Meanwhile, TMC national general secretary Abhishek Banerjee said EVMs may not have been manipulated but suspected that many of them may have been replaced across 100 counting centres. He further said counting agents were thrashed and thrown out of counting centres. He also raised a suspicion over alleged slow vote counting till afternoon.
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Banerjee, who is yet to resign as CM, alleged that Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah were “directly interfering” in West Bengal elections. She asserted that the next steps require “discussion” and the party will set up a fact-finding mission.
Banerjee, who had a 15-year rule as West Bengal CM, said that TMC workers were arrested before elections and Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar was the “villain”. “Sad to say, CEC became the villain of this election to loot the democratic rights of the people and to loot the EVM. Can you tell me that after voting EVM has 80-90% charge? How is it possible? Two days before the election, they started arresting our people. They started raiding everywhere,” she said.
Meanwhile, Union Home Minister Amit Shah has been appointed as the central observer for the election of the leader of the BJP’s Legislative Party in the West Bengal Assembly. Chief Minister of Odisha Mohan Charan Majhi has been appointed as the central co-observer. The newly elected BJP government will take oath on May 9, coinciding with the birth anniversary of Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore, the party’s state president Samik Bhattacharya said.
West Bengal Election Results Winners – Party & Constituency Wise
Five reasons the BJP swept Bengal: The BJP’s West Bengal win came down to five converging factors, according to party insiders. The women’s vote swung by an estimated five percent towards the BJP, energised by the women’s reservation push and the RG Kar case. Government employees — up to 50 lakh voters — responded to Amit Shah’s promise of the Seventh Pay Commission within 45 days. The PM Narendra Modi versus CM Mamata Banerjee development narrative drew the middle class and first-time voters, whom the party targeted heavily on social media. Unprecedented Central forces deployment gave voters the confidence to vote without fear of TMC intimidation. And the SIR exercise, the party argues, simply ensured only genuine voters cast ballots.
Mamata Banerjee loses Bhabanipur: Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has lost from Bhabanipur seat, a constituency she won in 2011 when her party defeated the Left Front and formed the government for the first time, to BJP leader Suvendu Adhikari. Banerjee had won the seat again in 2016 and then, returned to her constituency through a bypoll held in 2021.
With BJP in the lead, who could be next CM With the BJP heading for a historic majority, the question of who leads the state is already being asked in Delhi and Kolkata. Suvendu Adhikari is the front-runner by most accounts. Mamata Banerjee’s one-time lieutenant — who defected in December 2020, defeated her in Nandigram in 2021 and spent five years as a combative Leader of Opposition — is the party’s most recognisable face in Bengal. Samik Bhattacharya, an RSS old-timer, is the other serious name, as is former journalist and bhadralok face Swapan Dasgupta. Dilip Ghosh, who built the Bengal BJP from three MLAs in 2016 to 18 Lok Sabha seats in 2019, is another likeley contender.