In rural Saurashtra, Cong hopes to exploit ‘left-out’ feeling

RAJKOT, Dec 1:

The Congress is chiefly banking on the issue of water woes and “incomplete” irrigation projects to make fresh inroads in rural Saurashtra, sensing a feeling of being “left out” among the populace.
The opposition party had won 13 out of the 48 Assembly seats in Saurashtra region of Gujarat against the BJP’s 32 in 2012 Assembly polls.
To offset the BJP’s development plank, the opposition party has this time borrowed a Gujarati slogan coined by a social media user — ‘Vikas Gando Thayo Chhe’ (Development has gone crazy)’ — which soon caught on.
The Congress is focusing on the issue of water shortage in rural areas. Urban areas get enough water, but there is a feeling of “being left out” in the rural areas of Saurashtra, claimed Gujarat Congress secretary Mahesh Rajput.
“Social media trolling of BJP’s high-decibel campaign was the first sign that the ruling party was going on the back foot. We decided to jump in and started raising basic issues such as water woes, infrastructure and the need to improve incomes in rural areas,” Rajput said.
Besides, the party also hopes to leverage the Patidar agitation for quota, farmer distress and the impact of demonetisation in the hinterland of Saurashtra.
“When Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Rajkot in August for the celebration of (operationalisation of) Saurashtra Narmada Avataran Irrigation Project (SAUNI), it was an eye-wash. The project is not complete, but Modi and the BJP projected as if the entire project has been completed within five years,” Rajput claimed.
“The work of building canals and pipelines to carry the water to rural areas, which is more crucial, is still incomplete,” he claimed.
According to local Congress leaders, announcement of SAUNI project ahead of the 2012 Assembly elections gave a boost to the BJP back then.
“SAUNI project was a huge promise for entire Saurashtra. People believed his (Modi’s) words and voted for him. Hence the BJP recorded its best-ever performance from Saurashtra. Another factor (in 2012) was Modi’s ambition to become prime minister….It became a sentimental issue,” said a Congress leader. (PTI)

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