#delhi election results live
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babyenemychild · 2 days ago
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Explained: BJP's Delhi Election Performance In Numbers
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a-pramod-sharma · 2 days ago
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Delhi Election Results Update: क्या मध्यम वर्ग का गुस्से ने दिल्ली में AAP को डुबा दिया ! जानिये दिल्ली विधान सभा का पूरा चुनावी समीकरण आप की हार का कारण.
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यह भी पढ़े: DELHI ASSEMBLY ELECTION 2025: पटपड़गंज से बीजेपी के रविंद्र सिंह नेगी की ऐतिहासिक जीत, पीएम मोदी ने भी छुए थे पैर
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hc24news · 2 days ago
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Delhi Election Results 2025 Live: दिल्ली की 4 सीटों के परिणाम घोषित, केजरीवाल से प्रवेश वर्मा 3789 वोट से आगे
Delhi Election Results 2025 Live: चुनाव आयोग की ओर से दिल्ली की 4 सीटों के घोषित परिणाम में 2 सीट भाजपा के खाते में गयी है, तो 2 सीटें आम आदमी पार्टी को मिली है. अरविंद केजरीवाल और मनीष सिसोदिया हार के करीब हैं. अन्ना हजारे और रॉबर्ट वाड्रा ने उन पर निशाना साधा है. इधर, कांग्रेस का सूपड़ा साफ हो गया. दिल्ली इलेक्शन रिजल्ट का हर अपडेट जानने के लिए hellocities24.com के LIVE Updates में बने रहें.
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samacharapp · 3 days ago
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Delhi Election Results Tomorrow: AAP, BJP In Intense Battle For Glory
Several exit polls have given the BJP an edge over the AAP, which has been ruling in Delhi since 2015.
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New Delhi:
Counting of votes for the Delhi assembly polls will take place on Saturday to decide whether the AAP comes to power for a fourth term or the BJP forms a government in the national capital after 27 years.
The Congress is also looking for some gains after drawing a blank in the last two elections.
Several exit polls have given the BJP an edge over the AAP, which has been ruling in Delhi since 2015.
The counting process will begin at 8 am with early trends likely to start coming in from initial hours. According to the Election Commission, 60.54 per cent votes were polled on Wednesday.
Delhi BJP president Virendra Sachdeva has claimed his party will win nearly 50 seats. The AAP has rejected the exit poll predictions, asserting it will form the government again with its convener Arvind Kejriwal becoming chief minister for the fourth time.
Delhi's Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) Alice Vaz said that a total of 5,000 personnel, including counting supervisors, counting assistants, micro-observers, and supporting staff trained for the process, will be deployed on Saturday for the counting of votes.
In view of the fairness of the counting process, a random selection of five VVPATs (voter verifiable paper audit trails) will be done in each assembly constituency.
In a snowballing controversy, Lt Governor VK Saxena on Friday ordered an anti corruption branch (ACB) probe into allegations by AAP leaders that the BJP had attempted to poach its candidates by offering them Rs 15 crore and ministerial berth.
The AAP leaders have accused the BJP of trying to create an illusion in their favour based on exit poll predictions, but trying to poach AAP's candidates with chances of victory.
The BJP has demanded that AAP retract its charges and tender an apology or face legal action.
Delhi BJP general secretary Vishnu Mittal also wrote to the Lt Governor requesting for an ACB probe into AAP's charges. Soon after the LG's order, an ACB team visited Kejriwal in connection with the matter.
Earlier on Friday, Kejriwal held a meeting with all party candidates and asserted that the AAP will form its government, while alleging that the opposition is using exit polls to create "psychological pressure" and attempting to execute "Operation Lotus".
Speaking to reporters after the meeting, senior AAP leader Gopal Rai said that under Kejriwal's guidance, all candidates presented their ground reports, which indicated that AAP is set to win over 50 seats decisively, with a close contest on 7-8 seats.
