India's ruling Congress alliance wins election
Singh's ruling coalition won an overwhelming election victory yesterday, boosting hopes of a stable government as the emerging Asian power faces economic downturn and tensions with Pakistan. Singh's Congress-led coalition, riding on the back of years...
Singh's ruling coalition won an overwhelming election victory yesterday, boosting hopes of a stable government as the emerging Asian power faces economic downturn and tensions with Pakistan.
Singh's Congress-led coalition, riding on the back of years of economic growth, did better than expected and will probably be only just short of an outright majority, according to data from the election commission and projections by TV channels.
"The people of India have spoken, and spoken with great clarity," Singh told reporters.
The victory over the opposition Hindu-nationalist-led alliance means the left-of-centre Congress may find it easier to form a stable coalition with smaller parties and be less vulnerable to pressure on issues like economic reforms.
"Eventually the people of India know what's good for them and they always make the right choice," Sonia Gandhi, the head of the Congress party, told reporters.
Congress party supporters carrying banners of star campaigners Rahul and Priyanka Gandhi, set off firecrackers in celebration on the party's return to power.
The Congress party-led coalition was projected to win 261 seats, short of the 272 needed for a parliamentary majority, state TV said. The alliance had around 240 seats after the 2004 election.
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led opposition alliance would take 160 seats and a Third Front of communist and smaller groups 58 seats, the TV channel said.
The BJP effectively conceded defeat by saying that Congress had the biggest mandate.
"The results give the government much more freedom of action than it could have hoped for," said Pratap Bhanu Mehta, president of the Centre for Policy Research.
"Not only because it no longer needs the support from communist allies, but even the opposition, the BJP, has been so diminished after this election that it gives the Congress room on the foreign policy front too," he said.
Pakistan will top the foreign policy agenda of the new administration with the United States expected to renew calls to New Delhi to reduce tensions with Pakistan to help stabilise the situation there.
Ties with Pakistan have been in deep-freeze since an attack on Mumbai by Pakistan-based militants last November.
The Congress win should boost investor confidence and hopes for reforms. Markets had been jittery over a poor showing by either national alliance, fearing the emergence of a weak coalition.
"This is a dream for the market," Samir Arora, a fund manager at Helios Capital management in Singapore.
About 714 million people were eligible to vote in the largest such exercise in the world staggered over a month to allow security forces to supervise the vote.
Singh, 76, said he wanted a cabinet role for Rahul Gandhi, heir apparent of the Gandhi-Nehru dynasty who is seen as the architect of the Congress party's resurgence in northern states. India's booming economic growth for the past four years, including rising rural incomes, also appeared to have worked for the Congress-led coalition headed by the reformist Singh.
A financial downturn that began last year and is continuing in Asia's third largest economy had little impact on the fortunes of the ruling alliance.