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This is an archive article published on December 24, 2007

Modi, Modi, now Mega Modi

In an election verdict set to redefine his position within the BJP and the party’s at the Centre, Gujarat today returned Narendra Modi to power...

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In an election verdict set to redefine his position within the BJP and the party’s at the Centre, Gujarat today returned Narendra Modi to power with an overwhelming majority for a third consecutive term.

The BJP won 117 of the 182 seats as Congress hopes evaporated and the party finished with 59 seats, barely eight more than its 2002 tally. Congress ally NCP managed only three seats.

Hailing the BJP’s “spectacular victory in Gujarat”, L K Advani, the party’s prime ministerial candidate for the next Lok Sabha elections, said it is “a turning point because it signals the BJP’s comeback as the frontrunner in the next Parliamentary elections… today is a historic day for Indian democracy”. The party hopes to take Himachal Pradesh as well where counting will take place on December 28.

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Modi, who received a call from Prime Minister Manmohan Singh congratulating him on his win, said the verdict showed that the people of Gujarat had “not accepted” Singh and Congress president Sonia Gandhi.

“The BJP fought the elections only on the development plank and explained the party’s position only when faced with opposition attacks,” he said. “Sonia Gandhi and Manmohan Singh had campaigned for her party and tried to win, but they could not manage as the people of Gujarat did not accept them.”

As Modi later addressed party workers in Ahmedabad in Hindi — he said not just the nation, the entire world was watching Gujarat — the BJP issued a statement, saying “this historic verdict of the people of Gujarat will bring qualitative change in prevailing Indian politics. People have approved of a stable, efficient and transparent government which enhances their feeling of security.”

“People have rejected the anti-development mentality and have defeated forces who were out to defame Gujarat. This verdict will uproot several old beliefs, that it is not possible to win elections on the development agenda, that good governance is bad politics,” Modi said.

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Though Modi patted himself for his development agenda, seven of his ministers lost the elections, including I K Jadeja (Urban Development and Roads and Building), Kaushik Patel (Revenue) and Bhupendrasinh Chudasma (Agriculture).

Modi won by about 87,000 votes from the Maninagar constituency in Ahmedabad, defeating Congress candidate and Union Minister of State Dinsha Patel.

The BJP wrested 26 seats from the Congress in the Saurashtra/Kutch and South Gujarat regions where it was expected to do badly. The Congress, on the other hand, managed to get back as many as 34 seats from the BJP in the Central Gujarat region — only eight are from Saurashtra. Of the seven BJP rebel MLAs who fought the elections on Congress tickets, only one, Bavku Unghad, won from Babra in Amreli district.

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