The AAP established its dominance in Delhi's political map routing both the BJP and Congress in 2015 Assembly polls, winning 67 of the 70 Assembly seats.
The party again formed its government in 2020, winning 62 seats and decimating the opposition BJP and Congress.
A victory for the AAP will establish Kejriwal's dominance in Delhi and enhance his political stature nationally.
However, if the BJP wins the polls, it will not only be back to power in Delhi after a long gap of 27 years, but also succeed in breaking the spell of AAP and Kejriwal that it has been vying for a decade.
The Congress, which ruled Delhi for 15 years in a row till 2013, is striving to stage a comeback after failing to win a single seat in the previous two elections.
News is originally taken from: https://bit.ly/4hQt1tv
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mariacallous · 9 months ago
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India is in the middle of a 44-day exercise to elect its next government, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi tipped to return his Bharatiya Janata Party to power for a third consecutive term. Modi, who aims to win nearly three-quarters of the country’s 543 parliamentary seats, has surprised many observers by using dehumanizing anti-Muslim language on the campaign trail—rhetoric that is more direct than that of his past speeches.
So far, the BJP campaign has focused on creating an irrational fear among India’s Hindu majority that if Modi doesn’t return as prime minister, a share of their private wealth and affirmative action job quotas will be given to Indian Muslims. Modi and his party have doubled down on this narrative at a moment when reports suggest that their quest for a supermajority is unlikely to succeed. The brazen continuation of such anti-Muslim rhetoric differentiates this campaign from the two others that have put Modi in the prime minister’s office.
Hate speech is a criminal offense in India, and it is specifically barred during an election campaign. However, Modi chose the three leaders of India’s Election Commission, the agency charged with conducting free and fair polls, and it has ignored his flagrant violations of the election code. As a result, as the campaign continues through the end of May, so too will Modi’s anti-Muslim tirades. India is expected to announce its election results on June 4.
If the BJP wins and Modi is once again crowned prime minister, his Islamophobic rhetoric will not simply disappear. Many political leaders campaign in poetry and govern in prose, but hateful rhetoric has real-life consequences. Modi’s campaign speeches have put a target on Indian Muslims’ backs, redirecting the anger of poor and marginalized Hindu communities away from crony capitalists and the privileged upper castes. It underscores an attempt to make members of the Muslim minority second-class citizens in a de facto Hindu Rashtra, or state.
These social schisms need only a small spark to burst into communal violence, which would damage India’s global status and growth. Furthermore, Modi’s campaign rhetoric is matched by the BJP’s choice to not put up candidates in Muslim-majority Kashmir, reducing its stake in ensuring robust democracy in a region that New Delhi has ruled directly since 2019. His language will also have a direct bearing on India’s fraught ties with its neighbor Pakistan. Finally, the state-backed ill treatment will likely not be limited to Indian Muslims—meaning that other religious minorities, such as Christians and Sikhs, will also be affected.
Around 200 million Muslims live in India—the second-largest Muslim population in the world, after that of Indonesia. Few mainstream Indian political leaders have plummeted to such depths in castigating these citizens. Modi’s campaign rhetoric makes clear that if he is elected to a third consecutive term, the nation’s Muslims will stand politically disempowered, economically marginalized, and deprived of their constitutional rights.
Modi’s political rise came in the wake of significant violence against Muslims in Gujarat in 2002, when he was the state’s chief minister. Due to his role in the violence, the European Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States all temporarily barred his entry. Leading the party’s campaign to victory in the state assembly in the same year, his campaign speeches were full of crude language against Muslims. But the BJP’s electoral success in Gujarat—winning the next two assembly elections before the launch of Modi’s national campaign—ultimately gave Modi political credibility within an extreme fringe of the party.
By 2011, Modi had started reinventing himself as a business-friendly leader with an eye on a national role. By the time he became prime minister three years later, the narrative of a so-called Gujarat model of economic development concealed his anti-Muslim ideological moorings. Modi’s mask slipped occasionally, but he often spoke with a dog whistle. Mostly, the prime minister reiterated an imagination of India as a Hindu nation. In a post-9/11 world, Modi presented an alternative model of battling Islamic terrorism and consolidated a Hindu majoritarian voter base—delivering a stunning election victory in 2019 after an attempted airstrike against an alleged terrorist training camp inside Pakistan.
