From youngsters to elderly, the electorate, some driven by "personal experiences" and some by "media reportage", switched allegiance and even frankly admitted it.
22-year-old Shefali, who voted in the high-profile New Delhi constituency, where AAP chief Arvind Kejriwal is pitted against BJP's Nupur Sharma and Congress' Kiran Walia, claimed, she voted for the party which she believed "works for the common man."
"I work in Noida, so I take a metro for communting. And, the switch in my allegiance took place after I read some of those advertisements by this party, which talks about vegetable and commodity prices and I thought they could handle it better than big parties," Shefali said.
Facing back-to-back polls, Delhiite Jatin Mallik claimed that this time he wanted a "full-majority" government, so he has decided to go for a party that "had a wave in Lok Sabha polls".
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"I had voted for a new party in last polls (2013 Assembly elections) but post the 49-day government, there were lot of issues attached with the party that led that short-lived government and again there were recent media reports that wasn't in its favour, so I didn't vote for it again," he said.
Many voted keeping in mind the factor of "Centre-state" government equations, even though they said they still somewhat had "attachment" to the old party, they had picked last time on the ballot.
"I had voted for this upcoming party last polls and still have some allegiance left but after the fall of that government in 49 days, I started having second thoughts.
"Also, I believe it is better to have the same government in the state as at the Centre, since Delhi is not enjoying a full statehood, it needs help from the Centre," Kashish Jain, a voter in Gandhi Nagar constituency, said.