Chandigarh: Winning 77 of the 117 state assembly seats, the Amarinder Singh-led Congress on Saturday stormed to power in Punjab riding a strong anti-incumbency wave against the ruling SAD-BJP combine and warding off a spirited challenge by newcomer AAP.
The party put up its second best performance in the state. In the 1992 state elections, it had won 87 seats. With 77 MLAs it now just one seat short of a two third majority.
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In addition, Congress also won the bypoll to the Amritsar Lok Sabha seat.
The SAD-BJP alliance finished at number three spot in the state polls, behind AAP, which emerged as the largest opposition party with 20 seats.
However, the number fell way short of Arvind Kejriwal's claim of winning 100 seats.
The Prakash Singh Badal-led SAD won 15 seats, down from its earlier tally of 56 seats while ally BJP bagged three seats against the 12 it had won in 2012.
A pre-poll ally of AAP, the Lok Insaaf Party, contested five seats and won two of them.
At a packed press conference here, a beaming Amarinder Singh, who was the Congress' chief ministerial face, declared that tackling drug menace would be a top priority for his government.
The issue of drug abuse, especially by the youth in the state, was repeatedly raked by the opposition parties to attack the ruling SAD-BJP.
Not known for sparing opponents, Singh who turned 75 on the day, hit out at the SAD claiming it had brought the state "down to its knees" and mocked Kejriwal saying he was like a "summer storm that had come and gone".
Singh, lost the Lambi seat where he contested against chief minister Prakash Singh Badal, but won from the Patiala assembly seat where he defeated Gen (retd) J.J. Singh.
Improving its tally from 46 in 2012 to 77 now, the Congress also proved wrong the exit polls and predictions which had suggested a close fight between it and AAP.
The AAP had pinned great hopes on Punjab polls, a state where it got four seats in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls. The party was hoping for major gains in the Malwa belt, which has bulk 69 seats, but it did not materialize.
"We accept the people's mandate. All volunteers worked hard. Our struggle will continue," Kejriwal tweeted.
Accepting the verdict, five-time chief minister and Akali patriarch Parkash Singh Badal (89) said he would be submitting his resignation to the Governor here on Sunday.
For the Congress, the icing on the cake was victory in the Amritsar Lok Sabha seat bypoll where its candidate G.S. Aujla defeated nearest rival R.S. Chhina of BJP by 1,99,189 votes.
Badal said he would ask his son and SAD president Sukhbir Badal to form a committee to introspect the party's defeat.
The Congress will hold a meeting of its elected MLAs here on Sunday to elect the Congress Legislative Party leader.
The party won 40 seats in Malwa belt while the AAP had to BE content with 18. The SAD-BJP won 9 seats in the region. The Congress won 22 (of 25) seats in Majha belt and 15 (of 23) in the Doaba region.
Immediately after the win, upbeat Congress workers celebrated at Capt. Amarinder Singh's residence here while there were celebrations at his main residence and hometown in Patiala.
In other towns, including Amritsar, Jalandhar and Ludhiana, Congress workers celebrated, even applying 'gulal (colour)' on each others faces with Holi festival being round-the-corner and distributed 'ladoos' and broke into 'bhangra' dancing to the beats of traditional 'dhol'.
Singh thanked the people for their overwhelming support and also expressed gratitude to the Congress' central leadership and party workers.
"Committed to good governance, tackling drug menace, besides health and education will be priority," he said, spelling out his priorities.
Singh won from Patiala, with a huge margin of 52,407 votes as he defeated his nearest rival AAP candidate Balbir Singh. Former army chief J. J. Singh came third by securing 11,677 votes.
Sidhu, Pargat win
Navjot Singh Sidhu, who had switched over to the Congress recently from BJP, also registered a huge win from his Amritsar-East seat, which was earlier held by his wife Navjot Kaur.
Other prominent Congress candidates who won included Manpreet Singh Badal (Bathinda Urban), former captain of Indian hockey team Pargat Singh (Jalandhar Cantt), O.P. Soni (Amritsar Central) and Charanjit Singh Channi (Chamkaur Sahib).
However, senior leaders of the Congress who lost included former CM Rajinder Kaur Bhattal, who failed to win from her traditional seat Lehra losing to cabinet minister Parminder Singh Dhindsa, and Sunil Jakhar who lost from Abohar to BJP candidate Arun Narang.
Prominent Akali candidates who won included chief minister Parkash Singh Badal, who retained his traditional Lambi seat defeating Singh by 22,770 votes.
Deputy CM and SAD President Sukhbir Badal, ministers Bikram Singh Majithia and Parminder Singh Dhindsa also won their seats from Jalalabad, Majitha and Lehra, respectively.
AAP's prominent winners included H.S. Phoolka, who won from Dakha, Kanwar Sandhu from Kharar and Sukhpal Khaira from Bolath while party candiates Bhagwant Mann (Jalalabad), Jarnail Singh (Lambi), Himmat Singh Shergill (Majitha) and Gurpreet Singh Ghuggi (Batala) suffered defeats.