PM Modi spearheaded the campaign for the ruling party and president of Congress Rahul Gandhi helmed the stumping for his outfit.
NEW DELHI: Campaigning for the second and the last phase of polling in Gujarat ended on Tuesday. In the last phase, the canvassing saw charges flying thick and fast with the top brass of the BJP and the Congress launching no holds barred attacks against each other.
Top leaders from the two parties criss-crossed the regions going to polls on December 14 and addressed a number of rallies where they pulled out all stops to woo the voters.
The last day of the campaign saw Prime Minister Narendra Modi flying by a seaplane from the Sabarmati river in Ahmedabad to Dharoi in Mehsana district. Whereas, Rahul Gandhi said that there is “tremendous undercurrent” against the BJP in Gujarat, and predicted a victory for his party in the Assembly elections.
PM Modi spearheaded the campaign for the ruling party and president of Congress Rahul Gandhi helmed the stumping for his outfit.
The second and final phase of elections, for which the open campaigning ended at 5 pm, will see 93 assembly seats spread across 14 districts in north and central Gujarat going to polls.
The first phase of voting for the 182-member house, held on December 9, covered 89 seats.
A total of 851 candidates are in the fray for the second phase, where 2.22 crore people are eligible to vote.
The Gujarat contest is being seen as a prestige battle for Modi in his home state, where a reinvigorated Congress has sewed up a broad social coalition with prominent Patidar, OBC, and Dalit leaders in its bid to unseat the BJP in power for over two decades.
The influential Patidar community, which accounts for around 12 per cent of the state’s population, could prove to be the ‘X factor’ in the polls in which agitating quota spearhead Hardik Patel pledged support to the Congress and appealed to people to “uproot the BJP” this time.
As the campaign was nearing its end, “Vikas” (development) took a back seat, and caste and religious issues received prominence.
Pakistan, too, found ample mention in the final stages of the electioneering.
Modi set off a political storm when, speaking at a rally in Palanpur, he talked about a meeting held at suspended Congress leader Mani Shankar Aiyar’s home in Delhi and attended by some Pakistani dignitaries, a former Vice President of India and former prime minister Manmohan Singh.
This meeting, Modi claimed, happened a day before Aiyar called him “neech” (lowly sort of person).
During the campaign, Modi and BJP chief Amit Shah trained guns on the Congress on issues like Ram Temple, alleged Pakistani interference in the Gujarat polls and Aiyar’s remarks.
On the other hand, Gandhi persistently and tenaciously attacked Modi and the BJP for “not talking about the future of Gujarat” and skipping key issues being faced by the people of the state.
He accused Modi of ignoring the masses and working for only a handful of industrialists.
The last day of campaigning saw both Modi and Gandhi visiting temples. While Gandhi paid a visit to the famous Lord Jagannath Temple in Ahmedabad, Modi took blessings at the famous Ambaji Temple in Banaskantha.
Hardik Patel charged up the campaign by holding a massive rally in Nikol area of the city, where he appealed to voters to “teach a lesson” to the BJP this time.
The 24-year-old, arguably the most talked about personality in Gujarat today, even held a road show here defying authorities who had denied permission for the event.
Several senior leaders from both the BJP and the Congress also campaigned extensively for their candidates in major parts of north and central Gujarat.
In the 2012 assembly polls, the BJP had won 115 seats, while the Congress bagged 61.
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