The Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) is projected to win 255 seats in the country's 543-seat parliament, local media reports say.
As results poured in on Saturday, Manmohan Singh, the Indian prime minister, said the people had given the Congress a "massive mandate".
Al Jazeera's Barnaby Phillips in New Delhi said: "Congress appears to have done spectacularly well, particularly against the left and forces of the [rival] Third Front, whose supports appears to have collapsed in some areas.
"In the centre of
'Right choice'
Sonia Gandhi, the Congress leader, said the people had made the right choice.
"First of all I would like to thank the people for reposing faith in the Congress party once again," she said during a joint news conference with Singh.
"The people of
The UPA is, however, still short of the 272 seats needed for a parliamentary majority.
The BJP-led alliance is projected to take 165 seats while the Third Front, an alliance of communist and regional parties, is set to win only 80 seats, local media said.
Arun Jaitley, leader of the BJP, conceded that his party had been defeated.
"The Congress has the biggest mandate ... I think if Congress wants to compliment some of its leaders in this hour of victory, I think they're entitled to do so," he said.
Prakash Karat, general secretary of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), also conceded defeat.
"We have suffered a major setback," Karat said. "This is a victory for the Congress and its allies who will now clearly form the government."
Focus on rural poor
Sankarshan Thakur, an editor with the Kolkata-based Telegraph newspaper, said the Congress had been rewarded for pursuing policies that focused on the rural poor.
"It was a combination of luck [good monsoons that helped good crops yield] and good governance. Schemes guranteeing employment for the rural poor helped," he told Al Jazeera.
Communists in the southern state of Kerala and in the eastern
"There have [also] been big gains for Congress in Uttar Pradesh, the most populous state in all of
Raj Chengappa, editor of India Today news magazine, said a number of factors had played a role in the success of the Congress-led combine.
"First I think [was] their entire focus on development and the economy. Congress has a very strong economic team. Second, they have shunned divisive politics, unlike the BJP," he told Al Jazeera.
"Third, we had for the first time a very young generation that is voting in large numbers. I went to a poll booth and I was surprised that almost 50 per cent of the voters were below 25. This is an unusual phenomenon. I think they rooted for Congress.
Computerised counting of votes at hundreds of centres across the country began at 0230 GMT on Saturday, with the results for all parliamentary seats due later in the day.
About 714 million people were eligible to vote in the largest such exercise in the world. The vote was staggered over a month to allow security forces and election officials to supervise it.
Source: http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2009/05/2009516111237578238.html
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