AAP — the party for all people in Punjab
The Hindu
The massive victory reflects support across all sections, ages of society
Among the five States that went to polls, if the outcome in Uttar Pradesh will prove critical in terms of bolstering the BJP’s ambition of a third term at the Centre, the outcome of Punjab will be of equal importance in terms of throwing up a possible challenger to the BJP in the Lok Sabha elections. While the mere fact that the AAP won a majority was in itself not a great surprise, the nature of its victory represents the churning in the State and a deep desire to cling to an alternative. This is also borne out by the piece on Angry Punjab that led most social sections to vote in favour of the AAP.
When a party posts such a massive victory, the question as to what its social base is becomes somewhat redundant. For one thing, the winning party receives votes from all sections. Secondly it cuts into the votes of all other contestants (see Table comparing movement of social sections from 2017 to 2022) and thirdly its social base appears flat in the sense that from diverse social sections, the winning party receives support in a more or less uniform proportion.
Does the social profile of AAP conform to these hypotheses?
As Lokniti-CSDS post-poll data shows, men and women voted the AAP in equal proportion; literates and non-literates as also well-educated voters supported the AAP in equal proportion; voters of different economic class backgrounds supported the party almost in equal measure; and there was hardly much difference in the support the party received from rural and urban voters.
As the accompanying write up by Jagroop Kaur and Jyoti Mishra shows, there was some variation in the support that the AAP enjoyed across different caste and community groups: AAP received a little less support among the Hindu upper and scheduled castes, it garnered huge support among the Sikh OBCs. In terms of religion, the AAP polled a little less among Hindus than among the Sikh voters. Similarly, there was some variation in the support accorded to the AAP by voters of different age groups: less than 40% of voters in the over 46 age-group voted for the AAP in sharp contrast to more than 40% voters in the under 46 cohort who voted the party in. As one would imagine, the AAP polled more than half the votes among the 18-25 age-group.
But both these variations pale into insignificance because even the lowest support the AAP received — either in the case of caste-groups (among Hindu upper and scheduled castes) or in the case of elder voters — was in the range of a robust 35 to 37%.
While the victory of the AAP was huge in terms of seats, data shows that in polling over 42% of the overall vote, the party has struck a robust and all-round social support across various fault lines. At least at the moment of its glory, the party is practically a party chosen by all sections of the Punjab voters. For a State known for its deep social fault lines, this indeed is a very new development.
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