This year, Modi has not campaigned on his track record of the past decade or on the party manifesto for the next five years as often as he has attempted to further polarize Hindus and Muslims. In a speech given on April 21, Modi suggested that the opposition Indian National Congress party, if elected, would redistribute property to Muslims. The party would “calculate the gold with [Hindu] mothers and sisters” and transfer it “among those who are infiltrators and have more children,” he said—using terms by which his supporters regularly describe Muslims.
Elsewhere, Modi alleged that Congress was helping Muslims in a plot to take over India: “The opposition is asking Muslims to launch vote jihad,” he said in March. Speaking at a rally in Madhya Pradesh in early May, Modi said that voters would have to choose between “vote jihad” and “Ram Rajya,” the latter being a term referring to a mythical, idealized society that purportedly existed during the rule of Lord Rama, the hero of the famous Hindu epic Ramayana.
The prime minister’s economic advisory council soon released a paper that sought to stoke anxieties about a decline in the proportion of Hindus in India; during the period it covered—1950 to 2015—India’s population actually increased by five Hindus for every one Muslim citizen, but BJP leaders soon deployed the report to further demonize Indian Muslims.
The party’s official messaging has echoed Modi’s rhetoric. A now-deleted video posted on the Instagram account for the BJP’s Karnataka branch this month said, “If you are a non-Muslim, Congress will snatch your wealth and distribute it to Muslims. Narendra Modi knows of this evil plan. Only he has the strength to stop it.” It was followed by an animated clip depicting Congress leader Rahul Gandhi hatching a plan to benefit Muslims at the expense of Hindu groups.
Other Indian democratic institutions have done no better. Despite formal complaints from opposition parties and civil society groups, the election commission has neither punished nor restrained Modi. A petition in the Delhi High Court seeking immediate action against Modi for his “communally divisive speeches” was dismissed, with the judges arguing that it was “without merit” because the commission was already looking into the matter. “We can’t presume that they won’t do anything,” one judge said. But as the elections near the finish line, that is precisely what has happened.
Some observers are likely to dismiss Modi’s recent language as par for the course during an election campaign, when tempers run high. However, most surveys and polls have predicted an easy victory for the prime minister and the BJP; he has no need to resort to pandering to base emotions with toxic rhetoric. In an interview, Modi denied that he had uttered a word against Indian Muslims; he was proved wrong by fact-checkers and video evidence. India’s top political scientist said that through his denials in interviews, Modi is trying to influence the naive chroniclers while he continues with his anti-Muslim speeches for the masses and his supporters. Modi’s No. 2, Amit Shah, insists that the party will continue with this anti-Muslim campaign. By persisting with hateful speech, the BJP leadership is fueling a narrative that is likely to intensify discrimination against Indian Muslims during Modi’s rule.
As prime minister, Modi has spearheaded a project for the political disempowerment of Indian Muslims. For the first time in the history of independent India, the ruling party does not have a single Muslim member of parliament. In the current election, the party has put up just one Muslim candidate—on a list of 440—who is running for an unwinnable seat in Kerala. More broadly, religious polarization has made it difficult for Muslim candidates to win seats in areas without an overwhelming Muslim majority. During recent elections, there have been complaints of authorities barring voters in Muslim-majority localities in BJP-ruled states. Modi’s message to Indian Muslims is unequivocal: You do not matter politically.
India’s Muslims are economically disadvantaged, too. A 2006 committee under Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s Congress government found that the Muslim community faced high levels of poverty and poor outcomes on almost all socioeconomic indicators. India’s opposition parties have promised a new socioeconomic survey that could inform future policy without a focus on religion. Modi’s government, by contrast, opted to not conduct even the regular census in 2021—the first such instance in 140 years—due to COVID-19; it has not been conducted since.
