Celebrations at the Gandhinagar BJP office have already begun as the party sweeps the Gujarat elections...
Digital Desk: According to Election Commission of India (ECI) data, the governing party Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has won Dahod and Petlad constituencies so far, with the saffron party making strong gains in the early hours of counting on Thursday.
Kanaiyalal Bachubhai Kishori (BJP) defeated Harshadbhai Valchandbhai Ninama (INC) by 29,350 votes in Dahod, while Kamleshbhai Rameshbhai Patel defeated Dr. Prakash Budhabhai Parmar of INC by 17954 votes in Petlad.
Early polls show BJP's Ayar Mulubhai Hardasbhai Bera leading against AAP's Isudan Gadhvi in Khambhalia. Gujarat's AAP chief ministerial candidate is Isudan Gadhvi.
Alpesh Thakor of the BJP leads the Gandhinagar South Assembly constituency, while incumbent Chief Minister Bhupendrabhai Patel leads Dr Amee Yajnik of the Congress by 71,744 votes in Ghatlodia.
The ruling BJP is also in charge in Morbi, where a horrific bridge collapse on October 30th killed more than 130 people. Kantibhai Amrutiya, a five-term MLA, currently leads the constituency.
The celebrations at the Gandhinagar BJP office have already begun as the party sweeps the Gujarat elections. According to official EC trends, the BJP is leading in 152 of the 182 seats.
According to Union Minister Pralhad Joshi, the Gujarat model is now being endorsed and accepted.
"People have endorsed and accepted the Gujarat model since 2000-2001." The model that we are presenting to the country is being accepted. I congratulate the Gujarati people and the BJP. "It's one of the largest polling records in history," he said.
The BJP, which has ruled Gujarat for over 27 years, is hoping for another five-year term. Exit polls predicted that the BJP would win 117-151 seats in the 182-member Assembly.
The BJP had its best performance in Gujarat in 2002, when it won 127 Assembly seats. Congress had won 149 of 182 seats in 1985. The BJP has taken the lead in over 150 constituencies, and if the saffron party maintains its lead, it may break the Congress's 1985 record.
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