In the East Delhi parliamentary constituency area, which has 20 assembly segments and which together with Outer Delhi will decide the winners of this election, the price rise will again play a major role. An erstwhile Congress bastion, this area has the largest concentration of slum clusters in the capital and there is a great deal of resentment at the escalating cost of living. But all of this will only chip away at the peripheral BJP support base, which depends upon the perceived vigour and performance of the party; the core remains loyal. The Congress, on the other hand, seems content to get its nose in front by default. Congress leaders note that "despite winning only one seat in the 1998 parliamentary polls, our vote share went up to 43 per cent from 34.5 per cent in the 1993 assembly polls. We are catching up." With the Janata Dal more or less finished as a political entity in Delhi, the Congress is hoping to pick up those votes as well. Hopes are also pinned on the informal tie-up with the BSP (the party is supporting Congress candidates wherever it has not put up any of its own).