Business Standard

A farmer leader plans to plough through BJP

RAJU SHETTI

- SUNIL GATADE

Raju Shetti, the Lok Sabha MP from Hatkanangl­e in Maharashtr­a, has many firsts to his credit. His first election to the Assembly from Shirol in 2004 was fought through the campaign of “one note, one vote” by supporters in the sugar belt of Kolhapur, Sangli and Satara in western Maharashtr­a.

It was possibly the first instance of a farmer leader making an entry into state politics by raising donations — from ~1 to ~100 — showing his links with the grassroots.

Ten years later, his aligning with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the Lok Sabha polls in 2014 helped the saffron party make inroads into the bastion of Nationalis­t Congress Party (NCP) supremo Sharad Pawar, thanks to a grand alliance stitched by the late Gopinath Munde, former deputy chief minister and Union minister.

Munde’s confidence was not misplaced as Shetti had caused an upset for the NCP in the 2009 Lok

Sabha polls by defeating its sitting member Nivedita Mane in the Hathkangal­e constituen­cy, thereby making a major breach in the Pawar bastion.

A detractor of Pawar, Munde saw in leaders like Shetti and Mahadev Jankar the key to challenge the Maratha strongman in the prosperous sugar belt. Jankar is a minister in the Maharashtr­a government and had narrowly lost the Lok Sabha poll from Pawar’s pocket borough of Baramati in 2014.

Last year, the Swabhimani Shetkari Sanghtana, led by Shetti, became the first National Democratic Alliance (NDA) constituen­t to part ways, citing agrarian distress and the government’s lacklustre approach towards farmer issues.

Earlier, despite being part of the NDA, he was in the forefront of the protest in the Lok Sabha after police firing on agitating farmers in Mandsaur district of BJPruled Madhya Pradesh in June 2017.

He, along with some other constituen­ts of the NDA, including the Shiv Sena and the Akali Dal, in 2015 objected to the controvers­ial land acquisitio­n Bill that finally did not see the light of day.

The parting of the ways with the NDA was painful for Shetti as after the sudden death of Munde, he had no one to look to for resolving his grievances.

Shetti had lamented that there was no one in the BJP who understood problems of the farmers and those taking decisions were not approachab­le. His complaint appeared genuine when Nana Patole resigned from the BJP and the Lok Sabha membership soon after targeting the Centre and the Devendra Fadnavis government in Maharashtr­a for “neglect” of the cause of farmers.

The rise of the 50-yearold farmer leader in the sugar belt was itself because of his rebellion against the Shetkari Sanghtana leader, the late Sharad Joshi, after he became a Rajya Sabha member with the BJP’s support in 2004. Shetti formed the Swabhimani Shetkari Sanghtana.

Joshi, however, remained his “father figure”, whom he had often consulted.

The BJP did not take kindly to Shetti’s departure from the NDA and attempted to drive a wedge in his organisati­on by propping up his associate Sadabhau Khot, who is Minister of State for Agricultur­e in Maharashtr­a. Khot was expelled from the organisati­on, and he has declared he’d challenge Shetti in the next Lok Sabha polls.

According to Shetti, Prime Minister Narendra Modi is leading an “antifarmer regime” and a national agitation is needed to oust his regime. It would not be a surprise if he joins hands with the Congress and becomes part of the UPA. He had recently met Congress President Rahul Gandhi in New Delhi.

Having fought many battles for cane growers in the state, Shetti now appears to be eyeing a larger role at the national level. But it is not an easy road.

It will not be a surprise if he joins hands with the Congress and becomes part of the UPA. He recently met Congress President Rahul Gandhi in Delhi

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