Business Standard

Finding a winning formula

BJP ponders earlier legacies and what to do now in Karnataka to oust the incumbent Congress govt

- RADHIKA RAMASESHAN writes

BJP ponders earlier legacies and what to do now in Karnataka to oust the incumbent Congress government.

Six months before Karnataka was to vote, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was searching for a catalyst to recharge the cadre, unify squabbling state leaders, birth a slogan and shape a comprehens­ive outlook. It’s been wallowing in a welter of ideas that has resurrecte­d the debate on populism versus pragmatism, as it has to pander to two important but incompatib­le constituen­cies. These being the freebie-consuming masses and Bengaluru’s heavy hitters, craving for even roads, pristine lakes and unbroken power supply.

It was thought that the BJP had to discard the baggage-bearing BS Y eddy ur a pp a, now its chief ministeria­l candidate. A central BJP functionar­y protested the suggestion on Yeddyurapp­a, saying, “He was opposition leader for five years. The (ruling) Congress had enough time to prove the socalled charges but (only) when elections are round the corner, it raises them. We are on a safe wicket on corruption.”

However, Suresh Kumar, a former senior minister, agrees the land and mining scams associated with the BJP’s previous regime “clouded” its achievemen­ts in governance, notably the Sakala Services Act, 2011, that em powered citizens to demand time-bound government services. Therefore, it was time to brush away the cobwebs, give the party a fresh lick of paint and present to the voters the idea of a‘ New K ar nat aka ’, a simulacrum of the Prime Minister Na rend ra Mo di’ s‘ New India’ concept.

Kumar helmed a 17-member committee, asked to produce a ‘vision document’. It would detail the BJP’s position on 25 sectors, including industry, the informal economy, agricultur­e and education. Kumar was concerned over the perception that his state could be dubbed a laggard, compared to its robust neighbours, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.

“Karnataka must motivate itself. The IT (informatio­n technology) sector’s still diffident about staying as number one, compared with aggressive Hyderabad,” he said. He formed sub-groups to meet people in the districts and know what they expect of a ‘New Karnataka’. “It will cohere with Modi’s vision because that alone will instil confidence,” said Kumar, conceding the PM was central to the blueprint.

To underline the BJP’s seriousnes­s about governance as distinct from politickin­g, the panel got in retired state bureaucrat­s, M Madan Gopal and C Somashekha­r. Gopal, like Haryana’s Ashok Khemka, was frequently transferre­d during both the BJP and Congress regimes. He outlined his views on the legislatur­e-executive equation. “Karnataka’s losing credibilit­y because of the trust deficit between ministers and officers. The CM has not spoken to officers for two years. Frequent interactio­ns are called for. There should be a fixed tenure for civil servants. An integrity pact between the government and civil society organisati­ons is a must, so that responsibl­e citizens have a legitimate right to question without confrontat­ion. Lastly, bring in Modi’s governance strategies, make bureaucrat­s accountabl­e, audit their work, make the administra­tion transparen­t and integrate technology with governance,” said Gopal. Somashekha­r and he impressed on the BJP to get “practical” about populism, not promise the moon.

If Gopal suggested coalescing of technology with governance, K Amaresh was preoccupie­d with “democratis­ing” of IT. The idea being that IT come out of the “10 per cent niche” inhabited by the big daddies and spread itself “more equitably”. On September 10, at a function hosted by Bengaluru’s techies to felicitate Ananth Kumar, the new Union skill developmen­t minister from the state, Amaresh, who heads the state BJP’s IT cell, asked for imparting of IT training to skill developmen­t learners, instead of honing only their existing skills. “The government doesn’t have to teach plumbers, electricia­ns and artisans hereditary skills but teach them to market these through software-enabled programmes. We must impart high-end skills. MPs want young people to handle their Facebook, Twitter, videos and how to use Google. The focus should be on brandbuild­ing activities,” said Amaresh. He added the BJP should unveil its position on finding new uses for IT, instead of moping over job cuts in the establishe­d companies.

While expressing concern over the Congress government’s “overall apathy” towards industry that resulted in the flight of Hero MotoCorp and Asian Paints to, respective­ly, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, Trivikram Joshi, co-convener of the state party’s trade and industry cell, spoke of how not one of the 170-plus applicatio­ns to create new small and medium industries (SMEs) had been cleared in five years. “SMEs are the big job creators. Land for procuremen­t was identified in the dry belt. People were ready to give uncultivab­le land, for which they would have got four times more than the official price plus one job for a family member. The government wouldn’t budge,” said Joshi.

Shivkumar Udasi, the BJP’s member, Lok Sabha, from Haveri, pushed hard to get a Tata Metaliks plant in his constituen­cy and got in-principle sanction from Yeddyurapp­a when CM. Tata Metaliks left because the next Congress government refused to sanction a mining lease. “The government uses the (Congress-led) UPA’s investor-unfriendly Land Acquisitio­n Act that makes acquisitio­n tough,” rued Udasi.

If voted to power, the BJP says it is bent on implementi­ng an industrial policy its government had formulated in 2006 and speeding up land acquisitio­n in arid areas.

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 ??  ?? BJP President Amit Shah with Union Minister Ananth Kumar and Karnataka unit President B S Yeduyurapp­a during the launch of party’s 75-day ‘Nava Karnataka Nirmana Parivartan Yatra’ in Bengaluru
BJP President Amit Shah with Union Minister Ananth Kumar and Karnataka unit President B S Yeduyurapp­a during the launch of party’s 75-day ‘Nava Karnataka Nirmana Parivartan Yatra’ in Bengaluru

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