Kerala will vote in 2016 Assembly polls on May 16 while results will be declared on May 19.
Quick Take
Summary is AI generated, newsroom reviewed.
LDF, UDF only 4 seats apart, 0.25% swing in votes can reverse position
BJP could influence the elections by taking away votes from UDF
Last panchayat election, a precursor to state polls, are in LDF's favour
The Congress-led UDF has a wafer-thin majority at 72 seats in the 140-member assembly - majority is at 71 - and the CPM-led LDF has 68.
To touch 100 seats and a mammoth majority, the UDF will need only a 3.5 per cent vote swing in its favour, while the LDF will need to gain four per cent vote share to reach that number, based on historical data and current alliances.


How the BJP performs on May 16 when Kerala votes, could influence whether the UDF wins or the LDF - a stronger BJP is bad news for the UDF.
If the BJP gains even two per cent vote share in this election, it is likely to get 1.5 per cent of that from the UDF and will help the LDF get to a majority; if it gains five per cent, four per cent is likely to come from the UDF's share and the LDF will be home safe with 79 seats.

But the LDF will pin its hope on the fact that no party or alliance has been returned to power in 36 years and also that it dominated the last panchayat elections held six months ago. Panchayat elections have traditionally been a good indicator of which way the winds blow in Kerala assembly elections.

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