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He pointed out that one exit poll has given the BJP-IPFT alliance a vote share of 51 per cent, while another has given the ruling Left front 45-46 per cent, terming the difference in percentage “a little”. Reddy also said that the C-Voter exit poll has given the “advantage” to the Left front.
The C-Voter exit poll has predicted a close finish in Tripura, with the CPI-M likely to get 26 to 34 seats with 44.3 per cent vote share, the BJP and its allies to get 24 to 32 seats with a vote share of 42.8 per cent, while the Congress may win only around two seats with a vote share of 7.2 per cent.
“I don’t think that the BJP can win in Tripura. We are very confident the Left will win,” Reddy said. “Yes, it’s possible some sort of an anti-incumbency in some sections may be there but most of the people are happy and satisfied with the government,” he said.
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The BJP, hitherto an “also-ran” in the north-eastern state, is making a determined bid to demolish the red bastion of 25 years, with stalwarts like Prime Minister Narendra Modi and party president Amit Shah leading the charge.
The saffron party, which had forged a pre-poll alliance with the tribal outfit Indigenous People’s Front of Tripura (IPFT), had fielded 51 candidates. The IPFT, an anti-Left party, contested from the remaining nine seats.
The Congress went it all alone in Tripura this time and contested from 59 seats. The party had not fielded a candidate from the Kakrabon constituency in Gomati district.