23:00, 16 March 2017
This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content. |
2016, municipal councils: BJP, Congress, Shiv Sena, NCP won
The Times of India, Dec 20 2016
Prafulla Marpakwar
Congress, which was down and out in the first two phases of municipal council elections in Maharashtra, came up with an impressive performance in the third phase, winning the maximum number of seats -126 -out of a total of 409. The BJP came second with 119 seats, followed by the NCP (79) and Shiv Sena (48).
Also, in the 19 councils in the Marathwada region that went to the polls in the third phase, the Congress won the same number of presidents' posts as the BJP: eight. The NCP won only one st of president, while post of president, while Shiv Sena failed to open its account in the region.
However, despite the Congress's comeback in the latest phase on the turf of former CM and state unit chief Ashok Chavan, the Fadnavis-led BJP has emerged as the biggest gainer in the polls, having won the largest number of posts of president and members in 197 councils.
BJP has secured 65 posts of president, followed by 34 by the Congress, 26 by Shiv Sena and 20 by NCP. Out of 4,560 members' seats, BJP has secured 1,093, while Congress won 899.
2017, municipal corporations: BJP wins 8 of 10 corporations
BJP cuts Tiger's tail, wins 8 of 10 Maha corporations, Feb 24, 2017: The Times of India
In the hierarchy of elections, municipal elections are generally considered a lowly third, after Lok Sabha and assembly . But the very bitter falling-out between allies BJP and Shiv Sena had already injected a strong element of both political and personal drama into the elec tions to the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation, the country's richest civic body, which the Thackerays have controlled for two decades.
Maharashtra CM Devend ra Fadnavis had all but staked his reputation on the outcome of civic elections across the state, more so in India's financial capital. The first twothree hours of counting of vo tes seemed to suggest that he had gambled foolishly .
Then, fortunes swung.What had initially seemed to be a one-sided game turned into a last-ball cliffhanger. The Sena finished just two seats ahead of BJP in BMC, while BJP swept 8 of 10 corporations in the state. Uddhav Thackeray's par ty, which had said BJP didn't deserve more than 60 seats in a seat-sharing pact, ended the day as the single largest party but by a mere whisker -a couple of seats ahead of its estranged ally, which ran a high-decibel campaign against rampant corruption and lack of transparency in the Sena-dominated corporation, richly harvesting the anti-incumbency vote despite having been a junior partner in the ruling civic alliance.
The results are a major boost to BJP , which swept eight out of 10 corporations in the state that went to the polls, and a serious setback for the Sena in its bastion, Mumbai, where it was born in 1966.Though it held on to its Marathi votebank, it failed to come within striking distance of the majority mark of 114 in a house of 227 and was matched in tantalizing fashion, as the day of counting progressed, seat for seat, by BJP which drew heavily on Gujarati-Marwari and North Indian votes and a section of the Marathi-speaking population as well.
But with the two parties falling 28 and 30 seats short of the majority , all eyes are now on the possible permutations and combinations that could help one of them win the mayoral election, unless they now choose to bury the hatchet and join hands. Elsewhere, BJP was the single largest party in Ulhasnagar, Nashik, Pune, Pimpri-Chinchwad, Solapur, Akola, Amravati and Nagpur.
For the 25 zilla parishads, BJP won 397 of the 1,509 seats.It was followed by the NCP with 336, Congress with 293 and Shiv Sena with 259. MNS got one and others 147. Results of 76 seats were still awaited.
2017: Mumbai divided by language?
HIGHLIGHTS
Lower middle class and the working class among Marathi-speakers voted largely for the Shiv Sena, claims BJP leader Soumen Mukharjee
'The upper middle class and areas with large number of Gujarati-speakers and North Indians voted for the BJP'
MUMBAI: The results of the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation polls+ hint at polarisation along linguistic lines between the BJP and the Shiv Sena+ , claimed a BJP leader. The bickering alliance partners in Maharashtra, who parted ways ahead of the civic body elections, seemed to have divided the voters on regional or linguistic lines, going by the voting patterns, said Soumen Mukharjee, co-convener of BJP's media cell. Lower middle class and the working class among Marathi-speakers voted largely for the Shiv Sena, while the upper middle class and areas with large number of Gujarati-speakers and North Indians voted for the BJP, the voting patterns show, said Mukharjee. Also, the 'old Mumbai' city seemed to have supported the Shiv Sena, while the BJP, which attained its highest-ever tally by winning 82 out of 227 seats, only two less than the Sena, gained more in suburbs, especially the western ones.
"The polarisation has taken place over the linguistic base. Non-Marathi speaking voters have largely voted for the BJP. On the other hand, the old city areas have voted the Shiv Sena because of its strong network of party workers developed over the last so many years," Mukharjee said. As per the data given by the State Election Commission, of the 114 seats in the western suburbs from Bandra to Dahisar, which have a sizeable population of North Indians and Gujarati-speakers, the BJP won 52 and the Sena 38. The exception to this pattern was Bandra East, where Shiv Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray lives. BJP did not win a single seat here, while the Sena won five and AIMIM won remaining one seat. A Sena leader pointed out, speaking on the condition of anonymity, that though Mumbai BJP chief Ashish Shelar represents the Bandra constituency in the state Assembly, in the BMC elections+ his party drew a blank in the area. The eastern suburbs had a neck-and-neck contest between the BJP and the Sena. Of the 57 seats, the Shiv Sena won 18 and the BJP 17. Rest went to the NCP, Congress and others.
However, the exception was the suburban Mulund area, a stronghold of BJP MP Kirit Somaiya who had targeted the Sena leadership aggressively during the campaign. In Mulund, which has a sizable Gujarati-speaking population, the BJP won all the six seats. In old Mumbai, which has slums, tenements (chawls) and old 'waadis' (old one-two storey settlements), Sena had an upper hand. Out of the 56 seats, it won 28, while the BJP won 13, Congress 11, MNS two, SP one and the Akhil Bhartiya Sena one. This area comprises Sion-Koliwada, Wadala, Dharavi, Mahim, Worli, Shivdi, Byculla, Mumbadevi, Malbar Hill and Colaba.
The BJP did not win a single seat in Dharavi, known as Asia's largest slum area, Worli and Shivdi. "Sena's appeal to 'sons of soil' (native Maharashtrians) received a good response in the Mumbai city area. On the other hand, the BJP's plank of development and transparency was appreciated by western and eastern suburbs," Mukharjee said.