NEW DELHI: BJP will get a comfortable majority in Delhi, with Aam Aadmi Party reduced to a distant second and Congress completely routed, an opinion poll conducted by ABP News-Nielsen has predicted.BJP, riding high on the Modi wave, is predicted to bag 46 seats in the 70-member Delhi assembly, followed by AAP with 18 seats while Congress could be reduced to only five seats if the elections were to be held in the national capital now, the poll said.In the 2013 assembly polls, BJP had won 32 seats, followed by AAP with 28 seats. The survey predicted further decimation of the Congress which ruled the city for 15 years under Sheila Dikshit. The party is likely to get three seats less than what it had bagged in the last elections.According to the opinion poll, BJP could end up with 38% vote share, followed by AAP with 26% and Congress with 22%.AAP leader and former chief minister Arvind Kejriwal, though, remains the most preferred candidate for the CM's post, but with a thinner margin. Around 39% of respondents plumped for Kejriwal, who was closely followed by BJP leader Harsh Vardhan with 38% of votes.Around 7% people still favoured Dikshit as CM, followed by BJP leader Jagdish Mukhi (5%) and party's city president Satish Upadhyay (4%).Around 61% of people who participated in the survey were satisfied with the work done by Kejriwal in his 49-day tenure which could be the reason why the AAP chief is still considered among the favourites for the Delhi CM's post.However, Prime Minister Narendra Modi beat Kejriwal hands down as he remained the most popular leader in the Capital, with 63% support. Kejriwal was the second-most popular leader with 25% while Rahul Gandhi trailed with 12%.Modi's popularity seems to be shaping BJP's strategy which is likely to contest the assembly polls in his name instead of projecting a CM candidate. More than half (56%) the people surveyed said that with Modi as PM, "achhe din" were here.The opinion poll was conducted by ABP News-Nielson with 6,528 respondents in 35 assembly constituencies between November 5 and November 7.