"There are no ideological differences between BJP and Shiv Sena," Maharashtra BJP president Raosaheb Danve told reporters here.
"We tried our best to have an alliance with Shiv Sena. But we have differences on some technical grounds. We began (alliance) talks on the issue of transparency (in BMC administration). However, the alliance could not take place on the issue of transparency," Danve said.
"BJP is confident that tomorrow, when results are declared, it will come to power in BMC with full majority," he said.
About 56 per cent voters had yesterday exercised their franchise across 10 municipal corporations in Maharashtra, including for the all-important Mumbai civic body BMC which recorded a 55 per cent turn-out.
BJP and its bickering ally in the state government, Shiv Sena, who could not form an alliance for the civic polls in the megapolis or elsewhere this time, fought keenly, lashing out freely at each other during the bitter campaign.
Allegations and counter-allegations flew thick all through the run-up for the election, which has virtually turned into a battle of prestige for Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, heading the state's first BJP-led government, and Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray.
The stakes are high for Fadnavis and Thackeray, who led their respective parties from the front and were involved in a no-holds-barred campaign.
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