
Ludhiana West bypoll: All eyes on how BJP factor will play out in this urban constituency of Punjab
The primary contest is expected to be between Congress's Bharat Bhushan Ashu, a former minister and two-term MLA, and the ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP)'s Sanjeev Arora, an industrialist and member of the Rajya Sabha. However, attention is focused on how the votes cast for BJP candidate Jiwan Gupta will impact both the Congress and the AAP.
Since its establishment in 1977, the Ludhiana West assembly constituency has never been won by the BJP, even in independent contests or in alliances with the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD). Out of the ten elections held in this period, the Congress won six times, the BJP's former ally SAD claimed two victories, and the erstwhile Janata Party won once.
After the SAD-BJP alliance in Punjab ended over the three farm laws in 2020, the BJP contested the 2022 Assembly elections independently from Ludhiana West, with its candidate, Bikram Singh Sidhu, coming third with 23.95 per cent of the votes, and the AAP's Gurpreet Gogi winning.
However, in this urban seat, dominated by the upmarket Hindu business community, industrialists and traders, along with scientists/professors from Punjab Agricultural University (PAU), the BJP has made significant gains in the past year or so.
In the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, former Congress Ludhiana MP Ravneet Singh Bittu shifted to the BJP and contested on the party's ticket. Although he lost the election to the Congress's Amrinder Singh Raja Warring, the BJP led from the Ludhiana West segment, polling 45,000 votes, which was 15,000 more than the Congress received.
The ruling AAP was pushed to third and polled just around 22,000 votes from Ludhiana West. The BJP claimed a lead in 66 of the 95 urban wards of Ludhiana in the Lok Sabha polls. Overall, AAP candidate Ashok Parshar Pappi finished a distant third with the ruling party's vote bank dipping below that of the BJP.
Pappi blamed the defeat on the BJP's 'Ram Mandir' pitch. AAP had failed to lead from any of the six urban Assembly segments of Ludhiana, while five went to the BJP and one to the Congress. Despite the loss, PM Narendra Modi made Bittu the Union Minister of State for Railways and Food Processing, which he says 'was due to Modi's love for Punjab'.
Then, in the Ludhiana Municipal Corporation elections, the ruling AAP suffered a major setback, as it failed to reach the majority mark to appoint its mayor. Of the 95 urban wards, the AAP won 41 (seven short of a majority), the Congress 30, the BJP 19, and the SAD 2.
For the first-ever bypoll in Ludhiana West, necessitated by the passing of AAP MLA Gurpreet Gogi, the SAD is the only party that has fielded a Sikh face: advocate Parupkar Singh Ghumman, known for fighting legal battles for underprivileged people pro bono.
Political experts believe that while a victory for the BJP in the Ludhiana West bypoll may seem unlikely, the party is expected to impact the vote share of both the Congress and AAP. It remains to be seen which party will be affected more significantly.
'The BJP candidate, Jiwan Gupta, started late. His nomination was announced just a day ahead of the last day of nominations, but even then, their campaign has blossomed over the past week. Several leaders in the BJP, including state president Sunil Jakhar, Haryana CM Nayab Singh Saini, Delhi CM Rekha Gupta, and Union ministers Hardeep Puri and Anurag Thakur, came to campaign for him. The BJP might not be winning the seat, but they are going to severely dent our and the AAP's vote bank,' said a senior Congress leader.
The AAP was the first to announce Arora as a candidate in February itself, followed by the Congress's Ashu. The AAP was also the first to start campaigning with its national convener Kejriwal and Punjab CM Mann hitting the ground in Ludhiana in March itself.
A local resident said that 'financially well-to-do' people of Ludhiana city don't have much to do with CM Mann's populist schemes, such as free power and atta dal; rather, they are highly upset over erratic power supply and long power cuts that the city has been facing this summer.
'This is a major worry for the AAP. It has been over a month now that the CM is regularly staying at a five-star facility in Ludhiana, and the entire city faces massive traffic jams due to his security cover. Inside houses, there is no power, and outside, there are major traffic snarls. Unlike previous CMs, he never stays in government guest houses. But this party had promised to end VVIP culture,' said the resident.
While the Ram Mandir was a key issue in the 2024 Lok Sabha polls, this time it could be Operation Sindoor, which could hurt the AAP in Ludhiana, said another local resident. 'CM Mann mocking 'Sindoor' has not gone down well with the urban Hindu women in Ludhiana. The anti-incumbency against the AAP can favour both the BJP and the Congress. And even the SAD can improve this time,' said the resident.
However, what remains in the AAP's favour is the advantage of being the ruling party, the power of administrative machinery, and the announcement by Kejriwal that if Arora is elected, he will be elevated as a Cabinet minister. Kejriwal has even announced that if any other party's MLA is elected, it 'will be difficult for him to get development works done in the constituency' as he 'won't have any power or money sans AAP government's support'.
Since being declared a candidate, Arora has been portrayed as the face of AAP Ludhiana, leading inaugurations and laying the foundation stone for major projects. The AAP has also built its campaign around Congress candidate Ashu's behavioural traits —gussa (anger) and ahankaar (arrogance), a charge that Ashu has denied.
