Similar to the first two phases of India’s 2024 parliamentary elections, the Congress-led Indian bloc is in a less cohesive manner than the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led NDA in the ongoing third phase of the parliamentary elections. will be fought over. Indeed, the conflicts within these two alliances are likely to be more moderate in the third electoral phase than in the second, and some are likely to be purely ideological.
The Indian bloc has fielded 108 candidates for the 93 PCs voting on May 7, 15 more than the number of seats available. In the 13th PC he has two Indian bloc candidates, while in the Barpeta PC in Assam he has candidates from three political parties contesting the election. Indian political parties have intra-alliance conflicts in 14 out of 93 PCs (15% of PCs), second only to elections where 40 out of 88 PCs (45.5%) had intra-alliance conflicts. This is an improvement compared to the previous stage. Such conflicts were limited to 12 of the 112 PCs (10.7%) in the first phase.
Four of the 14 PCs in dispute between political parties in India are in West Bengal, between the All India Trinamool Congress (TMC) and the Congress-Communist Party of India (Marxist) or CPI(M) alliance. It is contested. In 2019, the BJP and Congress won one each of these four PCs, while the TMC won two of them. The remaining 10 countries with disputes between Indian parties are Chhattisgarh (1 person), Madhya Pradesh (1 person), Dadra and Nagar Haveli (1 person), and Assam (2 persons). ), Maharashtra (2 PCs), and Gujarat (3 PCs).
In 2019, the BJP-led alliance won seven of these 10 PC seats, with independent candidates winning more seats. His 2019 results for 2 Assam PCs are not relevant as there are boundaries. Among the Indian bloc member states, the Congress is contesting the most seats (68) at this stage of the election.
Compared to the Indian alliance, the NDA alliance is much more cohesive in this phase as well as in the previous two phases. NDA members are in dispute in only 6 out of 93 PCs (6.45%) and in 82 of them he is contested by the BJP. The proportion of contested seats within the NDA is higher in the third stage than both the first stage PC (uncontested) and the second stage PC (2 out of 88 PCs); This is due to relatively small partners within the alliance. In 2019, there are no MPs, and the party is fielding candidates together with the Bharatiya Janata Party. Of the six PCs in which multiple NDA parties are participating, four PCs (one each in Gujarat and Karnataka and two in Madhya Pradesh) are against the BJP and two PCs are against the Asom Gana Parishad. (AGP). One of them is in Assam.
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