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AP headed for multi-cornered contest in Assembly and LS polls

With no major alliances on cards till now, Andhra Pradesh is poised to witness a multi-cornered contest as the main parties, including the ruling TDP and main opposition YSR Congress are expected to jump into the fray on their own.

state is poised to witness a multi-cornered conteststate is poised to witness a multi-cornered contest
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Published : Mar 11, 2019, 8:23 PM IST

Amaravati: Andhra Pradesh appeared headed for a multi-cornered contest in the state Assembly and Lok Sabha elections to be held on April 11, a do-or-die battle for major political parties, including the ruling TDP.

Over 3.71 crore voters are eligible to exercise their franchise for electing 25 Lok Sabha members and 175 members of the state Assembly in the polls, the first after the state was bifurcated to create Telangana.

With no major alliances on cards till now, the state is poised to witness a multi-cornered contest as the main parties, including the ruling TDP and main opposition YSR Congress are expected to jump into the fray on their own.

For the TDP, which won the 2014 elections comfortably, retaining power is crucial while for the principal opposition YSR Congress, it is a must-win situation to ensure its political sustainability.

The Congress is seeking a resurrection in Andhra after the rout it suffered post-bifurcation of the state in 2014.

Stakes are not high for the BJP, but it is seeking to make a point on its relevance in the state's political landscape.

While the main fight will be between the TDP and the YSRC, all eyes are on Jana Sena as it could alter the fortunes of either party by splitting the votes, particularly that of a dominant community that tilted the scales in favour of TDP in 2014.

In 2014, the TDP had an alliance with the BJP and the combine was supported by Jana Sena Party of Telugu film star Pawan Kalyan. Jana Sena did not contest any seats then.

Now, the TDP has severed ties with the BJP while the Jana Sena is set to fight the elections for the first time in alliance with the CPI and the CPI-M.

Though the TDP forged an alliance with the Congress for the Assembly elections in neighbouring Telangana in December last year, the tie-up broke after the Congress debacle in the state.

The Congress leadership blamed the TDP for the rout in Telangana and, accordingly, decided to go at it alone in neighbouring Andhra Pradesh.

Read:JSP announces names of two LS candidates

Both parties will, however, work together at the national level.

Like in 2014, the YSRC has no allies this time either.

In the last elections, of the 175 Assembly seats, the TDP had won 102, YSRC 67, BJP 4, Navodayam Party 1 and an independent one.

Of the 25 Lok Sabha seats, the TDP bagged 15, YSRC 8 and BJP 2.

In the Assembly polls, the TDP polled 44.61 per cent of votes while the YSRC got 44.58 per cent. The BJPs 2.18 per cent vote share made all the difference, enabling the TDP to clinch power.

The Congress which ruled AP for 10 years from 2004 managed only 2.77 per cent votes in 2014 as people of Seemaandhra punished it for dividing the state.

(With inputs from PTI)

Amaravati: Andhra Pradesh appeared headed for a multi-cornered contest in the state Assembly and Lok Sabha elections to be held on April 11, a do-or-die battle for major political parties, including the ruling TDP.

Over 3.71 crore voters are eligible to exercise their franchise for electing 25 Lok Sabha members and 175 members of the state Assembly in the polls, the first after the state was bifurcated to create Telangana.

With no major alliances on cards till now, the state is poised to witness a multi-cornered contest as the main parties, including the ruling TDP and main opposition YSR Congress are expected to jump into the fray on their own.

For the TDP, which won the 2014 elections comfortably, retaining power is crucial while for the principal opposition YSR Congress, it is a must-win situation to ensure its political sustainability.

The Congress is seeking a resurrection in Andhra after the rout it suffered post-bifurcation of the state in 2014.

Stakes are not high for the BJP, but it is seeking to make a point on its relevance in the state's political landscape.

While the main fight will be between the TDP and the YSRC, all eyes are on Jana Sena as it could alter the fortunes of either party by splitting the votes, particularly that of a dominant community that tilted the scales in favour of TDP in 2014.

