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Assam 2016 is essentially a battle between the fifteen-year-old incumbent Congress government and a post-2014-bolstered BJP. If the 2014 Lok Sabha election result is anything to go by, the BJP in Assam should be enthused and the Congress embattled.
However, in an exclusive conversation with The Quint, sitting in his balcony in New Delhi, Gaurav Gogoi, Congress MP and son of Assam Chief Minister, says that the hawa in Assam is very different from the perception in New Delhi. He claims that after the 2014 debacle, the Congress party is more battle-ready than ever before.
In 2014, the Congress was reduced to three seats in Assam – the vote share of the party was down by 10 percent. Last year, before the Bihar election, senior Congress leader Hemanta Biswa Sharma and nine sitting MLAs of the Congress crossed over to the BJP. So if it appears that the BJP has taken the initial lead in making inroads into the Congress bastion, then it also appears that the Congress is sailing in the last chance saloon. But Gogoi believes otherwise.
So will this election in Assam be a war between Modi and the Gogois? Gogoi junior seems to suggest otherwise, calling it a battle between the two-year-old Modi government at the Centre versus fifteen years of Congress rule in the state.
While Gogoi appears confident, the C-voter opinion poll (conducted before the BJP forged an alliance with the Asom Gana Parishad, AGP) seems to suggest that power will change hands in Assam. It predicts a 4 percent fall in the vote share of the Congress, from 68 seats currently, and predicts that the party will lose 34 seats in the 126-member assembly. The poll essentially suggests that if the AGP does well without splitting the anti-Congress vote then there could be a BJP-led government in the state. Gogoi is dismissive.
Unhappy with the BJP-AGP tie up, on 9 March the Congress got a shot in the arm when two sitting MLAs from the AIUDF and two senior BJP leaders joined the Congress. In addition, Gogoi claims that student leaders from the All Bodo Students Union and the Assam Tribal Sangh have joined forces with the Congress.
Gogoi also acknowledges that the AGP has always had an understanding with the Congress. But despite stiff opposition from their own party cadre, they have gone ahead with an alliance with the BJP. The Congress may not say it upfront, but they sure are hinging on the recent rift within the Opposition.
Published: 11 Mar 2016,07:38 AM IST