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Sunday, March 10, 2019

Karnataka to vote on Apr 18 and 23: Will Cong-JD(S) coalition break into BJP bastions?

Lok Sabha 2019
The Lok Sabha polls will be held in Karnataka in a two phases with 14 constituencies going to polls in each phase.
Karnataka will go to polls on  with the Election Commission announcing the dates for the 2019 Lok Sabha Elections on April 18 and April 23. Polls will be held across the state in a two phases with 14 constitiencies going to polls on April 18 and 14 constituencies on April 23. The counting of ballots for the Parliamentary Election will take place on May 23.    According to the EC, for the 14 constituencies which go to polls on April 18, the last date for filing nominations in Karnataka is on March 26. The last date for scrutiny of nomination is on March 27 and the last date for withdrawal of nomination is on March 29. For those 14 constituencies going to polls on April 23, the last date for filing nominations is on April 4, the last day of withdrawal of nomination is on April 8. Karnataka has been a bastion of the BJP for Parliamentary Elections since 2004. The BJP won 17 out of the 28 seats in 2004, and emerged victorious in 18 constituencies in the subsequent 2009 Lok Sabha polls. In 2014, the BJP won 17 seats, the Congress won 9 while the JD(S) managed to win only 2 constituencies.   This election season, the Congress-JD(S) alliance is up against the BJP and is hoping to make in-roads in several key constituencies in the northern part of the state. The last time the Congress won more than 10 Lok Sabha seats in the state was in 1999 when it bagged 18 seats. Party insiders say that it is a matter of prestige for the Congress to win at least 15 seats this election, especially since the coalition partners are banking on winning most of the seats in Old Mysuru region. Kalaburgi, Bagalkot, Ballari, Chikkodi, Raichur and Bidar are the constituencies in the northern part of the state the coalition has to retain. "In these segments, the fight has always been between the Congress and the BJP, while the JD(S) has been a non-actor. These are also areas where the Congress has a presence. Losing out here means the Congress in Karnataka will be reduced to a party which cannot win in the northern part of the state,” a Congress source said. Since the 2018 Karnataka state Assembly elections, former Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, the MLA of Badami in Bagalkot, has been campaigning for the party and trying to break into BJP’s stronghold in the norther part of the state. The BJP too has strategically begun its fight with PM Modi launching the campaign in Karnataka from Hubballi, a BJP bastion. On March 6, Prime Minister Modi took part in a rally in Raichur, a Congress stronghold. “It will be a tough fight because in these regions, the Modi wave works, while it’s not so in many southern districts. The Mumbai-Karnataka region has seven segments and these are Lingayat dominated areas, which vote for BJP. The challenge will be to win three to four seats in this region. Another bastion of the BJP is Bengaluru Urban district. The city’s voters have voted for BJP since the 2004 election and the leaders are also pretty strong. This time, the candidates will be chosen based on winnability and not based on whether it is worth fielding a strong candidate against a heavyweight," the Congress source said.  
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