In Assam, the Congress was hopeful of a miraculous victory on the basis of the feedback it received from the electoral battleground after the three-phase poll concluded. The party’s campaign in Assam was distinctly different from any of its earlier campaigns in the state – or indeed, anywhere else in the country. The Congress ensured that its many factional leaders in the state put up a united fight right from the beginning and that even the candidate selection process, done hitherto behind the closed doors of the party headquarters at 24, Akbar Road in Delhi, was carried out in Guwahati after detailed discussions with local leaders. The party also chose to run a positive campaign with a clear vision for Assam – it spoke of five guarantees that included non-implementation of CAA, pension for homemakers, increased daily wage for tea tribes – instead of its usual jarring anti-Modi/anti-BJP rhetoric. Both Rahul and Priyanka campaigned extensively in the state. However, the grand alliance that the party had cobbled together in the state with parties like Badruddin Ajmal’s AIUDF, the Bodoland People Front and other Left Parties in the hope of uniting the anti-BJP vote seems to have also proved to be the party’s undoing, according to the exit polls. While the party is expected to sweep the Muslim-dominated regions of the state riding on its anti-CAA stand and alliance with Ajmal’s AIUDF, it is also predicted to fall prey to communal polarisation in Upper and central Assam. Similarly, despite its efforts to woo the women voters of the state, exit polls predict that the BJP continues to enjoy support of this formidable vote bank in Assam.