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UP Elections: BJP’s Votes Soar Since 2012, but Drop Since 2014

The BJP had got 42.6 percent vote share in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls in Uttar Pradesh.

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The BJP has more than doubled its vote share in Uttar Pradesh to close to 40 percent since the last assembly elections though there is a slight drop since the Lok Sabha polls of 2014.

The BJP did even better in the neighbouring Uttarakhand, with over 46 percent vote share, though down from nearly 56 percent in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls.

In Punjab, where the Congress was headed for a victory, the BJP saw its vote share decline to just about 5 percent, down from nearly 9 percent in the 2014 elections. The party also saw its vote share drop in Goa to nearly 33 percent from over 54 percent though it saw a big jump in Manipur to close to 35 percent from 12 percent.

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The BJP's rival parties – the SP, the BSP and the Congress – have all seen their vote shares decline sharply since the 2012 assembly polls in Uttar Pradesh though there is surprisingly not much change since their share in the Lok Sabha elections of 2014.

While the BJP has emerged victorious in UP after 14 years, the rivals appeared to have failed in converting their vote shares into an equivalent seat share.

As per the latest trends, the BJP was seen heading for victory in close to 300 seats in the 403-member Assembly.

In terms of the latest vote share data, as available with the Election Commission, the BJP polled 39.6 percent, followed by the SP and the BSP with 22 percent each while the Congress was seen getting over 6 percent.

Among others, the Rashtriya Lok Dal was seen getting less than 2 percent vote share and the CPI had just 0.2 percent, while 0.9 percent votes were cast for NOTA (None Of The Above).

Independent candidates who were seen as leading on three seats polled 2.5 percent votes.

The BJP had got 42.6 percent vote share in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls in Uttar Pradesh while the same was just 15 percent in the last assembly elections in the state in 2012. The SP’s vote share has remained largely unchanged from 22.3 percent since 2014, but has come down from over 29 percent in 2012.
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For the Mayawati-led BSP, the vote share has actually gone up from just below 20 per cent in 2014, though down from nearly 26 percent in 2012. For the Congress, it has been a path down the hill from 7.5 percent in 2014 and from 11.6 percent in 2012.

In Goa, the seat tally was seen divided between the BJP and the Congress, through the former had a better vote share of over 33 percent as against 28 percent of the latter.

Manipur, where also the results appeared to be divided, the BJP polled larger number of votes at over 35 percent as against 33 percent for the Congress. In Punjab, the BJP and its ally Shiromani Akali Dal got 5.2 percent and 25.4 percent votes, respectively, lower than more than 38 percent share of the Congress.
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The Aam Aadmi Party, which has a government in Delhi and was shown in exit polls to have done well, got nearly 24 percent votes, but looked much weaker on seat tally. It did worse with just about 6 percent share in Goa, the other state where AAP had sought to claim a presence.

In Uttarakhand, another state where the BJP was headed for a massive majority just like UP, the Congress polled 33.5 percent, while independents also got more than 10 percent votes.

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