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The Election Commission's data shows that in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, the candidates fielded by the Jammu and Kashmir Apni Party (JKAP), the Democratic Progressive Azad Party (DPAP), and the Jammu and Kashmir People's Conference (PC) failed to secure even one-sixth of the total valid votes polled in their respective constituencies.
Regional parties like the National Conference, the People's Democratic Party (PDP), and Engineer Rashid’s Awami Ittehad Party, have emerged as the dominant forces in the Kashmir Valley.
The voter turnout in Jammu and Kashmir in the Lok Sabha polls stood at 58.46 percent — the highest in a parliament election in the last 35 years. The parliamentary segments of Srinagar, Baramulla, and Anantnag-Rajouri recorded voter turnouts of 38.49 percent, 59.1 percent, and 54.84 percent respectively.
89 out of 100 candidates in the region failed to secure 16.67 percent of the total votes in their constituencies, resulting in the forfeiture of their security deposits.
Azad, who left the Congress party in 2022 due to differences with Rahul Gandhi, failed to garner votes for his party’s candidate. He had unsuccessfully contested the 2014 Lok Sabha elections from Udhampur seat on a Congress ticket. Saroori even lost in the Inderwal assembly segment (Kishtwar district), where he had previously won three consecutive assembly elections.
There is little for DPAP candidates Muhammad Saleem Paray of the Anantnag-Rajouri seat and Amir Ahmed Bhat of the Srinagar seat to celebrate, as they received only 25,440 votes (2.47 percent) and 15,104 votes (2.24 percent) in their constituencies, respectively
JKAP candidates Muhammad Ashraf Mir and Zaffar Iqbal Manhas got 9.77 percent votes in Srinagar and 13.86 percent votes in Anantnag-Rajouri. People Conference's Sajjad Lone also lost badly against independent candidate Engineer Rashid, getting 16.76 percent of the polled votes, saving his deposit with just about 900 votes.
Former Chief Minister and Jammu and Kashmir National Conference candidate Omar Abdullah garnered 25.94 percent of the votes in Baramulla, and former Chief Minister and the People's Democratic Party candidate Mehbooba Mufti got 23.40 percent of the vote share in Anantnag-Rajouri. Notably, sensing defeat, the BJP decided not to contest any seats in the Kashmir valley.
With the impending assembly elections, the BJP appears to be struggling and the goal of having a "Hindu chief minister" remains elusive.
Political pundits in the valley argue that it will be difficult to dislodge the traditional parties in Jammu and Kashmir because the BJP is still seen as a “villain” in the Muslim-majority region, as depicted in their performance in the parliamentary elections.
"This election has proven to be a mass rejection of defectors and the entire process of creating new fronts has been discredited,” he added.
Sunil Sethi, the BJP's chief spokesperson in Jammu and Kashmir, told The Quint that its main aim was to ensure the defeat of the top political leaders of the valley and they successfully managed to do it. He said the BJP won both the seats from Jammu and supported those parties in the valley who were in a position to defeat the NC and the PDP. It is pertinent to mention that both former chief ministers of the erstwhile state, Omar Abdullah and Mehbooba Mufti, lost the elections.
Sethi further added that the two seats that NC were able to win were on religious lines and not political. It is true that the National Conference candidate, Aga Ruhullah Mehdi, who won the Srinagar-Budgam seat, is a Shia leader and has huge followers in the community.
Similarly, Mian Altaf Larvi, who won the Anantnag-Rajouri seat, is a prominent figure among the Bakarwal and Pahari communities. He is the son of Mian Bashir Ahmad Larvi, a renowned religious and spiritual leader in the Gujjar community.
Noor Mohammad Baba, a retired professor of political science at the University of Kashmir, told The Quint that post abrogation of Article 370, the BJP tried its best to discredit regional political parties and create “alternative narratives” and "new political fronts" but that has not worked so far.
With the assembly elections around the corner, the BJP appointed Union Minister of Coal G Kishan Reddy as the poll-in-charge in J&K. The Supreme Court has directed the Election Commission to hold the elections by September 2024.
(Auqib Javeed is a Srinagar-based journalist. He tweets at @AuqibJaveed. This is an opinion piece. The views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for them.)
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