Kharge Predicts UDF Win in Kerala, DMK Victory in Tamil Nadu After Exit Polls

Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge expressed optimism about the DMK-led alliance returning to power in Tamil Nadu and the Congress-led UDF winning in Kerala after exit poll predictions. According to Axis My India, the DMK alliance is projected to get 92-100 seats, while actor Vijay's TVK leads in CM preference over MK Stalin. Kharge conceded tough battles in Assam and Puducherry but remained hopeful of better results. He also noted a neck-to-neck fight in West Bengal between BJP and TMC, and promised to resolve Karnataka's leadership confusion soon.

Key Points: Kharge Hopeful of UDF, DMK Wins After Exit Polls

  • Kharge confident of DMK-led alliance win in Tamil Nadu
  • UDF predicted to secure majority in Kerala
  • Exit polls show close fight in West Bengal between TMC and BJP
  • Congress faces tough battle in Assam and Puducherry
3 min read

Congress President Kharge hopeful of UDF win in Kerala, DMK alliance victory in Tamil Nadu after Exit Polls

Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge expresses optimism for UDF in Kerala and DMK in Tamil Nadu based on exit poll predictions, while noting tough battles in Assam and Puducherry.

"I have a hope that a clear majority for DMK might come in Tamil Nadu - Mallikarjun Kharge"

Kalaburagi, April 30

Congress Presidet Mallikarjun Kharge expressed optimism in the DMK led alliance returning to power in Tamil Nadu and the victory of the Congress led UDF in Kerala after Wednesday's exit poll predictions.

"Now, some results are showing clearly in some places. Some results have created a bit of confusion. But, to the extent I feel, I have a hope that a clear majority for DMK might come in Tamil Nadu; I have spoken about it there as well. Similarly, in Kerala, our people have already told me that UDFwill come with a majority, " the Congress President said.

According to Axis My India exit poll, the seven-party alliance led by the DMK would get 92-100 seats, Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) 98-120 seats and the five-party alliance led by AIADMK would get 22-32 seats. According to Axis My India, Vijay is ahead of Chief Minister MK Stalin in terms of choice for the next Chief Minister. While Stalin was supported by 35 per cent of those surveyed, the support was 37 per cent for Vijay.

However, several other exit polls predicted that the alliance led by the ruling DMK will return to power in the state. People Pulse projected 125-145 seats for the DMK-led alliance and the AIADMK-led alliance which also includes the BJP, getting 65-80 seats. It projected Vijay's Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) getting two to six seatsTamil Nadu has 234 assembly seats. According to exit poll projections by Matrize, DMK and allies will get 122-132 seats and AIADMK and allies 80-100 seats. It said TVK would get 0-6 assembly seats.

The Congress President conceded that in Assam and Puducherry the Congress faced a tough battle in upsetting the ruling alliance.

"In Assam, the Exit Poll is saying that our expected seats are not coming. But I have confidence that we might get more than the figures they are showing. In Pondicherry also, we have fought an equal battle against BJP and the NR party. We have expectations there too, but more or less, there is a tough fight there; let us wait and see for another two days," Kharge said.

Kharge said that Bengal was seeing a close fight between the BJP and the Trinamool Congress but refused to be drawn into a question on wether the Congress would support TMC if they fell short of a majority.

"According to the West Bengal Exit Poll or according to our information there, there is a neck-to-neck fight. One piece of our information is that there is a lead for TMC. Secondly, BJP and their other alliance NDA partners are doing a bit of oppression, threatening, and by deploying CRPF against the people, they are trying to give a 'takkar' (tough challenge) to Mamata's TMC," Kharge said.

Speaking on the likelihood of Congress supporting TMC in case of a hung assembly, Kharge said, "We will see; it doesn't look good to say it now, let's wait two days for a clear picture."

The Congress President also promised that the confusion on a possible change of CM in Karnataka would be sorted out at the earliest.

"We will resolve the state's (Karnataka) confusion as soon as possible. But more than our 'fate', according to our ideology and what we have worked for in the party, Sonia Gandhi takes our decisions. But now that question does not arise at all; already there is a Chief Minister here. If any decision is to be taken by Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi, or us together in the path of change, it will take some time," Kharge said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sneha F
"We will see, let's wait" — that's Congress's new slogan everywhere. 😅 In Kerala, UDF vs LDF is always a tightrope. I've been hearing UDF might scrape through in a few seats, but exit polls can't capture the Muslim League factor properly. Let's wait for May 2!
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Vivek B
Kharge ji's comment about Bengal is classic — "oppression by deploying CRPF" but won't say outright if they'll back TMC. That's the same old Congress dance. Either take a stand or don't bring it up. For TN, DMK alliance looks solid on ground except for those central TN belts where TVK is cutting into votes.
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Rakesh M
As a Malayali, I can tell you UDF is genuinely optimistic this time — Pinarayi's anti-incumbency is real, especially after those welfare scheme cuts and the Wayanad landslide handling. But Kharge ji should also talk about the internal factionalism in Kerala Congress. That's the real elephant in the room.
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James A
Interesting how Kharge mentions "our ideology" for Karnataka decisions but can't explain the CM confusion. That's classic Congress dysfunction — they always hide behind Sonia and Rahul when there's a messy internal battle. Exit polls aside, the real story is how Congress can't even manage its own house in Karnataka while talking about TN and Kerala.
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Priya S
I'm from Puducherry and Kharge is right — it's a tight fight between Congress-NR and BJP. But the exit polls barely cover our union territory. And honestly, people here are tired of the

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