Rather than relying on data, Modi and his supporters prefer an emotional response that pitches poor and marginalized Hindus against Muslims. India is a highly unequal country: About 90 percent of the population earns less than the average income of $2,800 per year. This gap has widened under Modi, with the richest 1 percent now owning 40 percent of India’s wealth. By othering Muslims, Modi puts them at risk of becoming the object of other deprived groups’ ire, which could lead to further communal violence. A Muslim man was allegedly lynched in Gujarat during the current election campaign, without making national  headlines.
Islamophobia is at the core of the project to make India a Hindu state. Modi and the BJP frequently weaponize terrorism discourse to delegitimize critics and political opposition. In Kashmir, where the BJP is not running candidates this election, this tactic has fueled anger and hostility. The high turnout in the region seems to be an expression of rage against Modi’s 2019 decision to revoke its semi-autonomous status. When the ruling party leaders conflate Islam with terrorism, there is little chance of extending any hand of peace toward Pakistan, either. Modi and his ministers have vowed to take back Pakistan-administered Kashmir by force if necessary—no matter the grave risk of conflict between two nuclear-armed countries.
Finally, Modi’s rhetoric does not bode well for other religious minorities in India. In the border state of Manipur, the largely Christian Kuki community has suffered state-backed majoritarian violence for more than a year. In Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populated state, Christian priests and worshippers are being jailed, beaten, and threatened by both Hindu majoritarian groups and state police. Meanwhile, the BJP has demonized the Sikh farmers who led protests against agricultural laws in 2020 and 2021, labeling them as separatist Khalistani terrorists. (Last year, Modi’s government was accused of involvement in the killing of a Sikh separatist leader in Canada as well as in an attempted assassination in New York.)
Muslims, Sikhs, and Christians are India’s biggest religious minorities; they make up nearly one-fifth of the country’s population. To disempower these groups would spell the end of the historical bond between India and ideas of universal justice, human rights, and democracy. A majoritarian Indian state—a Hindu Rashtra—would instead make a covenant with bigotry, discrimination, and violence. The bipartisan U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom has repeatedly asked Washington to blacklist Modi’s government for its suppression of religious freedom, but the Biden administration has refused to act so far.
However, the evidence is there for all to see—and Modi has further substantiated the charge of bigotry with his campaign speeches targeting Indian Muslims. No matter if the BJP achieves its supermajority, this rhetoric will have significant consequences for India. Modi is serving a warning. The world should take note before it is too late.
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newsbetulhub · 1 day ago
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Political tension rises in Delhi as Pravesh Verma and Kailash Gahlot meet with the LG.
Delhi Election Results LIVE: Union Minister Ravneet Singh Bittu Calls for Ousting AAP in PunjabAfter the ruling party’s defeat in Delhi, Union Minister Ravneet Singh Bittu has called for the removal of AAP from power in Punjab. Bittu stated, “Now it’s Punjab’s turn. The people of Punjab have made up their minds. It’s time for the hypocrites to go. Look at Haryana, Rajasthan, Delhi, UP, MP, Bihar,…
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trendingnewsfox · 2 days ago
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sujeetsharma · 2 days ago
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Delhi Elections, results and my thoughts
3:30 PM - 8 February 2025
Once a party rose to power with historic public support, but today its chief and former Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal lost his constituency. People gave him not just one but two chances. While some promises were fulfilled, others turned into mere vote-bank rhetoric. A leader once celebrated is now facing defeat.
Change doesn’t happen overnight; it unfolds over time. His overconfidence and hunger for power gradually shifted him away from the vision he once promised the people. Arvind Kejriwal, who rose to power as a people's leader, began to act more like an owner than a servant, growing arrogant in his belief that no one could defeat him in Delhi. The corruption charges against his party members, along with multiple arrests, have eroded public trust and shaken people's faith. His controversial remarks, including those that hurt religious sentiments, made him appear biased. His tendency to play the blame game and make accusations of defamation against other parties has overshadowed his focus on fulfilling his own responsibilities. Allegations of scandals led to his arrest, but beyond that, his focus shifted from governance to personal ambitions. While many politicians do this, Kejriwal was framed as the "Nayak" of politics, a role he ultimately failed to live up to.
