Haryana, Maharashtra stare at multi-cornered contest as poll din ends
The loudspeakers went silent as political parties asked their cadre to get on with the job of door-to-door campaign for persuading the voters.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi unleashed a poll blitzkrieg addressing over 30 rallies in the two States where he took on the opposition over dynastic politics and corruption.
With no local face in Maharashtra which has 288 seats and Haryana which has 90 seats, the BJP is banking heavily on Modi wave, especially in Maharashtra where it split with its long term ally, the Shiv Sena.
During his rallies, Modi came down heavily on both the Congress and NCP, saying they were highly corrupt and had looted the state for the last 15 years.
Congress on the other hand projected Prithviraj Chavan while NCP Ajit Pawar and Shiv Sena Uddhav Thackeray.
With Wednesday's polling in the two States being seen as the first key test of popularity for major political parties after the Lok Sabha elections, the BJP left nothing to chance with Modi addressing over 20 rallies in Maharashtra and 10 in Haryana. Counting of votes will be taken up on Sunday.
The October 15 elections for the Maharashtra Assembly will be the first in over quarter of a century when major political parties are out in the poll arena sans erstwhile alliance partners.
The BJP is contesting 257 seats while its smaller allies are contesting on 31. Congress and NCP are contesting on all the seats. Some candidates from other parties are contesting on Congress symbol.
The last time Shiv Sena and BJP fought separately was before 1989 - the year their alliance was sealed and for Congress and NCP, it was before 1999 the year the Sharad Pawar-led party was formed.
The
main
issues
which
parties
highlighted
in
Maharashtra
were
Marathi
identity,
Hindutva,
corruption
and
development.
In
the
2009
polls,
Cong
won
82,
NCP
won
62,
Sena
45
and
BJP
47
and
MNS
12.
Ashok
Chavan
of
Congress
was
elected
the
chief
minister.
While Congress banked on the development plank, Shiv Sena projected itself as one with a "real identity" of Maharashtra. The BJP was unsparing in its attacks on the Congress-NCP on the issue of corruption with Modi asking the electorate to "punish" the Congress and NCP which "looted" the people.
The other top guns battling it out in Haryana are the kin of the three famous 'Lals' including jailed former Chief Minister O P Chautala.
Unlike in the recent past, when the fight was mainly between Congress and Indian National Lok Dal (INLD), a number of new players threw their hats in the ring this time.
However, Congress, BJP and INLD are being seen as the main players, with all three hoping to capture power on their own.
(With agencies inputs)
OneIndia News