Now, onto exit polls: A look back at how close they were in 2009, 2014, 2019
Finally, as the Lok Sabha elections draw to a close on Saturday, 43 days after the first phase on April 19, all eyes will shift to the exit polls which will start emerging soon after the voting period officially ends.
Between June 1 and June 4, when the results will be declared, it will be these exit polls that will keep parties either hoping or despairing.
So, how close were theexit polls in the past two general elections, 2014 and 2019, which were both won by the Narendra Modi-led BJP by huge margins? While the 2014 Lok Sabha polls were held between April 7 and May 12, with the results announced on May 16, the 2019 edition was from April 11 to May 19, and the results came out on May 23.
In 2014, an average of eight exit polls estimated the BJP-led NDA winning 283 seats and the Congress-led UPA 105 seats – failing to estimate the extent of the ‘Modi wave’ that year, which saw the NDA finishing with 336 seats and the UPA with a mere 60. Of these, the BJP won 282 and the Congress 44.
In 2019, an average of 13 exit polls put the NDA’s combined tally at 306 and the UPA’s at 120 – again underestimating the NDA’s performance, which won 353 seats in all. The UPA got 93. Of these, the BJP won 303, and the Congress 52.
In 2009 too, when the UPA came back to power, an average of four exit polls underestimated the tally of the winner. They gave 195 seats to the UPA and 185 to the NDA. The UPA finally won with 262 seats, compared to the NDA’s 158. Of these, the Congress won 206 seats and the BJP 116.