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Exit polls show UPA ahead

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BS Reporter New Delhi

Exit polls show UPA ahead
BS Reporter / New Delhi May 14, 2009, 0:09 IST

Sensex falls sharply on uncertainty over govt formation.

Exit and opinion polls gave the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) an edge over the Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) in the 15th general elections to the Lok Sabha. But they also predicted that both alliances would need more help from fresh partners to make the halfway mark of 272 in a 545-member Lok Sabha.

In the 2004 general elections, no exit poll managed to predict the result accurately. All polls gave the NDA an edge, whereas it was the UPA that formed the government.

 

All major television channels commission polls ahead of elections as a matter of course. Over the years, this has raised questions on the fairness of the electoral exercise. As a result, Supreme Court and Election Commission restricted these, to prevent colouring the judgment of voters in a phased election; the clamps ended today. At the close of voting, all major television surveys said both major combinations would have to contend with a hung House.

The number of seats required to make up the 272 shortfall was considerable for both alliances, ranging from 40 to 60 seats, leaving political circles agog with the possibility of political realignments.

On its own, the Congress won 145 seats in the 2004 elections and the BJP 138. The Left parties with 61 seats, the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) with 24 seats and the Samajwadi Party with 36 seats were among the allies that helped the UPA form a government in 2004.

In 2009, these major UPA allies have banded into a separate front with other new partners, some from the rival NDA. The Third Front, led by the Communist Party of India (Marxist), declared that it will neither support the Congress nor the BJP.

The “Fourth Front”, comprising the Samajwadi Party, the RJD and the Lok Janashakti Party, has given veiled indications that it will help the UPA but is yet to reveal the terms of the compromise.

Internal assessments by the political parties themselves are predictable. On the basis of the seats the present UPA allies bring to the table, the Congress is giving the alliance 205 seats and the NDA 168 seats. In the internal assessment of the BJP, the NDA will get 220 seats and the UPA 170 seats.

A pre-election India Today opinion poll predicted 190 to 199 seats for the UPA, far below the 222 seats it won five years ago. The survey said the BJP-led NDA will get between 172 and 181 seats, short of the 187 seats it won in 2004.
 

INITIAL EXIT POLL NUMBERS 2009
Headlines TodayUPA191NDA180Left38Others134
India TVUPA195-201*NDA189-1953rd Front113-121Others14
NewsXUPA199NDA1913rd Front104Others48
Congress155BJP153    
UTViUPA195NDA183-1953rd Front105-121  
News 24UPA218NDA1943rd Front1014th Front30
Times NowUPA198NDA1833rd Front112Others50
Congress154BJP142Left38  
Star NewsUPA199NDA1963rd Front100Others48
Congress155BJP153    
CNN-IBNUPA185-205NDA165-1853rd Front110-1304th Front25-35
Congress145-160BJP135-150Left30-40  
NDTV**UPA77NDA723rd Front394th Front6
Others2
* (could go up to 227-237 if RJD, LJP and SP join)     ** Projections for 196 seats in six states
 AND IN 2004...
Congress and allies: 222 seats; BJP and allies: 187 seats
NDTVNDA230-250Congress and allies190-205Others100-120
Aaj TakNDA248#Congress and allies190Others105
Star TVNDA263-275Congress

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First Published: May 14 2009 | 12:09 AM IST

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