But what the Opposition has accused the AAP of is 'plotting Kejriwal's backdoor entry into Rajya Sabha' by making Arora contest from Ludhiana. 'He is not campaigning for Arora, but his own entry into the Rajya Sabha. Arora is merely a pawn,' said a leaver, asking people not to vote for Kejriwal, 'who has been rejected by the people of Delhi'.
However, both the Congress and the BJP have already announced that the bypoll would be a 'trailer' for 2027 Punjab Assembly polls, as they claim that 'people are waiting to throw out the AAP' and 'winds of change will blow from Ludhiana'.
While the AAP's campaign so far has been led by its well-known faces, such as Kejriwal, Mann, Manish Sisodia, Rajya Sabha MP Harbhajan Singh, former Delhi CM Atishi, and Mann's wife, Dr Gurpreet Kaur, among others, the Congress is relying mostly on its local leadership.
Thanks to the wide-open rift between candidate Ashu and state Congress president Amrinder Singh Raja Warring, the latter had been conducting his own separate meetings and press conferences, although he accompanied Ashu on nomination day. Rather, Ashu has been relying on former CM Charanjit Singh Channi, Kapurthala MLA Rana Gurjeet Singh, and Jalandhar Cantt MLA Pargat Singh to lead his campaign.
'While till now, everyone is assuming numbers 1 and 2 to be between the Congress and the AAP, it will not be a surprise if the BJP ends up second,' said a local BJP leader.
In 1980, when the SAD and the BJP were not allies, the BJP's Vishwa Nath had stood third with 21.49 per cent votes. In 1985, the BJP's Inderjit Singh again stood third with 8.86 per cent of the votes, and in 1992, the saffron party's Kailash Sharma finished second with 31.82 per cent of the votes.
In 1997, after the SAD-BJP alliance was formed, the SAD's Maheshinder Singh Grewal won the seat. However, in 2002, the SAD's Avtar Singh Makkar lost to the Congress. In 2007, the SAD's Harish Rai Dhanda won. In 2012, the Congress's Ashu won while the BJP's Prof Rajinder Bhandari finished second with 30.17 per cent votes.
In 2017, Ashu won for a second consecutive time, but with the AAP entering Punjab's political landscape, the BJP was pushed to third, with Kamal Chatly finishing third with just 18 per cent of votes. In 2022, after the SAD-BJP alliance ended, the BJP's Bikram Sidhu came third while the AAP won.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
21 minutes ago
- Indian Express
AAP councillor arrested over gambling racket, BJP demands his expulsion
A fresh political slugfest has broken out in Delhi with the arrest of Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) councillor Joginder Singh Bunty in connection with an alleged illegal betting racket Saturday night. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) lost no time in demanding Bunty's expulsion — a move aimed at cornering a party already struggling to find political footing after it was ousted from power following the Assembly elections in the city earlier this year. However, the AAP shot back and stuck to its expected line of defence, accusing the BJP of targeting rivals. Bunty, a first-time councillor, was arrested along with six others from an office on Kadipur Road in Southwest Delhi, where the police claimed an illegal gambling operation was underway. 'The police arrested seven people from an office on Kadipur Road for being involved in a gambling operation on Saturday night. A tip-off was received about the operation,' a senior police officer said. The AAP leader, however, is no stranger to controversy. In 2022, a video had surfaced online, showing him brandishing a revolver while dancing during his campaign for the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) elections, which had led to the registration of a case under the Arms Act. Bunty had still won the elections, defeating the candidates of the BJP, the Congress and two Independents. However, the latest case comes at a time when the AAP, which until recently had held power in both the Delhi Assembly and the MCD, is scrambling to regain its foothold in the city. The BJP's sweeping win in the Assembly elections earlier this year was followed by it reclaiming the MCD, which AAP had wrested in the 2022 civic polls after 15 years of BJP rule. The ruling party used Bunty's arrest to reinforce how AAP, which once promised a clean break from traditional politics, has since been mired in controversies. Reacting to the arrest, Delhi BJP president Virendra Sachdeva questioned AAP's stance on the matter and said, 'Will Delhi AAP chief Saurabh Bharadwaj expel this gambling councillor, or will he once again dismiss it as a BJP conspiracy?' Sachdeva said the incident reflected a 'new face' of the party since it lost power in the MCD, and accused the AAP leaders of a pattern of criminality. Seizing the opportunity to emphasise upon AAP's recent string of scandals, Sachdeva said, 'AAP leaders have always claimed to be part of a party that practices a different kind of politics, but Delhiites began seeing the party's real face with leaders like fake degree-holder Minister Jitendra Tomar and controversial ration-card Minister Sandeep Kumar. The latest addition to that list is Councillor Joginder Singh Bunty, arrested for running a gambling racket.' Even as Bharadwaj did not directly respond to the allegations against Bunty, the party referred to the arrest of the top guns from the party in the past. 'In the past decade, the BJP has created a situation where central government agencies and their police register false cases on an everyday basis against political adversaries. Today, it is difficult to comment on the merits of any allegation if it comes from an agency under the BJP's control,' an AAP statement read.