Hopefully, Arvind Kejriwal learns a lesson this time and comes back stronger instead of blaming others. Let’s see how the winning party BJP governs Delhi and fulfills its promises. He made both good and bad decisions, but there’s no denying he was a popular CM and will be strong in opposition.
Note: These are just my personal thoughts. I’m not much into politics, I prefer history. Politics often fuels division, while history teaches valuable lessons from the past. It helps people learn, observe, and apply insights to shape a better future.
Sujeet
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kknnews · 2 days ago
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Delhi Election Results 2025 LIVE: BJP Dominates as AAP Faces Setback in Greater Kailash, Kalkaji, and Bijwasan
Delhi Election Results 2025 LIVE: BJP Dominates as AAP Faces Setback in Greater Kailash, Kalkaji, and Bijwasan...
KKN Gurugram Desk | The Delhi Assembly Election 2025 vote counting is underway, with BJP securing a strong lead in 48 seats, while AAP trails at 22 seats. Congress has failed to secure any leads so far. In a major blow to AAP, Arvind Kejriwal lost from New Delhi, while Delhi Minister Saurabh Bharadwaj lost the Greater Kailash seat by over 3,000 votes. BJP’s Garvit Singhvi won the Greater Kailash…
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ainnewsone · 3 days ago
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दिल्ली चुनाव परिणाम: संजय राउत ने AAP-कांग्रेस पर साधा निशाना, कहा - एकजुट होते तो बीजेपी की हार तय थी?
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AIN NEWS 1: दिल्ली चुनाव के शुरुआती रुझानों में बीजेपी को बढ़त मिलती दिख रही है। इस पर शिवसेना (UBT) के वरिष्ठ नेता संजय राउत ने प्रतिक्रिया दी है। उन्होंने कहा कि अगर AAP और कांग्रेस साथ मिलकर चुनाव लड़ते, तो बीजेपी की हार पहले घंटे में ही तय हो जाती। बीजेपी की बढ़त और विपक्ष की रणनीति दिल्ली विधानसभा चुनावों में शुरुआती रुझानों से साफ हो रहा है कि बीजेपी को स्पष्ट बढ़त मिल रही है। इस बीच संजय राउत ने विपक्षी दलों पर निशाना साधते हुए कहा कि AAP और कांग्रेस ने अलग-अलग चुनाव लड़कर बीजेपी को फायदा पहुंचाया। उनका मानना है कि दोनों पार्टियों का लक्ष्य बीजेपी को हराना था, लेकिन उन्होंने अलग-अलग लड़कर अपनी स्थिति कमजोर कर ली। क्या आप और कांग्रेस की गलती से मजबूत हुई बीजेपी? संजय राउत ने कहा कि अगर AAP और कांग्रेस गठबंधन कर चुनाव लड़ते, तो नतीजे पूरी तरह अलग होते। उन्होंने तर्क दिया कि बीजेपी के खिलाफ लड़ाई में विपक्षी दलों को एकजुट रहना चाहिए था, लेकिन आपसी मतभेदों के चलते वे बंट गए, जिसका सीधा फायदा बीजेपी को मिला। 2025 चुनावों में क्या होगा विपक्ष की रणनीति? दिल्ली चुनाव के ये नतीजे भविष्य में विपक्ष के लिए एक सीख हो सकते हैं। अगर विपक्षी दल गठबंधन की रणनीति पर विचार नहीं करते, तो आने वाले चुनावों में भी बीजेपी को फायदा मिल सकता है। राजनीतिक विशेषज्ञों का मानना है कि सशक्त विपक्ष ही बीजेपी को टक्कर दे सकता है, लेकिन इसके लिए एकजुटता जरूरी है। क्या AAP और कांग्रेस आगे साथ आएंगे? संजय राउत की इस टिप्पणी के बाद यह सवाल उठता है कि क्या AAP और कांग्रेस भविष्य में हाथ मिलाएंगे? दोनों दलों के नेताओं ने इस मुद्दे पर अभी तक कोई आधिकारिक बयान नहीं दिया है, लेकिन अगर वे वाकई बीजेपी को हराना चाहते हैं, तो उन्हें गठबंधन की रणनीति पर गंभीरता से विचार करना होगा। दिल्ली चुनावों के नतीजे यह दिखाते हैं कि विपक्षी दलों में एकता की कमी से बीजेपी को फायदा हुआ। संजय राउत के बयान से साफ है कि अगर AAP और कांग्रेस साथ होते, तो बीजेपी की हार तय थी। अब देखना होगा कि भविष्य में विपक्षी दल क्या रणनीति अपनाते हैं और क्या वे एकजुट होकर बीजेपी को टक्कर दे पाते हैं या नहीं। https://www.youtube.com/live/LSpp0bNGFUM?si=cjYfwszwUZIanKWf Shiv Sena (UBT) leader Sanjay Raut has commented on the Delhi election results, emphasizing that the AAP and Congress alliance could have ensured BJP’s defeat. He criticized their decision to fight separately, stating that BJP's lead would not have been possible if the opposition had been united. The Delhi elections 2025 have once again highlighted the importance of strategic alliances in defeating BJP. Read the full article
