Edited by Amit Chaturvedi | Updated: December 20, 2012 15:33 IST

Shimla: In cold Himachal Pradesh, 76-year-old Virbhadra Singh looks a relieved
man. He has delivered a win for the Congress, which has crossed the halfway mark and is set to form government in the state.
Chief
Minister Prem Kumar Dhumal of the BJP earlier conceded defeat and
congratulated the Congress. And senior BJP leader Shanta Kumar said in
Delhi, "We accept the verdict. All people in the BJP had fought
elections together. The people did not vote for us. We accept it."
The Congress has won 36 seats while BJP 24, of the state's 68 seats. The election was being seen as possibly the
last chance that Virbhadra Singh, a five time Chief Minister, had of
resurrecting his political career after he had to step down as Union
Minister this year because of corruption charges. (Read: Sonia to decide chief minister, says Virbhadra Singh)
Pitch-forked
late into handling the Congress' bid to wrest back Himachal, he had to
battle internal party wrangles, whisper campaigns and even the issue of
the cap on the subsidised LPG cylinders imposed by the Central
government led by his party just before elections in the state.
What
Mr Singh was counting on was the high voter turnout in the November 4
elections, a record at 74 per cent. The Congress said this was a clear
indication of an anti-incumbency vote. And on Himachal's track record of
always voting against the party in power; no ruling party has retained
power for two straight terms in Himachal. (Read: Virbhadra Singh wins by record margin)
As
it became clear today that the Congress would indeed take the state
back from the BJP, Mr Singh said, "I was asked to go back to the state
and ensure a Congress win... who will become the next chief minister
will be decided by the Congress high command, and president Sonia
Gandhi."
The BJP began the day well; very early trends seemed to
go its way prompting Chief Minister Prem Kumar Dhumal to say that he
expected a sound victory. But that changed within an hour and the
Congress has not looked back since. The BJP's star campaigner Narendra
Modi, who is celebrating a hat-trick of assembly election wins in
Gujarat, had campaigned extensively for the party in Himachal Pradesh
and the BJP's loss has prompted his critics to ask why the much-touted
Modi magic failed here.
A big win for Mr Modi in Gujarat was
widely seen as an indication that the Gujarat Chief Minister was ready
for a bigger role at the national stage. But he does not enjoy universal
acceptability, a point that his detractors have been underscoring
today. Sources in the JD(U), which partners the BJP in the National
Democractic Alliance or NDA, said today that if Mr Modi had enjoyed
immense popularity all over the country, his efforts would have worked
in Himachal.
In 2007, the BJP had won 41 seats, the Congress 23,
the Bahujan Samaj Party one and independents three. The BSP legislator
later joined the BJP. (Read: Dhumal wins by slender margin)
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