Thiruvananthapuram / AMN

The Voters in Kerala have once again proved that they prefer a change in the government every five years. This is why Congress led UDF defeated badly and the LDF returned to power as the result of the election came today.

LDF won 91 of the 140 seats in an election that saw the Congress routed and the BJP entering the assembly after decades of waiting.
As widely anticipated, the Left Democratic Front (LDF) led by the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) unseated the Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) in the May 16 battle.

Election officials said the LDF had won 91 seats, with the CPI-M itself grabbing 58. In contrast, the entire UDF tally was 47, a clear sign of the voters’ disgust against a government that battled corruption charges.

“This is a vote against the corrupt and those who failed to protect the dignity of women,” thundered CPI-M veteran and former chief minister V.S. Achuthanandan.

He called it a “wave” in favour of the LDF, whose victory will now make Kerala the second state in the country after Tripura to come under Marxist control.

“We accept this defeat which we never ever expected,” said a stunned Ooomen Chandy, the outgoing chief minister. “We felt we would return (to power) but this has not happened. We will now introspect.”

It was one of the worst electoral defeats for the UDF. The Congress seat tally fell from 39 to 22.

The ministers who lost were Shibhu Baby John (Labour), P.K. Jayalekshmi (Scheduled Tribes Welfare), K. Babu (Ports and Excise) and K.P. Mohanan (Agriculture). Speaker N. Sakthan and Deputy Speaker Palode Ravi (both Congress) were also humbled.

“As chairman of the UDF, I have a responsibility for this debacle,” said Chandy, who however was elected for the 11th time from Puthupally.
As boisterous Left activists celebrated all across Kerala, CPI-M leaders said the party would meet on Friday to decide who will be the new chief minister.

In the race are two men: Achuthanandan, 92, and his long-time foe within the party, Pinarayi Vijayan, 72.

Although Vijayan is known to enjoy majority support within the CPI-M in Kerala, Achuthanandan is widely seen as the mass leader and he is known to be keen to lead the state again.

Besides the CPI-M’s 58 seats, the Communist Party of India (CPI) won 19 seats, the Janata Dal-Secular three, the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) two while four other LDF constituents won one seat each.

Five independents backed by the Left were also elected.

In the UDF camp, the Congress led by winning 22 seats followed by the Indian Union Muslim League (18), Kerala Congress-Mani (6) and Kerala Congress-Jacob (1).

The UDF suffered a huge setback in districts like Kollam and Thrissur besides Ernakulam and Thiruvananthapuram.
It was in Thiruvananthapuram that former central minister and BJP veteran O. Rajagopal won from Nemom constituency, defeating two-time legislator V. Sivankutty of CPI-M.

Rajagopal, a well-known face in Kerala politics, becomes the first BJP leader to enter the Kerala assembly. Until Thursday, no BJP candidate had won an assembly or Lok Sabha election in the state.

A visibly happy Rajagopal said his victory would mark the BJP’s surge in Kerala.

But the BJP’s hopes of getting four to six legislators elected on the strength of some aggressive campaigning by Prime Minister Narendra Modi as well as BJP president Amit Shah failed.

Independent candidate P.C. George was also elected to the house. A total of 1,203 contestants were in the fray. Most exit polls had predicted a Left victory. But Congress leaders, Chandy included, insisted until the votes were counted that the UDF would return to power.