Battle Bengaluru: How the city is expected to vote
There are 28 constituencies in Bengaluru. The city alone accounts for 12 per cent of the 224 seats across the state which will poll on May 12. The city has not exactly been loyal to any party.
Where the results in both the Lok Sabha and Vidhan Sabha results are concerned it has been a mixed bag. While in the 1980s, it was a Congress bastion, later on the Janata Party occupied a considerable amount of space in the city's electoral landscape.
However the infighting within the Janata Party and the splits gave room for the BJP. In 2013 Karnataka election when BJP was a divided house, it still managed to win 12 out of the 28 assembly segments. Overall the BJP had won 40 seats in the state which means 30 per cent of this tally came from Bengaluru alone. The Congress on the other hand bagged 13 in 2013.
In 2008, the BJP had won 16 seats in Bengaluru while the Congress bagged 11 seats.
Poll issues in Bengaluru:
Women
safety,
law
and
order
Population
explosion
and
migration
Pollution
and
encroachment
of
lakes
Slums
Water
sanitation
and
deteriorating
civic
amenities
Shrinking
greencover
Traffic
Bad
transport
system
How
Bengaluru
has
voted
in
the
past:
Assembly 2008: ( 28 constituencies):
BJP: 16
Congress: 11
JD(S): 1
Assembly 2013: ( 28 constituencies):
Congress: 13
BJP: 12
JD(S): 3
Lok Sabha 2009 ( 3 constituencies):
BJP: 3
Congress: 0
JD(S): 0
Lok Sabha 2014 ( 3 constituencies):
BJP: 3
Congress: 0
JD(S): 0
High profile constituencies and its leaders:
BTM
Layout:
Ramalinga
Reddy
Shivajinagar:
Roshan
Baig
Byatarayanapura:
Krishna
Byre
Gowda
Shantinagar:
N
A
Haris
Malleshwaram:
M
R
Seetharam
Chamarajpet:
Zameer
Ahmed
Khan
Vijayanagar:
Krishnappa
M
Padmanabha
Nagar:
R
Ashok
Sarvajna
Nagar:
K
J
George
Karnataka Assembly Election dates | |||
Date of notification | April 17 | ||
Last date to file nominations | April 24 | ||
Last date to withdraw nominations | April 27 | ||
Date of polling | May 12 | ||
Date of counting | May 15 | ||