In 2014, the TDP had an alliance with the BJP and the combine was supported by Jana Sena Party of Telugu film star Pawan Kalyan. Jana Sena did not contest any seats then.

Now, the TDP has severed ties with the BJP while the Jana Sena is set to fight the elections for the first time in alliance with the CPI and the CPI-M.

Though the TDP forged an alliance with the Congress for the Assembly elections in neighbouring Telangana in December last year, the tie-up broke after the Congress debacle in the state.

The Congress leadership blamed the TDP for the rout in Telangana and, accordingly, decided to go at it alone in neighbouring Andhra Pradesh.

Read:JSP announces names of two LS candidates

Both parties will, however, work together at the national level.

Like in 2014, the YSRC has no allies this time either.

In the last elections, of the 175 Assembly seats, the TDP had won 102, YSRC 67, BJP 4, Navodayam Party 1 and an independent one.

Of the 25 Lok Sabha seats, the TDP bagged 15, YSRC 8 and BJP 2.

In the Assembly polls, the TDP polled 44.61 per cent of votes while the YSRC got 44.58 per cent. The BJPs 2.18 per cent vote share made all the difference, enabling the TDP to clinch power.

The Congress which ruled AP for 10 years from 2004 managed only 2.77 per cent votes in 2014 as people of Seemaandhra punished it for dividing the state.

(With inputs from PTI)

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AP-POLLS
AP headed for multi-cornered contest
Amaravati, Mar 11 (PTI) Andhra Pradesh appeared headed
for a multi-cornered contest in the state assembly and Lok
Sabha elections to be held on April 11, a do-or-die battle for
major political parties, including ruling TDP.
Over 3.71 crore voters are eligible to exercise their
franchise for electing 25 Lok Sabha members and 175 members of
the state assembly in the polls, the first after the state was
bifurcated to create Telangana.
With no major alliances on cards till now, the state is
poised to witness a multi-cornered contest as the main
parties, including ruling TDP and main opposition YSR
Congress, are expected to jump into the fray on their own.
For the TDP, which won the 2014 elections comfortably,
retaining power is crucial while for the principal opposition
YSR Congress its a must-win situation to ensure its political
sustainability.
The Congress is seeking a resurrection in Andhra after
the rout it suffered post-bifurcation of the state in 2014.
Stakes are not high for the BJP, but it is seeking to
make a point on its relevance in the states political
landscape.
While the main fight will be between the TDP and the
YSRC, all eyes are on Jana Sena as it could alter the fortunes
of either party by splitting the votes, particularly that of a
dominant community that tilted the scales in favour of TDP in
2014.
In 2014, the TDP had an alliance with the BJP and the
combine was supported by the Jana Sena Party of Telugu film
star Pawan Kalyan.
Jana Sena did not contest any seats then.
Now, the TDP has severed ties with the BJP while the
Jana Sena is set to fight the elections for the first time in
alliance with the CPI and the CPI-M.
Though the TDP forged an alliance with the Congress for
the assembly elections in neighbouring Telangana in December
last year, the tie-up broke after the Congress debacle in
that state.
The Congress leadership blamed the TDP for the rout in
Telangana and, accordingly, decided to go it alone in AP.
Both parties will, however, work together at the
national level.
Like in 2014, the YSRC has no allies this time either.
In the last elections, of the 175 assembly seats, the
TDP had won 102, YSRC 67, BJP 4, Navodayam Party 1 and an
independent one.
Of the 25 Lok Sabha seats, the TDP bagged 15, YSRC 8
and BJP 2.
In the Assembly polls, the TDP polled 44.61 per cent of
votes while the YSRC got 44.58 per cent.
The BJPs 2.18 per cent vote share made all the
difference, enabling the TDP to clinch power.
The Congress which ruled AP for 10 years from 2004
managed only 2.77 per cent votes in 2014 as people of
Seemaandhra punished it for dividing the state. PTI DBV
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