Gujarat Assembly elections 2017: BJP's Muslim outreach worries Congress

Congress workers say top
leaders unwilling to campaign in Muslim areas; BJP encourages Muslims to attend
its public meetings
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NEWS : As the Congress embraces “soft” Hindutva in Gujarat,
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday reached out to the Muslim community of
the state.
In Bharuch, Modi accused the Congress of stoking a
Hindu-Muslim divide. He said Bharuch and Kutch, two districts with significant
Muslim populations, are economically the fastest growing districts of Gujarat.
The PM went on to say how during the Congress rule, celebrating festivals comes
with the apprehension of violence.
The PM’s comments come on the heels of a finely-tuned
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) outreach campaign among the minority as well as
the majority communities in Gujarat, which has the Congress worried.
According to Congress workers as well as activists, the
feedback is increasingly that several in the Muslim community, even if they do
not vote for the BJP, might not turn up in adequate numbers to vote for
Congress candidates.
Of the 43.3 million people eligible to cast their votes in
the state in the forthcoming Assembly polls, Muslims make a bit over nine per
cent of the electorate. The state will see elections on December 9 and 14.
According to internal estimates of political parties,
Muslims comprise more than 10 per cent of the electorate in 65 of the 182
Assembly seats in Gujarat. Of the 65, Muslims comprise almost a fifth of the
electorate on 20 seats.
In 2012, the BJP won 42 seats with a margin of almost 15,000
votes or less. The Congress has identified 30-odd of these seats it believes it
can wrest from the BJP. With the Patidar community divided, several of the
30-odd seats are on the list of 65 where Muslims can be a factor if the BJP
fails to get a consolidated Hindu vote. A low turnout of Muslim voters would
hurt the Congress.
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