Modi targetting regional parties

R K Misra
Hope is a good breakfast but a bad dinner.And Congress realized this  much to it’s chagrin when an impatient India sent it packing and now waits  expectantly while saffron replacement Narendra Modi lays the table afresh.
For the moment he seems intent on clearing the gargantuan kitchen.Maharashtra and  Hary- ana have just been swept clean of the Congress and NCP in the State Assembly  elections held this month and are set to be replaced with a spanking new saffron  set-up headed by Modi”s trusted men.Elections to Jammu and Kashmir and Jharkhand have already been declared. Next  year, 2015, is the turn of Bihar followed by Tamil  Nadu,  Puducherry, Kerala and Assam in 2016 and Uttar Pradesh,Manipur and Punjab in  2017.Congress is now reduced to ruling in only   9 of the 29 states in the  country, five of them-Assam,    Manipur, Aruna- chal Pradesh, Mizoram and Meghalaya-in the  north-east, a junior partner in Jharkhand, besides Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and  Kerala.
The Indian political ‘plate’ has been seeing considerable seismic activity.From  decades of Congress party domination the scene shifted to intermittent but  ineffective opposition led broad spectrum Governments headed by Morarji  Desai, Charan Singh (1977-1980). Soon Mrs Indira Gandhi was back in 1980 but  yielded to son Rajiv Gandhi following her assassination in 1984.Rajiv in turn  gave way to the Janata dal government of V.P.Singh and Chandrasekhar of Samajwadi  Janata Party(1989-91) with the Congress returning in 1991 under P.V. Narasimha Rao  following Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination .
The BJP led by Atal Bihari Vajpayee came to power in 1996 but could not put  together the numbers and was followed by H.D.Deve Gowda ,I.K.Gujral (1996-1998)  before Vajpayee returned in 1998 heading a BJP led NDA coalition.It was ousted in  the next general election in 2004 and the Congress returned leading another  coalition led UPA Government,holding power for two terms before giving way to a  Narendra Modi led BJP Government in 2014.
The last term of Man Mohan Singh’s UPA Government led to popular revulsion as  regional parties ran riot holding the Government to virtual ransom and corruption  scaling Himalayan highs. Desperate to hold on to power at any cost, The Congress  just buckled under, running a rag-tag Government. So overtaken was the leadership by  greed that it forgot to even take a page out of Indira Gandhi’s book. Whenever  cornered, She would opt for elections, going to the people with a new slogan (‘garibi  hatao’) and invariably come back with a majority.
It has taken over a quarter century for the pendulum to swing from Congress rule  through unstable opposition led Governments, then coalitions to a BJP majority rule  in 2014.The proccess has been painful, but mercifully, the end of the tunnel  seems to be visible now.
Through subtle strategic maneouvres, pushy politics, and brazen brand building, Modi  cut through the clutter in his own party as well as the Congress to catch common  imagination. And the rest,as they say, is history. The Maharashtra and Haryana election results have brought out that the downward  spiral of the Congress still continues. It is yet to pull out of the demoralized  disarray that it finds itself in.Rahul Gandhi had done well to go back to the  drawing board to refashion the party from scratch more in keeping with the  aspirations of a young,educated and dynamic India but seems to have given up mid- way in the face of reverses and criticism. He could start anew by studying his  grandmother’s political moves more closely. Atleast ,his arch political rival,Modi  has done so.He had mercilessly decimated All opposition within his own party in  Gujarat to emerge as the unchallenged leader.He repeated the feat without remorse  at the national level to become the spearhead of the party in the 2014 general  elections and sail through.
Even in the present post-poll scenario in Maharashtra,it was Modi who decisively  turned the tables on the NCP. Sharad Pawar’s party was gamely exploring the  possibility of a tie-up with the Shiv Sena.A call to a top industrialist was all  that it took from the highest quarters in Delhi warning of the bulging skeletons  languishing in Central cupboards.Whether fact or a mere coincidence,within hours  the NCP announced unconditional support to the BJP Government in  Maharashtra, reducing the Shiv Sena from a roaring tiger to a meek mouse.
With the Congress still spreadagled Modi and his man-Friday, Amit Shah have a  headstart of sorts. It has been years but the Congress has not found time to  appoint a new president of the Gujarat unit after Arjun Modvadia put in his  papers owning responsibility for the Gujarat Assembly polls debacle in 2012.On the  other hand, Amit Shah already has a new assignment from Modi-to begin work on  Bihar,West Bengal and Jharkhand for the polls.
While riling against the Congress, Modi is actually targeting regional parties. His  strategy involves ensuring that the Congress loss does not become the regional  party’s gain. Thus it is that the INLD in Haryana and the Shiv Sena and the NCP  were both targeted by the BJP in  Maharashtra. Next in his crosshairs is Nitish  Kumar’s             JD-U in Bihar, the JMM-Congress combine in Jharkhand, Mulayam Singh’s
Samajwadi party in UP and Mamta Bannerjee’s Trinamool Congress in West Bengal. With  popular perception inclined to buy Modi’s argument that proliferating regional  parties are not good for national interest, and same party Governments in the  centre and the state ensure better results, the fortunes of most of them seem set  to plummet in the elections to come.Similarly his move of pulling out all stops  in aiding the floodhit people of Jammu and Kashmir and agreeing to spend Diwali  in Srinagar and Saichen are all designed to reap fulsome results. As things  stand, more states will fall into the BJP kitty in the days and years to come.Dont be  surprised if you see a BJP Government in Bihar, Jharkhand and a very strong  presence even in West Bengal and Jammu!

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here