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newsxbyte · 3 days ago
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Delhi election result: Omar Abdullah’s cryptic post hitting out at INDIA as AAP, Congress trails – ‘Aur lado apas mein’
Delhi Election Results 2025: Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah shared a cryptic post accompanied with a GIF captioning it ‘Aur lado apas mein’ (fight each other some more), as INDIA bloc parties AAP and Congress trails in early trends of Delhi Election results 2025. CATCH LIVE UPDATES ON DELHI ELECTIONS 2025 After leads showed the BJP winning nearly 50 of Delhi’s 70 Assembly seats,…
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babyenemychild · 2 days ago
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Modi’s Party Wins Major Victory in Election in India’s Capital Region
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a-pramod-sharma · 2 days ago
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दिल्ली में उड़ गई आप, कांग्रेस को हो गया पत्ता साफ ?
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दिल्ली में उड़ गई आप, कांग्रेस को हो गया पत्ता साफ ?
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talkingheadlines · 4 days ago
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LIVE Updates on Delhi Exit Polls 2025: AAP Dismisses Predictions of BJP's Sweeping Victory, Says 'Exit Polls Are Always Wrong'
LIVE Updates on Delhi Election Exit Polls 2025: Exit Polls Predict BJP Winning Nearly 50 Seats and AAP’s Ouster from Delhi Delhi Election Exit Poll Results 2025: LIVE Updates AAP Remains Confident as Exit Polls Predict BJP Victory After the exit polls predicted a big win for BJP in the Delhi Assembly elections, AAP (Aam Aadmi Party) continues to show confidence. The voting for the elections…
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newsbetulhub · 2 days ago
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Delhi Election 2025 LIVE: BJP Heading for Victory After 27 Years, Majority Confirmed – AAP’s Performance Inside!
Highlights:Counting for the Delhi Assembly Elections 2025 is underway.BJP has crossed the majority mark in the trends.Who will win Delhi? The picture will be clear in a few hours.Delhi Election Results LIVE: Delhi voters have ousted the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) from power, according to the latest trends. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has gained a significant lead on multiple seats and is…
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bizbudgetnews · 5 days ago
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Check the Latest Updates on Delhi Assembly Elections
https://www.business-standard.com/elections/delhi-elections/delhi-election-exit-poll-results-2025-live-updates-aap-bjp-congress-delhi-assembly-election-exit-polls-125020501064_1.html
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