Ahmedabad (Gujarat):An intense battle of prestige is on between the BJP and the Congress over the control of the minority and Dalit-dominated Danilimda Assembly constituency in Ahmedabad city of Gujarat, which the saffron party has never won since the seat came into existence a decade back. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is hopeful of breaking the jinx this time as it is pinning hopes on the division of Congress's votes in the seat that is all set for a four-cornered contest with the entry of the All India Majlis-E-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) and the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) into the fray.
Danilimda, a Scheduled Caste (SC)-reserved assembly segment is one of the 21 seats in Ahmedabad district and it will go to polls in the second phase - on December 5. It was carved out following delimitation and has so far witnessed two assembly elections - in 2012 and 2017. It is one of the seats where the opposition party still holds clout.
The BJP had won 15 of these 21 seats in Ahmedabad district in 2017, whereas the Congress won the remaining six. The Danilimda seat has around 2 65,000 registered voters, of whom nearly 34 per cent belong to minority communities, whereas 33 per cent are from the Dalit-SC community. The remaining are from Patel and Kshatriya communities.
Congress's Shailesh Parmar, who is also the party's deputy leader in the Gujarat assembly, has been winning the seat since 2012 by bagging more than 50 per cent of the votes polled. "Shailesh Parmar is always available for the people of the constituency, irrespective of their caste, creed, religion or political affiliations. He is loved and adored by the people in his constituency. He has done a lot for the constituency," state Congress leader Manish Doshi told PTI.
According to local Congress leaders, the party's key to victory from here has been the minority votes en-bloc and a big pie of the Dalit votes. However, the entry of the Arvind Kejriwal-headed AAP and Asaduddin Owaisi-led AIMIM has disturbed the poll arithmetic in the area. The local Congress unit is apprehensive that the AAP might eat into its Dalit votes, whereas the AIMIM might divide the minority votes.
Suspended Congress leader and corporator Jamnaben Vegda contesting the poll as an independent has made the challenge tough for the grand old party in the area. "This time, the election in this constituency is a bit challenging, as AIMIM and AAP are also contesting. Earlier, in a direct fight with the BJP and the caste combination in place, Congress always had an advantage. But we are confident of retaining this seat. It is a prestige fight for all the Congress workers," a local Congress leader from the constituency said.