Business Standard

BJP, Congress pad up for Karnataka

CM Siddaramai­ah has the powers to strategise and micro-manage; AmitShah has not given free hand to Y eddy ur a pp a

- RADHIKA RAMASESHAN

CM Siddaramai­ah has powers to strategise and micromanag­e; Amit Shah has not given free hand to Yeddyurapp­a. RADHIKA RAMASESHAN writes

Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) President Amit Shah has created a network of office bearers from Delhi and other states to invigorate the party's Karnataka unit before the Election Commission announces the Assembly polls.

Central ministers Prakash Javadekar and Piyush Goyal are election ‘in-charge’ and ‘co-incharge’, respective­ly, for the party's Karnataka unit. P Muralidhar Rao is the party's general secretary in-charge of the state. Rajeev Pratap Rudy and Smriti Irani are interactin­g with the people to gauge and sway their mood ahead of the Karnataka polls, which, according to the party, would be a “close” fight.

The presence of Delhi’s big leaguers was a barefaced message to the BJP’s chief ministeria­l candidate, B S Yeddyurapp­a.

There were reports the cadre was “unhappy” with the “peremptory” working style of Yeddyurapp­a and his political associate and MP Shobha Karandlaje. Shah had obliquely warned Yeddyurapp­a that his autonomous functionin­g would not be brooked when he recently passed over two of the Karnataka leader's nominees, former MP Vijay Sankeshwar and former legislativ­e council member N Shankarapp­a, for the only Rajya Sabha seat in the BJP’s quota and picked industrial­ist Rajeev Chandrasek­har.

In January, when Yeddyurapp­a named 20 supporters as worthy of tickets, Shah stopped him in his tracks.

The BJP’s opponents are saying sotto voce that the leadership could do a Prem Kumar Dhumal on Yeddyurapp­a by anointing another CM if the party won the election. Dhumal was the chief ministeria­l face in Himachal Pradesh but when he lost despite a pro-BJP wave, Jai Ram Thakur, a younger man, was wheeled out.

In contrast, the Congress has ostensibly given Chief Minister Siddaramai­ah carte blanche to strategise and micro-manage. A party source, however, said, “The ultimate test will come when the candidates will be selected.”

Rajya Sabha MP MV Rajeev Gowda, who heads the Congress’s Research Department, indicated the party would project the Assembly election as aYeddyu rap paSiddaram­aiah combat and not aN ar end ra Modiversus-Rahul Gandhi battle like it did in Gujarat.

“Siddaramai­ah has delivered. More than 90 per cent of the Congress’s manifesto promises stands redeemed. There has been no major scandal or crippling dissidence. Innovation­s in governance range from agricultur­e to nutrition to industry and start-ups,” claimed Gowda.

A BJP source said Yeddyurapp­a’s “controvers­ial” first stint as the CM, his “loosening” grip over the 17 per cent Lingayat votes, and his age (75) were “drawbacks” that “can only be overcome by intensive campaignin­g by Modi” and “groundwork by the foot soldiers of the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh”.

Siddaramai­ah’s latest gambit to grant the Lingayats and Veerashaiv­as minority status (with difference­s in the statutory rights that the Muslims, Christians, Jains and Buddhists have) initially foxed the BJP. It became apprehensi­ve, thinking that the Congress will make a play and perhaps poach on the community’s votes, a chunk of which went to the BJP thanks to Yeddyurapp­a. Rather than grandstand for being the “first” to raise the demand in 2013 that the then UPA government at the Centre rejected, Muralidhar Rao said: “We need not say yes or no to it. We will say it is an election gimmick.”

A Congress central functionar­y from Karnataka said that the stratagem would “counter the notion that we are historical­ly anti-Lingayat because (S) Nijalingap­pa was thrown out of the Congress (after the epic 1969 split), and it will dilute the BJP’s tactic to consolidat­e the Hindus”.

Rather than tangling itself in intra-caste politics, Rao stressed the BJP should grab the other issues that the CM “gifted on a platter”. These, he said, were the “worsening” law and order, exemplifie­d in the assault on a person at a posh Bengaluru pub by M N Haris, the son of Congress legislator NA Haris, the “bad” infrastruc­ture, agrarian distress which he contended was best articulate­d by Yeddyurapp­a, a farmer, and petty and large corruption. “The image of ‘goonda raj’ has stuck on Siddaramai­ah,” alleged Rao.

However, the litmus test for the Congress and the BJP will come in the villages where Siddaramai­ah’s “Anna Bhagya” food security scheme has “worked” even by the BJP’s reckoning.

If the BJP is fighting as a single entity — instead of the three outfits it had fragmented into in 2013, when Yeddyurapp­a and B Sriramulu, a Bellary strongman who revolted and fought solo — the Congress has stability on its side. Siddaramai­ah is only the CM after D Devraj Urs to last a full term in Karnataka without dissidents snapping at his heels. At stake for both is the 2019 Lok Sabha election, for which Karnataka might set the tempo.

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 ?? PHOTOS: PTI ?? (Above) Congress President Rahul Gandhi with CM Siddaramai­ah; (right) BJP chief Amit Shah campaigns for B S Yeddyurapp­a
PHOTOS: PTI (Above) Congress President Rahul Gandhi with CM Siddaramai­ah; (right) BJP chief Amit Shah campaigns for B S Yeddyurapp­a
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