New Delhi: A day after exit polls gave a divided opinion on the end result of the West Bengal Assembly election, the BJP expressed confidence on Friday (April 30) that it’s going to type the following authorities in the state by profitable a majority of the seats after the votes are counted on Sunday (May 1).
“We will get a full majority and form the next government comfortably,” BJP common secretary Bhupender Yadav, a key member of the celebration’s mind belief, mentioned.
Asked about a number of ballot forecasts which have given an edge to the ruling Trinamool Congress (TMC), headed by Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, he exuded confidence that the saffron celebration will get individuals’s blessings.
BJP’s IT wing head Amit Malviya, who was actively concerned in the marketing campaign because the celebration’s co-incharge for West Bengal, additionally expressed confidence about the saffron celebration forming its maiden authorities in the japanese state.
“We will win comprehensively,” he mentioned and dismissed these exit polls which have put the TMC forward, saying that isn’t going to occur.
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) will very a lot type the following authorities, he added.
The exit polls on Thursday (April 29) forecast a decent contest between the incumbent TMC and the BJP in the high-profile West Bengal Assembly polls.
India Today-Axis My India predicted a neck-and-neck contest, giving the BJP 134-160 and the TMC 130-156 seats.
The Republic-CNX polls additionally gave the BJP a slight edge by projecting 138-148 seats for the celebration in the 294-member Assembly and 128-138 to the TMC.
However, Times Now-C Voter predicted a clear majority for the TMC by projecting 158 seats for the celebration and 115 for the BJP.
The Jan Ki Baat exit polls, nevertheless, predicted a robust majority for the BJP in West Bengal, giving it 162-185 seats, towards 104-121 to the TMC.
The TMC had received 211 seats and the BJP solely three in the 2016 West Bengal polls.
The Left-Congress alliance was forecast to be additional marginalized in the fiercely bipolar contest.