As indicated by ward-wise patterns, BJP was driving in162 seats, Congress in 45, AAP in18 and AIMIM in 4 till 11am.
After the counting of decisions in favor of six city enterprises in Gujarat started at 9am, early patterns showed that continuous ranchers fight, fuel value rise are not liable to imprint the decision BJP’s vote bank locally. Taking all things together six urban bodies — Ahmedabad, Vadodara, Surat, Rajkot, Bhavnagar, Jamnagar — BJP was ahead. As the checking continued, BJP won 36 seats and Congress nine.
As per the most recent patterns, out of 192 seats in Ahmedabad, BJP was driving in 81, Congress in 15 and the AIMIM in two. In Surat, out of 120 seats, BJP was driving in 50 seats, Congress in 10 and the AAP in 19 seats. Out of 76 seats in Vadodara, BJP was driving in 36 seats, Congress in nine. In Rajkot, BJP was driving in 48 seats out of absolute of 72 seats.
Out of 64 seats in Jamnagar, BJP was driving in 23, both Congress and AAP in four. In Bhavnagar, BJP was driving in 30 seats and Congress in eight — out of 52 seats of the metropolitan company.
In a shock, Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) opened its record in Jamnagar interestingly. The gathering won three out of four seats in Ward 6 of Jamnagar Municipal Corporation.
Decisions were hung on Sunday for 192 seats across 48 wards in the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation, 120 seats across 30 wards in the Surat Municipal Corporation, 76 seats across 19 wards of the Vadodara Municipal Corporation, 72 seats across 18 wards in the Rajkot Municipal Corporation, 52 seats across 13 wards in the Bhavnagar Municipal Corporation and 64 seats across 16 wards in the Jamnagar Municipal Corporation.
Ahmedabad recorded the most minimal turnout of 42.51 percent, while Jamnagar saw the most elevated turnout of 53.38 percent, trailed by 50.72 percent in Rajkot, 49.46 percent in Bhavnagar, 47.84 percent in Vadodara and 47.14 percent in Surat. Of the absolute 1.14 crore citizens enrolled in these significant urban areas of Gujarat, 52.83 lakh had projected their polling forms, the SEC said in a delivery.