British Future has analysed the trends that saw 10 Indian-origin candidates elected to the Parliament in the 2015 general election and found that the ruling Conservatives are set to increase their tally slightly.
However, there is likely to be a drop in the Opposition Labour party's tally which would result in a net increase of one or two Indian-origin MPs.
"The next month's general election (on June 8) may well see the Conservatives overtake Labour as the party with the most ethnic minority MPs in the House of Commons.
There are currently five Indian-origin Conservative MPs in the House of Commons - Priti Patel, Alok Sharma, Shailesh Vara, Rishi Sunak and Suella Fernandes.
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The party has additionally nominated Rahoul Bhansali, Samir Jassal, Ameet Jogia, Resham Kotecha, Reena Ranger, Meera Sonecha, Minesh Talati and Paul Uppal to contest the June election.
Among the new Tory entries, Uppal and Kotecha have the maximum chance of winning in their constituencies of Wolverhampton South-West and Coventry North-West respectively.
The party has additionally fielded Neeraj Patil, Rohit Dasgupta, Hitesh Tailor, Navin Shah, Navendu Mishra, Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi, Kuldip Singh Sahota, Manjinder Kang and Preet Kaur Gill.
Among the Labour party's new group of prospective parliamentary candidates, Gill and Dhesi look set to be among the first British Sikhs to enter the House of Commons next month from Birmingham Edgbaston and Slough constituencies respectively.
"Looking at the seats where Labour holds the slimmest majorities, won the last election by 10,000 votes and under, if Labour were to lose all of these marginal seats, one Labour Indian-origin MP would lose his/her seat and three Conservative Indian-origin MPs would win seats.
However, there is also a chance that the Conservative party win more or less than these 114 "marginal seats" and could win seats in unforeseen places, it said.
"The final total will depend on the scale of the government's majority, and several constituency races that are too close to call with any confidence," said Katwala, who sees a neck and neck race between the two parties on ethnic minority representation in the Parliament.
"The Conservative Party has a proud record of ensuring candidates from all walks of life stand for the Parliament," a party spokesperson said.
It has, however, been criticised for fielding ethnic minority candidates only in so-called safe seats rather than the tougher to win marginal seats.
The Labour party, which has a marginally better record on this count says, "The Labour Party is the party of equality. We seek to build a society free from all forms of racism, anti-Semitism and Islamophobia".
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