Voter preferences

The IAF strikes against JeM's terrorist camp in Pakistan, a new jobs quota and cash handouts to farmers have lifted Prime Minister Narendra Modi ’s popularity back to peak levels, according to a pre-election survey.The poll found 43 percent — or more than four of every 10 respondents — wanted Modi to return as Prime Minister. That’s seven percentage points higher than during the 2014 elections, when a little over one-thirds had wanted him to lead the country. Conducted by the Lokniti research program at the New Delhi-based Centre for the Study of Developing Societies from March 24 to March 31, the poll surveyed 10,010 respondents spread across 19 of the country’s 29 states.Voting in India is set to take place in seven phases from April 11 to May 19 and the result will be announced May 23. Still, a rise in popularity doesn’t necessarily translate into seats for his party.The survey suggested "three decisions of the Modi government taken between January 7 and February 26 might just have the ability to change the course of an election that just could very well have been a close race.”In the first quarter of 2019, the BJP-led government decided to assign 10 per cent quotas to the economically weaker section, pledged to transfer money to bank accounts of farmers and conducted air strikes inside Pakistan following the Pulwama terror attack.Most respondents didn’t openly say these would be the most important voting issues for them and instead chose unemployment and development as the key factors, the survey showed.“However, looking at other data from the survey, we have reason to believe that the three back-to-back happenings seem to have had impacted voter preferences and opinions, quite possibly at a sub-conscious level,” the Lokniti poll found.In contrast to the effect that the air strikes, reservation and cash transfers seem to having on the BJP’s and Modi’s popularity, the impact of the Rafale deal controversy and opposition Congress’s assurance of a minimum income guarantee to the poor were found to be not as strong, the survey said.