null
null
Menu
Chanakya Projection Sparks Surprise Twist, Upsets UDF Camp Ahead of Results
April 30, 2026 by Mediaeye News
Preferred on
Chanakya Projection Sparks Surprise Twist, Upsets UDF Camp Ahead of Results

Thiruvananthapuram: With the Kerala Assembly election results just days away, a surprise projection by Chanakya released on Thursday has shaken up the political atmosphere, creating uncertainty in the state’s electoral outlook. While most forecasts had earlier pointed to a comfortable win for the United Democratic Front (UDF), the latest numbers have introduced fresh tension and speculation within the camp.

While pollsters such as Axis My India, People’s Pulse, VoteVibe, Matrize and JVC have broadly projected the UDF led by the Congress to cross the 71-seat majority mark in the 140-member Assembly, Today’s Chanakya has raised the possibility of a hung House.

According to Chanakya’s estimates, the UDF may secure 69 seats (+/-9), placing it in the 60–78 range, just on the cusp of a majority.

The Left Democratic Front (LDF), led by the Communist Party of India-Marxist, is projected at 64 seats (+/-9), or 55–73 seats, indicating a neck-and-neck contest.

The margin between the two fronts, the agency suggests, could be wafer-thin.

Crucially, the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), spearheaded by the Bharatiya Janata Party, is expected to improve its tally to 3–11 seats, potentially emerging as a crucial force in a fractured verdict scenario.

The divergence in projections has become the talking point of the election’s final phase.

While most polls give the UDF between 72 and 85 seats, well above the majority threshold, Chanakya’s lower-end estimate has raised concerns within the opposition alliance about overconfidence and last-mile voter shifts.

The LDF, though trailing in most surveys, remains within striking distance in this projection, underscoring the competitiveness of the race.

Vote share estimates further reinforce the tightness. Chanakya projects the UDF at 40 per cent (+/-3 per cent), the LDF at 38 per cent (+/-3 per cent), and the NDA at 20 per cent (+/-3 per cent), suggesting that even small swings could decisively alter outcomes across closely fought constituencies.

With every seat now critical, the spotlight shifts to counting day.

Official results will be declared on May 4, and as always with exit polls, the final verdict may yet defy predictions.

More InFocus News on www.mediaeyenews.com

MediaEye Group

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

–IANS

 

Mediaeye News

Mediaeye News

Our editorial team brings you the latest news and insights with in-depth analysis and reporting.


Trending News

Top News