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The Indian National Congress’s humiliating defeat in the recent assembly elections, particularly in its home state of Uttar Pradesh and the assembly constituency of its vice-president Rahul Gandhi, are symbolic of the party’s present condition.
The Congress is going through one of its worst slumps in its post-Independence history, and many digital bytes have suggested a surgical strike on its leadership and a complete overhaul of the party machinery.
The most appropriate metric for evaluating the performance of a political party and its “CEO” is its win percentage and vote share. Ten states – Maharashtra, Jharkhand, Bihar, Delhi, Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Assam, UP and Punjab – have had a state election since the 2014 general election, not including the smaller ones such as Goa and Manipur.
These 10 states account for nearly 60 percent (317/543) of all Lok Sabha seats.
In subsequent state elections in these 10 states, the Congress party contested in 1,032 assembly constituencies across these states and won 258 – a winning percentage of 25 percent.
Put simply, the Congress doubled its win rate between the 2014 general election and the subsequent state elections.
In eight out of these 10 states, the Congress has won more assembly segments post-2014 than it did in the 2014 elections (when considering parliamentary performance in assembly segments to break down voting patterns). Its vote share increased in six out of these 10.
The charts below show the Congress’ vote share and seats won in the 2014 general election and the subsequent assembly election in each state. A triangle inside the box indicates that the Congress improved its performance post-2014 in that state.
Arithmetically, it is hard to make the case that the Congress is in worse shape today than it was in 2014. The numbers clearly show that the Congress has doubled its win percentage and improved its vote share by 50 percent since 2014.
To be sure, the Congress’ improved electoral performance is largely on the back of opportune alliances. But a decision to swallow pride and ally with another party is also a political strategy.
Either way, only time will tell if the Congress needs a new life or a coffin, but arguments on either side should not lose sight of the data.
(This article was originally published in IndiaSpend.)
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