Business Standard

The go-to men

With the 2019 polls on the horizon, Modi and Shah bank on a handful of leaders having skills and proven credential­s. Who are these men and how are they important in the changing political landscape?

- RADHIKA RAMASESHAN

With the 2019 polls on the horizon, Narendra Modi and Amit Shah bank on a handful of leaders having skills and proven credential­s. RADHIKA RAMASESHAN writes

Political management is an artful enterprise for a party in power and more for one that administer­s through a coalition. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) discovered the ordeals of handling incongruen­t allies in the early years of the first National Democratic Alliance (NDA) dispensati­on, led by Atal Bihari Vajpayee and his second-in-command, L K Advani.

Notwithsta­nding their long experience, Vajpayee and Advani were ingénues in a thicket peopled by divas (J Jayalalith­aa) and icons (Balasaheb Thackeray). When Jayalalith­aa, who proffered her support to Vajpayee after much persuasion, demanded that Samata Party leader George Fernandes should be dumped as the defence minister, Vajpayee sent his foster sonin-law Ranjan Bhattachar­ya to appease her. The late All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) chief was nettled by Vajpayee’s insoucianc­e because he dispatched a family member to engage with her on a serious political issue.

Later, when Vajpayee had an issue with the then Shiv Sena supremo Thackeray, he turned to Fernandes to troublesho­ot, which he ably did. Fernandes turned out to be Vajpayee’s dependable negotiator and peacemaker.

The Biju Janata Dal (BJD) president and Odisha chief minister, Naveen Patnaik, was peeved after Advani sent a favourite, a Rajya Sabha MP, to renegotiat­e the terms of engagement when the BJD’s alliance with the BJP crumbled over attacks on Christians. Patnaik, by then a hard-core politico, was amused at Advani’s choice of a flamboyant­ly attired politician, with whom he talked cinema and not communalis­m. Expectedly, the alliance ended.

The current NDA ship is navigated by two hard-nosed politician­s, Narendra Modi and Amit Shah, who are unyielding under pressure and flexible under compulsion. Prime Minister Modi and BJP President Shah carry out their political mission and agenda through motley emissaries bound together by their instinct for realpoliti­k, commitment to the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) and the BJP, and an ability to work within the system. With two exceptions — Banwarilal Purohit and Himanta Biswa Sarma.

Purohit, Tamil Nadu governor, is not from the Sangh. He was a Congressma­n from Nagpur who served only one Lok Sabha term as a BJP member but was elected twice each as an MLA and an MP from the Congress ticket. The Maharashtr­a Congress inducted him as a minister. The BJP, then a two-year toddler, watched Purohit closely and was impressed with his “honesty and diligence”, a Maharashtr­a party veteran recalled.

However, a third qualifier endeared Purohit more to Modi and that was his sense of realpoliti­k. In September 2017, when he was shifted from Dispur to Chennai, Tamil Nadu was gripped by political chaos, which flummoxed the BJP. Purohit signalled that he would not close off. He meets district officials daily to understand how the Centre’s schemes work in a state rendered dysfunctio­nal by fluid politics.

In November 2017, when Modi unexpected­ly called on the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) patriarch, M Karunanidh­i, at the latter’s Chennai home, the political chatter was Purohit had cleared the decks. “Naturally, we couldn’t arrange a call on an opposition leader through the AIADMK government. We had to go through the governor,” a state BJP leader said.

The speculatio­n over a prospectiv­e realignmen­t of forces — after Modi’s harmonious equation with Jayalalith­aa ended with her death — was fuelled when in March Purohit invited the DMK Working President M K Stalin ostensibly to explain why he had appointed T S Shastri as vice-chancellor of the Tamil Nadu Dr Ambedkar Law University. The unpreceden­ted move raised eyebrows because, under previous governors, Tamil Nadu political parties had the carte blanche to recommend vice-chancellor­s. Purohit stated he was “cleansing the system”.

Purohit is regarded as Modi’s eyes and ears in Tamil Nadu. The latest evidence of the governor’s pro-activism came in February. He told entreprene­urs in a Chennai business conclave that they could access him directly with their problems because “I have a good relationsh­ip with the chief minister... and work will be done immediatel­y”.

Among the other go-to persons in the ModiShah reign are Nitin Gadkari, Piyush Goyal, Bhupender Yadav and Himanta Biswa Sarma.

“Each of them is a setu (bridge) that links the government with the party but their territorie­s are different,” explained a BJP functionar­y. They have distinct functionin­g styles but a common brief handed out by the Modi-Shah duo is to meet as many people as they possibly can, hear out their entreaties and resolve those that were feasible.

“Piyush multi-tasks while he walks, many phones in hand. He will attend to his ministry’s demands, switch off, listen intently to an ‘aam aadmi’, absorb his words and direct an aide to do the needful. Gadkari’s the relaxed one who will joke, seriously work and deliver. Yadav never turns anyone away. Sarma is precise, sometimes abrupt but result-oriented,” a source said. In the Modi-Shah regime, results alone count.

 ??  ?? BJP chief Amit Shah with Himanta Biswa Sarma ( right) and Tripura CM Biplab Kumar Deb ( 2nd from left) at a rally
BJP chief Amit Shah with Himanta Biswa Sarma ( right) and Tripura CM Biplab Kumar Deb ( 2nd from left) at a rally

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