The PK analogy in AP Politics

It's the inquisitive instance of the 'PK' factor which appears to have had its effect on the result of the Lok Sabha and Assembly polls in Andhra Pradesh.
In front of the general election and after the finish of polling on April 11, there were exchanges in all circles over the effect of three 'PKs' on the result in Andhra Pradesh.
In the last investigation, only one PK factor worked and the resultant achievement was an avalanche.
The decision Telugu Desam Party depended on PK, the Pasupu-Kumkuma conspire under which a dole of Rs 10,000 was disseminated from government coffers to every part (totaling around 95 lakh ladies) of self-improvement groups.
For the fundamental resistance YSR Congress, it was the political strategist PK Prashant Kishor.
The third PK was a film hero and Jana Sena Party president Pawan Kalyan who hopped into the constituent fight out of the blue.
The TDP, truth be told, put money on two PKs, Pasupu-Kumkuma just as Pawan Kalyan, trusting the fiscal dole would siphon in the ladies votes as once huge mob while the other PK would part the counter incumbency vote and advantage the decision party.
Kalyan couldn't make a big deal about an effect and his very own party confronted a washout.
Clearly, Pasupu-Kumkuma too did not help the TDP as it escaped in the 'fan' (YSRCs election image) wave.
Prashant Kishor and his India Political Action Committee group did ponder for the YSRC by carefully helping it assemble the association directly from the polling stall level.
As indicated by sources, the YSRC floundered in 2014 just because of the absence of such an authoritative structure.
The political counseling firm, which worked with Narendra Modi in 2014 and Nitish Kumar later, was instrumental in setting the methodology for the YSRC and making the account by sorting out 35 crusades, 17 on the ground and 18 online since May 2017.
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