Victory for Indian ruling party

12 April 2012

The ruling Congress party swept to a resounding victory in India's mammoth national elections, defying expectations as it brushed aside the Hindu nationalist opposition and a legion of ambitious smaller parties.

The strong showing by the party laid to rest fears of an unstable, shaky coalition heading the South Asian giant at a time when many of it neighbours are plagued by instability, civil war and rising extremism.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh declared victory, telling reporters that voters had given the Congress party-led coalition, which is dominated by the powerful Nehru-Gandhi political dynasty, a "massive mandate".

The left-of-centre Congress, which has long tried to balance free market reforms with a vow to protect the downtrodden in this country of 1.2 billion people, wants a "stable, strong government which is committed to secular values," he said.

The results left the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, the country's other main party, vowing a period of introspection after they failed to capitalise on the economic uncertainty and increased turmoil in Pakistan, India's long-time rival.

"We will analyse these results in detail," said Arun Jaitley, a senior BJP leader conceding defeat. "The BJP accepts the mandate of the people of India with all humility."

With most votes counted, the Election Commission said the Congress-led alliance had won - or was leading in - races for 254 seats in the 543-seat Parliament. The BJP alliance came up short with 153. The Congress party alone, without the support of its coalition allies, had won or was leading in 204 seats, putting it far ahead of all other parties.

While the results were a clear victory for the Congress coalition it still leaves it short of the 272 seats needed to govern alone and will require the support of other parties. India has been ruled by coalition governments for most of the last two decades.

For months, polls and political observers had predicted that neither of the country's two main parties would emerge a clear winner, forcing an unstable and unwieldy coalition that could have conceivably included dozens of smaller parties.

Analysts said that Congress, which posted the best results by an individual party in nearly two decades, reaped the rewards of dramatic economic growth during their last term and a series of high-profile pro-poor programmes.

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