Delhi's overwhelming rejection of the AAP came barely two years into its meteoric rise in the 2015 Assembly polls when it had clinched an unprecedented 67 of the 70 seats.
Today, it was left with just 48 wards in its kitty out of the 272 spread across the three municipal corporations in the national capital.
After its abysmal performance in the 2015 Delhi Assembly polls when it could manage to win just three seats, the BJP added muscle to its decade-long domination of the corporations effortlessly bucking anti-incumbency, with the electorate giving a thumbs up to its gamble of fielding all fresh faces.
Taking forward its stupendous electoral successes in Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand, the BJP won 181 seats, putting paid to Congress' hopes of a revival in the national capital which it ruled uninterruptedly for 15 years between 1998 and 2013. Congress could win just 30 seats.
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The BJP's corporation-wise tally is: SDMC - 70, NDMC - 64 and EDMC - 47 as against AAP's 16, 21 and 11 and Congress' 12, 15 and 3 wards.
AAP's abject defeat, which came close on the heels of its abysmal performance in the Assembly polls in Goa, where it failed to open account, and poorer than expected show in Punjab, does not portend well for the party which is bracing itself for a bigger battle in Prime Minister Narendra Modi's home turf Gujarat. Assembly election is Gujarat is due later this year.
Its Delhi convenor Dilip Pandey resigned while Chandni Chowk MLA Alka Lamba offered to step down owing responsibility for the debacle, pointing towards an impending churning in the party.
Delhi's Water Resources Minister Kapil Mishra, a popular face, called for "introspection" instead of raking up the issue of alleged manipulation of EVMs.
Modi expressed his gratitude to the people of Delhi for reposing faith in the BJP and ensuring its resounding victory.
In his first reaction, Kejriwal promised all cooperation to the civic bodies and refrained from commenting on EVMs, the "manipulation" of which he had identified as the reason behind AAP's string of poll upsets.
"I congratulate BJP on their victory in all 3 MCDs. My govt looks forward to working wid MCDs for the betterment of Delhi," Kejriwal, who went into a huddle with top leaders of the AAP as the results trickled in early in the day, tweeted.
The Congress, which was hoping to bounce back in Delhi, has also been consigned to political wilderness, at least for the time being. Ajay Maken, who steered the party's Delhi unit over the last two years, resigned.
In the 2012 municipal polls, BJP had garnered 36.74 per cent vote share and the Congress 30.50 per cent. The AAP was yet to make its electoral debut then.
The opposition called it a "referendum" on the Kejriwal government and demanded that the CM resign.
Experts credited the BJP's landslide victory to the "Modi wave", while the AAP's debacle was described as the bursting of a political bubble.
"The way the AAP has been routed, its chances of survival have been reduced. Parties contest elections all the time, they win and they lose as well, it should not be too worrisome for them. But, the AAP's case is different," he said.