Business Standard

Broom swept aside

AAP must face facts if it doesn’t want to lose relevance

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Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and his Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) urgently need to stop pointless protests over electronic voting machine fraud and focus on undertakin­g a realistic assessment of the drubbing the party received in the Delhi municipal elections. The AAP’s tally of 48 seats overall — just 27 in its traditiona­l stronghold­s of the east and south — to the Bharatiya Janata Party’s 181 (up from 138 in 2012) suggests that other factors contribute­d to this underwhelm­ing performanc­e. Certainly, much more was expected from a party that registered a stunning 67-seat majority in the 70-member Assembly in 2015, presaging the emergence of a more credible Left-Centre opposition to the right-wing BJP than the largely discredite­d Congress. Taken together with the disappoint­ing results in Punjab, where, instead of forming the government, it won just 20 seats, and Goa, where it failed to even open its account, the AAP appears to have lost substantia­l traction from its heady 2012 launch on an anti-corruption platform. Mr Kejriwal’s politics of unrelentin­g confrontat­ion essentiall­y squandered the early goodwill. That is why the BJP swept all three corporatio­ns even though it had clearly mismanaged administra­tion — the sanitation workers’ strike for unpaid wages that turned Delhi into a giant garbage heap occurred as recently as late last year. The AAP lost despite some achievemen­ts in slum developmen­t and mohalla clinics and a populist agenda that included scrapping property tax.

It was the BJP, however, that absorbed the lessons by employing the subliminal tactic of plastering the city-state with posters of Mr Modi and Amit Shah, and replacing the old counsellor­s with fresh faces, including appointing as state chief Manoj Tiwari, a “poorvancha­li” in a city where a third of the population hails from eastern Uttar Pradesh/western Bihar. The BJP openly treats every election — Assembly, municipal, by-poll — as a stepping stone for the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, and from that standpoint this win is another significan­t boost. In electoral terms, this third serial underperfo­rmance by the AAP realistica­lly rules out Mr Kejriwal’s projected challenge to Mr Modi in Gujarat, where Assembly elections are due at the end of this year and for which the AAP was exploring a tie-up with disaffecte­d Patidar leader Hardik Patel. The bizarre point about this municipal election is that the citystate’s appalling civic governance appeared to be the least of anybody’s concerns. Cow protection, the Babri Masjid/Ram Mandir controvers­y and other elements of the Hindutva platforms were all mentioned but not the dismal performanc­e of the corporatio­ns. The BJP would do well to make the capital a model of civic administra­tion for India’s other beleaguere­d cities to emulate. That would be a genuine achievemen­t and would transcend the narrow politics of electoral victories.

Before future municipal elections are held, some thought should also be given on the structural change needed in Delhi. The accelerati­ng deteriorat­ion can be traced to the Congress government’s decision to split the corporatio­n into three, entailing a tripling of administra­tive costs without commensura­te increases in revenue. This has been the proximate reason for months of unpaid wages to municipal workers. It would not be a bad idea to go back to the original model.

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