Lok Sabha Elections 2024: Not best bets, BJP's Ujjwal Nikam, Congress's Varsha Gaikwad in close race
In Mumbai North Central, a hotly contested Lok Sabha seat, BJP's Ujjwal Nikam faces off against Congress's Varsha Gaikwad. Nikam, known for his role in high-profile cases like the Mumbai terrorist attacks, was a surprise BJP candidate. Gaikwad, th...

Gaikwad, MLA from Dharavi, is the Mumbai Congress president and wanted to contest the election from Mumbai South Central, the constituency her late father Eknath Gaikwad represented in the Lok Sabha. However, Shiv Sena (UBT) chief Uddhav Thackeray was insistent that his party's candidate Anil Desai be fielded from the seat as the INDIA bloc candidate instead of Gaikwad. The Congress, therefore, fielded Gaikwad from the neighbouring seat of Mumbai North Central.
The BJP sprang a surprise by fielding lawyer Ujjwal Nikam as its candidate from the seat. Nikam was the special public prosecutor in the case related to the November 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai, where a lone Pakistani terrorist, Mohammad Ajmal Kasab, was caught, found guilty and later hanged. Prior to that Nikam handled the 1993 Mumbai serial blasts case. He has built a reputation of being a public prosecutor who gets a conviction in sensitive cases.
Like Gaikwad, Nikam was not his party's first choice for the seat. Poonam Mahajan, daughter of late BJP leader Pramod Mahajan, is a two-term MP from the seat. However, the BJP's internal report found that Mahajan, if fielded, would find it tough to hold the seat. The party then wanted to field Bandra West MLA and Mumbai BJP president Ashish Shelar from the seat, but Shelar, keen to play a bigger role in the state, was not interested. Eventually the BJP settled on Nikam as its candidate from the seat.

Besides being the lawyer who helped bring Kasab to justice, Nikam being a Marathi helped, considering the constituency has more than 572,000 Marathi voters.
Nikam's big challenge is the presence of about 440,000 Muslim voters in the constituency, especially in the backdrop of the BJP raking up Hindu-Muslim issues in the campaign, with the Muslim community gearing up to support Gaikwad. There are also close to 100,000 Christian voters and a similar number of Dalit voters in the constituency.
Gaikwad being an "outsider" does not appear to be an issue for the non-BJP supporters. "It does not matter whether the candidate is from a neighbouring constituency or this one. All that matters is whether it is a Congress candidate," said Ditta Almeida a resident of Hill Road.
There are around 200,000 Gujarati voters in the constituency whom the BJP is counting on along with the Marathi voters.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.