Business Standard

No poll pomp and show: On the ground in Mangaluru

- ADITI PHADNIS Mangaluru, 3 May

Walking around in Mangaluru, you would not know a cut-throat election campaign is on in the state. There are no cutouts, walls are not painted with graffiti or plastered with posters and there are absolutely no speeding vehicles blaring cacophonou­s music and messages on loudspeake­rs.

The politics is in the subtext. At the BournBon Bakery (among other things, they serve a Bournvita mousse) youngsters looked at each other when asked about politics, shrugged, and a wit among them commented: ‘ask around. You won’t get Chateaubri­and in these parts’. In a city of gourmets and gourmands, the reference was clear. The divide between Hindus and nonHindus runs deep.

One of the most cosmopolit­an cities in Karnataka, Mangaluru also has as many as 40,000 RSS shakhas, and a wide network of like-minded affiliates, including the VHP, Bajrang Dal, Hindu Jagaran Vedike and the Shri Rama Sene. At the heart of their campaigns are themes of ‘love jihad’, cow slaughter and “protection of Hindu culture”. The “danger” of Hindu girls “falling prey to boys of other communitie­s” is the dominant worry, says a store owner.

In large swathes of the city, Christians (mostly Catholic) and Muslims have a significan­t presence. In terms of voting preference­s, the result has been that the victory of the Congress in 2013 (for the first time since 1989) was a record of sorts. This area has been a BJP bastion since 1994. In the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, however, BJP was able to cool the assembly election fever and Mangaluru was won by the party defeating the Congress.

Kishore Rai, the BJP’s Dakshina

Kannada general secretary says: “In

2013, there was an anti-government wave which was why we lost 7 out of 8 seats in the district. But this time, we are looking to win all 8 seats. Sangh Parivar is very strong here. Since last year, vistaraks have been sent to every booth. The 19-point programme of Amit Shah by involving booth pramukhs and panna pramukhs is being followed. We have been preparing for this election for the last one year.”

Coastal Karnataka contribute­s just 19 seats to the Karnataka Assembly out of 224. Yet, the region has contribute­d two chief ministers – Veerappa Moily and Sadananda Gowda. The contest in this region is not between BJP chief minister designate BS Yeddyurapp­a and Congress Chief Minister Siddaramai­ah — it is between Narendra Modi and Siddaramai­ah.

“This area has always been ahead of the curve: it benefited from education through Christian missionari­es. It took the ball and ran. The people have always been entreprene­urial and there is an element of competitio­n: ‘if he can do it why can’t I’. Business comes to people easily — otherwise why would a small region in the state — Mangaluru and Udupi — have given India five banks (Syndicate Bank (1925), Bank of Karnataka (1924), Canara Bank (1906), Vijaya Bank (1931) and Corporatio­n Bank (1906)?’ says Dr MS Moodithaya, Pro Vice Chancellor of the Nitte University. KV Kamath is among the most famous and celebrated local boys.

Moodithaya says the contest in this area is not a contest of parties — it is a contest of leadership. He says somewhat crypticall­y that the region is poised for change. Locals say Siddaramai­ah is populist. He listens to the voice of the poor and gives them what they are asking for – and such leaders are needed too. But Modi is aspiration­al. And there is much hanging on Modi’s visit to Coastal Karnataka on 5 May.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? BJP Chief ministeria­l candidate B S Yeddyurapp­a campaigns for BJP candidate C T Ravi for Karnataka Assembly elections at Chikmagalu­r district in Karnataka on Thursday
PHOTO: PTI BJP Chief ministeria­l candidate B S Yeddyurapp­a campaigns for BJP candidate C T Ravi for Karnataka Assembly elections at Chikmagalu­r district in Karnataka on Thursday

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