Election campaign ends with personal attacks, barbs and controversies
New Delhi: Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi warned on Saturday of an India divided by caste and creed if the BJP comes into power, as the campaigning ended in the multi-stage election.
Gandhi sought to muster a final show of Congress strength in the Varanasi with the party struggling to snatch victory from the jaws of a widely forecast election defeat by the BJP.
The BJP "only wants to divide people, make people fight with each other," Gandhi told a rally in Varanasi, one of the last constituencies due to vote in Monday's final day of balloting. The results of the marathon election will be known by Friday.
Varanasi is being contested by BJP’s prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi. He is an indefatigable campaigner who has travelled 300,000 kilometres in the last eight months speaking to 437 rallies in addition to addressing 1,350 rallies as a hologram -- according to the BJP. Modi's high-tech campaign is believed to mark the first time holograms have been used to reach voters in an Indian election campaign. Modi, projecting himself as a political outsider who will overhaul India's political status quo, launched a blistering attack on Saturday on the Congress.
'Mother-son government'
Modi, 63, derisively referred to Rahul Gandhi and his party president mother, Sonia, as the "mother-son government" and appealed for a "good, strong mandate in Delhi to work for the people."
"People, till the time you end these dynastic politics, things won't improve," Modi said to people in Robertsganj, a part of Uttar Pradesh which is going to the polls Monday. The BJP is already scenting victory, predicting "a clear majority" nationally.
Amit Shah forecasts that the BJP and allies would get 300 seats in the 543-seat parliament. Indian opinion polls also suggest the BJP is set to score a strong victory. Shah said the electorate had supported the BJP "irrespective of caste (and) religion", seeking to dispel notions that Modi's muscular Hindu nationalism was a stumbling block for voters.
In the last days of the campaign, Modi has tried to cast off the BJP's religion-based image, pushing an agenda of good governance and economic growth in contrast to the left-leaning Congress's populist pitch.
"I believe in one India, the best India," said Modi, chief minister of Gujarat, who is popular among business and middle-class voters frustrated by a sharp economic slowdown, high inflation and corruption scandals.
Still, 12 years ago, few would have guessed Modi would be in line to be premier after riots swept Gujarat during his early time as chief minister, killing at least 1,000 people, most of them being Muslims.
The BJP leader was never charged with wrongdoing but many critics allege he did too little to stop the bloodshed.
The Gandhi family has been making a last-ditch campaign push with Rahul, his mother and sister, Priyanka, all on the hustings. On Saturday, Rahul reaffirmed Congress's commitment to "empowerment of the poor", charging that a BJP government would not "benefit anyone but business".
Congress has given India three premiers since independence. But bookies reckon chances of Rahul becoming premier are so minuscule they've stopped taking bets.
Investors, confident of a BJP win, have driven India's benchmark share index to record highs. Few observers, though, expect the BJP to reach the magic 272 number needed for a majority by itself. Many anticipate a period of fierce horse trading as regional heavyweights trade parliamentary support for political concessions. A few market players have voiced concerns of a massive selloff if the BJP fares worse than expected and political instability ensues.
Rahul, groomed for Congress leadership by his mother has been dubbed the "reluctant crown prince", preferring a backroom role. Media has judged his campaign performance uninspiring.
Priyanka, 42, regarded as more politically gifted, has made blistering attacks on the BJP and called the election a "fight for the heart" of Hindu-majority but constitutionally secular India.
While India's 1.25-billion population is mainly Hindu, Muslims comprise 13 percent. If Congress loses, few observers are writing its obituary, having seen the party rebound before from crashing defeats.