The events associated with the Lok Sabha polls topped the shifting political paradigm in Delhi. Though earlier elections witnessed the BJP and Congress contending head-on, and the AAP was also on the battlefield, this year’s elections look slightly different now.
The Congress party participates in three and AAP in four out of the total seven seats in the second. With AAP in the forefront, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal has been acquitted by Supreme Court to campaign with mere interim bail.
However, the alliance has not ensured the electoral front where the campaign strategy is concerned, and Kejriwal and Rahul Gandhi did not address the meetings.
Notably, in her appeal to the voters, Sonia Gandhi did not even mention the AAP, let alone describe it as an obstacle for her party; she called out to support the ‘INDIA’ bloc.
The BJP, in turn, has changed the positions of all of its candidates so that only one out of seven remains as it was before the shuffling. This party has expectations that relying on new faces and the enthralled spirit of party workers, the party will be able to achieve the third consecutive clean sweep in the capital.
The Congress-AAP combine has justified that the BJP’s policy change to replace all the incumbent MPs must be because the previous lot has done nothing for the people.
Deepak Babaria, AICC in-charge general, has closed the alliance of Congress and AAP that the alliance will win all the seven seats and also charged with ‘rigging’ in the 2019 results.