[BJP's best performance ever was in 1998 - vote share: 25.6%, seats: 182
(out of total 543). (And in 1999 post-Kargil - vote share: 23.8%, seats:
182.) Last time round, in 2004, it polled 18.80% vote and picked up 116
seats.
So the projection of 32% vote for the BJP nationwide looks pretty much
unrealistic.
But the essential claim that the Anna Hazare tir has damaged the Congress
and benefited the BJP must be quite unexceptional.]

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1110904/jsp/frontpage/story_14462625.jsp

Hazare lifts BJP but not enough
OUR BUREAU

*New Delhi, Sept. 3: *The BJP has been the biggest gainer from Anna Hazare’s
anti-corruption campaign although not enough to win an election on its own,
a STAR News-Nielsen survey conducted across 28 cities reveals.

It shows the BJP would garner 32 per cent votes across the country and the
Congress only 20 per cent if the Lok Sabha polls were to be fought tomorrow.
(*See chart*)

However, with 48 per cent respondents either undecided or favouring other
parties, it’s clear that whoever shows the better skill at striking
alliances would have the edge.

The survey underscores that the Congress cannot do without Manmohan Singh
yet. Most declined to directly blame Singh for the government’s mishandling
of the Hazare campaign while saying, to another question, that Rahul Gandhi
was not yet ready to take over as Prime Minister.

Certain nuances too came out. If those surveyed plumped for Hazare and his
lieutenants wholesale in hypothetical poll face-offs with Congress
stalwarts, they rejected the idea that the ruling party alone was
responsible for the pervasive graft. Three-fourths said all parties were
equally to blame.

Also, while the majority said that a strong Lokpal bill would be a milestone
in India’s battle against corruption and wanted it passed immediately, 40
per cent of the respondents thought it would not end graft in the near
future.

The Centre, or its spokespersons, seems to have failed miserably in
convincing the respondents that Hazare’s mode of protest undermined the
legislative process. An overwhelming 82 per cent backed his tactics, against
just 12 per cent who said these amounted to blackmail.

It’s also clear that Hazare’s agitation has cost the Congress a huge slice
of support, at least for now. Except in southern India, where 21 per cent
preferred the Congress and 16 per cent backed the BJP, the main Opposition
party enjoyed the highest endorsement everywhere. The BJP-Congress vote
share percentage was 40-27 in the north, 20-15 in the east, and 46-15 in the
west.

These numbers are in stark contrast to the results of a similar STAR
News-Nielsen survey conducted in May 2011 before Hazare’s campaign gathered
momentum.

At that time barely four months ago, the Congress led with 30 per cent of
the vote share while the BJP had only 23 per cent. Hazare’s crusade,
therefore, has cost the Congress 10 per cent of the overall votes while the
BJP has gained nine per cent.

A 54 per cent majority believes the government bungled by arresting Hazare,
while 64 per cent lays the blame on senior ministers in Singh’s cabinet. A
majority 54 per cent thinks even Sonia Gandhi would not have done much
better.

A shock is in store for ministers who articulated the government’s initial
hard line and challenged Hazare’s aides to prove their legitimacy in
elections. The survey shows that in one-to-one poll battles, Kiran Bedi and
Arvind Kejriwal would drub Kapil Sibal and home minister P. Chidambaram,
respectively.

Kejriwal, the most vocal among Hazare’s aides, has more cause for cheer:
around 62 per cent feel the 43-year-old is the new role model for Indian
youth. As for the Lokpal bill, 56 per cent says the Centre must not dither
but pass it immediately, and any necessary amendments can come later.

Comparing the survey figures with the same respondents’ voting pattern in
the 2009 Lok Sabha polls throws up a small surprise, though. While the BJP
has gained seven per cent of the vote share and the Congress lost 12 per
cent overall, the figures are reversed in the south, where the BJP has lost
12 per cent and the Congress gained five per cent.

If B.S. Yeddyurappa’s scandals are the reason, perhaps the moral is that
corruption can hurt everybody.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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