Axis My India Chairman and Managing Director Pradeep Gupta speaks during an interview with PTI, in New Delhi, Wednesday, May 20, 2026.  
Politics

Year before polls, satisfaction level with governance 'good' in UP, 'mixed' in Punjab, says pollster Pradeep Gupta

New Delhi | With less than a year to go for the assembly elections in Uttar Pradesh, the ruling BJP appears to be in a comfortable position, with people largely satisfied with the performance of the Yogi Adityanath government, according to Axis My India chief Pradeep Gupta.

At the same time, Gupta said the political mood in Punjab was far more fluid, with public satisfaction towards the ruling AAP remaining "mixed" amid the emergence of a fragmented four-cornered contest in the state.

In an interview to PTI on Wednesday, Gupta shared observations from his agency's fieldwork in the two politically crucial states, both of which are scheduled to vote in early 2027 and whose outcomes are expected to have wider national implications.

"If we consider the feedback in totality from Uttar Pradesh, then one can say that the satisfaction percentage is good. Keeping that in mind, as things stand today, one does not see much trouble (for the BJP) in Uttar Pradesh," Gupta said.

He, however, cautioned against reading the political situation in the state as settled. "But Uttar Pradesh is a different kind of state where the situation changes very quickly," he added.

Gupta said Axis My India's ground teams begin working in poll-bound states at least a year in advance, allowing the agency to capture shifts in public sentiment well before elections are announced.

On Punjab, Gupta said the electoral dynamics were more complex due to the presence of four distinct political formations instead of the three-cornered contest seen in 2017 and 2022.

"In Punjab, the situation is mixed. Some sections of society are satisfied, but now four parties are visible in the contest. Earlier, there were effectively three formations - the AAP, the Congress, and the NDA, with the Akali Dal and BJP contesting together," he said.

Gupta argued that in a fragmented electoral contest, even modest vote shares could translate into victory if the opposition vote splinters.

"When four parties are in the fray, like Uttar Pradesh used to witness earlier, even 26 per cent vote share can bring a full majority. The Samajwadi Party once formed a majority government with around 26 per cent votes, and Mayawati did so with around 29 per cent," he said.

"So even if one-third, or around 33 per cent, people are satisfied, and votes get divided, the party with 25 per cent can also win. Elections are ultimately decided by how votes are distributed," Gupta said, describing Punjab as a "very interesting" political contest at the moment.

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