IND151
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bhand mein jaye desh,IND bhai khaane pe kab bula rahe ho
Post kiya hai usme se kha lo.
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bhand mein jaye desh,IND bhai khaane pe kab bula rahe ho
BJP projected to get 12% vote share in TN by CSDS-IBN survey!!!
That still won't guarantee them any seats in TN. Amma holds all the cards there this time.
Karnataka is the only S.Indian State where they can realistically hope for a good tally.
But still, the shocker is that it is getting more vote share than Congress (10%) !!
Not to mention that they are in talks with PMK & DMDK for alliance, i think NDA can beg there around 5 seats which isn't bad.
Mai bohot chai pita hu, din me 12-14 cup
That still won't guarantee them any seats in TN. Amma holds all the cards there this time.
Karnataka is the only S.Indian State where they can realistically hope for a good tally.
You meant bag, didn't you?
It's been nearly 40 years since a National Party did well in TN. I still think NDA should have tried their level best for an alliance with Amma instead of DMK. But the shrewd Lady that she is, she knows it's much better to bargain with a lot of seats under her belt.
BJP projected to get 12% vote share in TN by CSDS-IBN survey!!!
But still, the shocker is that it is getting more vote share than Congress (10%) !!
Not to mention that they are in talks with PMK & DMDK for alliance, i think NDA can beg there around 5 seats which isn't bad.
In 2006 elections DMDK got a vote share of nearly 12-14 pc, the best by a party on debut, until recently AAP beat that record in a small state in Delhi. But still it managed to send only one MLA to assembly. The vote shares are split, and not present in a single constituency.
FYI. 2009 Chiranjeevi's debutant PRP got 19% voteshare in AP. Got 18MLAs.
Delhi is hardly a state. Its a CITY state. We must not take that into consideration.
Must read
Why US fears Modi?
Sanjeev Gupta writes about the spat and patch up between US and Modi. Before going into the subject, one must understand why the US doesnt want Modi to be India's Prime Minister? One must understand that the US doesnt want another China in the making. The US has no controll over China, but has full control over a India led by the Indian National Congress. However Modi is not a Sonia or a Rahul. he would never bow down before US for gains. US fears that Modi will try and develop India as an Independent global power, instead of a regional power, as per the wishes of US. Modi is a man who means business, be it politics or development.
The US supports India's rise as an increasingly capable actor in Asia, but not as an independent power, it wants New Delhi to be under its control and not as Bejing. Modi is one man standing between US and its ambition of making India its ally and work under its control.
In additon, the U.S. may have some fence-mending to do with India’s tough-talking, most visible political figure and would-be economic reformer. That would be Narendra Modi, the chief minister of the country’s prospering Gujarat State, an oasis of economic success on the west coast midway between the capital of Delhi and the financial center of Mumbai. Modi, whom the conservative, Hindu-centric Bharatiya Janata Party has chosen as its candidate for prime minister, is running hard on promises of sweeping economic reforms and a stronger military establishment, while urging Pakistan to give up “the culture of guns, pistols and conception of terror.”
More than any other major political figure on the Indian scene, Modi has fervent admirers and diehard detractors. Some say he’s what the country needs in order to get on with badly needed economic reforms. Among those who have not forgotten, or forgiven, apparently is the U.S. government, which has balked at issuing Modi a visa since the riots in which Modi’s people were implicated even though a special investigation cleared him of complicity last year. A young woman from the State Department, talking in Washington, was all over the Indian networks last weekend saying, primly and properly, that he was free to apply for a visa at any time, the application would be decided on its merits and she could not comment on the outcome.
The U.S. may have to decide in a hurry, however, if Modi’s BJP does well enough to upset the long-ruling but divided Congress Party and others in elections this year's Lok Sabha, the lower house of the parliament, which elects the prime minister.
For the U.S., what to do about Modi, who promises to be a serious headache at a time when U.S.-Indian relations have been on a prolonged upswing, since the days when India was “tilting” toward the old Soviet Union. US fears may well become true and India could well be a China like power in near future.