Business Standard

The saffron spread

- VIKRAM JOHRI vjohri19@gmail.com

With the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) handsomely registerin­g its presence in the Northeast in the recently concluded Assembly elections, the party’s onward march continues unabated. Every time the party finds itself in the dock — most recently, for example, with the outsize PNB scam — it receives good news electorall­y. Its setbacks at the hustings since 2014 have been either minor or reversed with new partnershi­ps, like in Bihar.

This was also the week when the scale of the scam involving Karti Chidambara­m, the son of former finance minister P Chidambara­m, began to be realised, with the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion and Enforcemen­t Directorat­e moving fast to build their case. Juxtaposed against the victory in the Northeast, the anti-corruption plank of the BJP will be significan­tly strengthen­ed by this latest salvo, notwithsta­nding Karti’s valiant attempts to showcase he is in the right, expressed rather incongruou­sly in the victory sign that he flashes every time he is shifted between courts.

The two events underscore the growing reach of the BJP not just electorall­y but also as a shaper of public opinion. No issue brings this facet to light with greater clarity than the government’s attempts to tackle black money and corruption. In the build-up to 2014, the anti-corruption agenda largely belonged to the Anna Hazare movement and directly benefitted Arvind Kejriwal politicall­y. But since the change in government at the centre, that is no longer the case.

To be sure, one wonders if the Karti saga was timed to deflect criticism hurled at the government over Nirav Modi, but that is ultimately a question of optics. If there was a case against Karti, and it now looks like there is, the government’s choosing an opportune time to showcase it becomes secondary. Indeed, Karti may be the beginning of a larger can of worms that the government has waited thus far to pop open.

Speaking about the non-performing assets mess in public sector banks in Parliament earlier this year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi signalled that his government would leave no stone unturned in bringing to book those — he meant members of the Opposition — who had looted the country. The Prime Minister is a fierce orator at the most ordinary of times, but his attack was uncharacte­ristically direct for Parliament and it left one with the feeling that the government had studiously built up an arsenal that it planned on detonating in the final leg of its tenure.

This would be a continuati­on of the government’s anti-black money campaign that shifted focus from repatriati­ng ill-gotten wealth from abroad early in its term. Since demonetisa­tion, the government has marketed its intentions as cleaning the system back home, with that exercise providing the agencies with the evidence to go after shell companies and recalcitra­nt accountant­s.

And the public is arguably with the government on this. Not only was it willing to undergo the physical demands of demonetisa­tion but the arrests of individual­s — and when those cannot happen, the seizures of assets — showcase a system that is finally acting against the high and mighty in a country where farmers kill themselves for their inability to repay loans that are a pittance when compared to the magnitude of the scams unearthed.

The build-up in vote share in the Northeast is a simultaneo­us plank of the government’s re-election bid next year. While not significan­t in terms of the numbers it sends to the Lok Sabha, the region has been the focus of this government as its new stomping ground. Under Himanta Biswas Sarma’s stewardshi­p, the BJP has shown remarkable agility in gaining a foothold there, both deploying the services of sister organisati­ons, long active in the Northeast, and adapting its message when required.

To be sure, 2019 is not yet in the bag. Karnataka is the next biggie this year, followed by elections in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh (MP) and Chhattisga­rh. In the southern state, pollsters have been unable to signal which way the wind is blowing since both the Congress Chief Minister, Siddaramai­ah, and the BJP challenger, B S Yeddyurapp­a are mass leaders with significan­t followings.

Meanwhile, murmurs about Vasundhara Raje’s re-electabili­ty can be heard in Jaipur but none of these state-level decisions are likely to affect the central government. For one, Modi’s standing as a national leader, buoyed by outcomes such as the Northeast, remains largely undiminish­ed. Bypoll losses such as the recent ones in MP mean little when the larger picture is one of rising influence.

Two, the party has put in place a mechanism that lets the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh take the call at the state level, as evidenced by the chief ministersh­ip of Manohar Lal and Yogi Adityanath. This allows the centre to benefit from the BJP’s growing footprint while not getting sucked into intractabl­e conflicts between state leaders, a problem that has been the bane of, say, the Congress in MP.

For now, the BJP remains the side to beat in 2019.

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