The Hindu
21 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Congress-IUML mounts pressure on Kerala government to hold Vellappally Natesan accountable for stoking religious schism
The Congress and the Indian Union Muslim League (IUML) sought to mount pressure on the Left Democratic Front (LDF) government on Sunday (July 20, 2025) to hold Sree Narayana Dharma Paripalana (SNDP) Yogam general secretary Vellappally Natesan accountable for allegedly stoking religious schisms in society through 'communal and caste grievance-weighted hate speeches.' Almost synchronously, the Communist Party of India (Marxist) [CPI(M)] appeared to scramble to distance itself from the Hindu backward class organisation leader's contentious remarks. It seemed not lost on the CPI(M) that Mr. Natesan headed the Left Democratic Front (LDF)-backed Renaissance Protection Samiti (RPS), a collective formed in 2019 ostensibly to further progressive and secular values to counter a perceived right-wing drift towards identity politics in Kerala society. The CPI(M) State secretariat urged the SNDP Yogam leadership to pursue the humanist, progressive, and secular values expounded by social reformer and Renaissance leader Sree Narayana Guru. The CPI(M) stated that social organisations were free to raise any issue concerning the people. However, it should not be in a manner that created religious divisions and hate. Chandrika flays Natesan The fraught relationship between the IUML-Congress leadership and Mr. Natesan appeared to fray further on Sunday, with IUML mouthpiece Chandrika criticising Mr. Natesan for allegedly spewing 'communal venom to claw back socio-political relevance.' Mr. Natesan had invited the UDF leadership's ire by remarking on Saturday that both the ruling front and the Opposition were uniformly beholden to the Muslim community, given its 'growing electoral and economic heft.' He said both fronts were hostages to minority vote bank politics. He had alleged that the IUML planned to expand its presence to central and south Kerala by demanding more seats in the regions in the 2026 Assembly polls, possibly with an eye on the Chief Minister's post. IUML national general secretary P.K. Kunhalikutty emphasised that it was the responsibility of the LDF government to act against individuals who exploited the bully pulpit of influential social organisations to cause communal divisions in Kerala's secular society. Nevertheless, he avoided addressing the question of whether the police should charge Mr. Natesan with creating enmity between different sets of people and instead placed the burden on the government to 'determine the proper course of action.' Leader of the Opposition V. D. Satheesan alleged that Mr. Natesan raised dog whistle issues such as caste and religion at the behest of Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan. He accused the CPI(M) of sending a subtly aimed political message through Mr. Natesan to galvanise the majority community votes by othering minorities. Mr. Satheesan accused the CPI(M) of sacrificing secularism at the altar of political expediency. Mr. Natesan stated that some quarters sought to quell the Ezhava communities' 'struggle for social, economic, and political justice' by cherry-picking Sree Narayana Guru's teachings. He said he was 'willing to go to jail for speaking social truths.'


Time of India
36 minutes ago
- Time of India
ECI invites Motha in Del for talks on illegal migration, says Pradyot
1 2 Agartala: Tripura's ruling BJP ally Tipra Motha delegation has been invited at Nirvachan Sadan in New Delhi on Wednesday to discuss their demand for extensive revision of electoral roll to identify illegal migrants from Bangladesh and Myanmar with the Election Commission of India (ECI), Motha founder and Tripura royal scion Pradyot Kishore Debbarman said. Pradyot termed the development as a 'huge victory', and said ECI's invitation validates the concerns repeatedly raised by Tipra Motha over the demographic change and security implications of unchecked cross-border migration. In recent years, infiltration from Bangladesh and Myanmar has emerged as the biggest threat to Tripura. The settlers of both tribal and non-tribal since the accession of Tripura to Indian union in Oct 1949 are the indigenous in the state, and thereafter, before creation of Bangladesh in 1971 were also considered as the legal settlers of the state. Whoever crosses over to Tripura after March 1971, according to Indian law, they are illegal immigrants, and they had managed to stay in the state, thereby creating a problem for the genuine citizens. However, soon after the creation of Bangladesh in 1971, India govt had issued order to all the states and territorial govt to flush out illegal immigrants, but it didn't work in Tripura. Thereafter, in 2017 and 2021 similar orders were issued, but the then Left Front and BJP govt, respectively neither made it public nor executed the orders. On May 19 this year, the ministry of home affairs issued directives to all the state govts following Pahalgam incident to identify illegal migrants and deport them to their respective countries. Accordingly, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Haryana have started implementing the order. Tripura has also formed a special task force to deal with illegal migrants and prevent infiltration. To identify the illegal migrants and their deportation, Tipra Motha, has launched a sustain campaign at community level and demanded ECI to go for extensive revision of electoral roll like Bihar. "We are trying to protect our next generation and looking beyond party politics. This is not just a fight of TIPRA Motha party but every Indian," Pradyot said, adding that he also made a passionate appeal to rise above party politics and stand united against illegal migration, emphasising the need for a collective and nationalistic approach to the issue rather than treating it as a political agenda.