Business Standard

Dharna as a political creed

With both the B JP and Congress state units keen to rid Delhi of its “third force”, Kejriwalh as decided to take re course to his tried and tested strategy of politics of agitation

- ARCHIS MOHAN

AAP is now a party restricted to Delhi. To Kejriwal’s advantage, neither the BJP nor the Congress have leaders in Delhi who can match either his connect with the people or his credibilit­y to launch street protests

Murky isn’t just Delhi’s current weather, but also its political landscape. If the city state’s residents are gasping for breath under a thick haze of dust, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal has lately indulged in rare political contortion­s to prevent his Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) from being suffocated between the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Congress in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.

Since Monday, Kejriwal and three of his ministers have been sitting on a dharna in the waiting room of Lieutenant Governor Anil Baijal’s office at Delhi’s Raj Bhavan. The immediate provocatio­n is the refusal of Indian Administra­tive Service officers to attend meetings convened by AAP ministers for the past three months.

At stake in ten months are seven Lok Sabha seats of Delhi, and connected to that outcome is whether AAP survives in Indian politics beyond the expiry of the current term of the Delhi Assembly in February 2020.

After the high of its emphatic win in the Delhi Assembly polls in February 2015, AAP’s failures in the Punjab and Goa Assembly polls have punctured its ambitions of providing an effective third alternativ­e to the BJP and Congress in states with entrenched bi-polar politics.

AAP is now a party restricted to Delhi. To Kejriwal’s advantage, neither the BJP nor the Congress have leaders in Delhi who can match either his connect with the people or his credibilit­y to launch street protests.

The AAP’s governance model in

Delhi has also come for praise, particular­ly its work in improving government schools and providing affordable health facilities in government hospitals.

But several of AAP’s initiative­s have been blocked by the office of the Lieutenant Governor. The running feud with Delhi’s bureaucrac­y, after Delhi Chief Secretary Anshu Prakash accused the AAP leadership of manhandlin­g him, hasn’t helped. AAP leadership alleges the senior bureaucrac­y has turned non-cooperativ­e at the behest of the Centre.

With Lok Sabha elections round the corner, the AAP government is desperate either to be seen to be delivering on governance, or convince people how the Modi government has continuous­ly, via Baijal’s office, put up obstacles to the implementa­tion of pro-people policies.

In this tug of war with the Modi government, Kejriwal has sought, and received, support from opposition parties. AAP has also been keen to explore an alliance with the Congress in Delhi. It believes AAP and Congress should contest four and three seats, respective­ly, in Delhi to ensure the pooling of anti-BJP votes.

But the Delhi unit of the Congress is against such an alliance. The problems of the Congress government in Puducherry, which is also a Union Territory with a Legislativ­e Assembly, have been somewhat similar in dealing with Lieutenant Governor Kiran Bedi. But many in the central leadership of the Congress blame the Kejriwal-led “India against corruption” movement for the downfall of the United Progressiv­e Alliance government, and those wounds are still fresh.

Last month, Janata Dal (Secular) leader H D Kumaraswam­y invited Kejriwal to his oath-taking ceremony in Bengaluru. While Kejriwal sat on the dais along with opposition leaders, he wasn’t part of the photo-op where the leaders lined up to display opposition solidarity. The Congress leadership had expressly conveyed to the JD(S) that its leaders , Sonia and Rahul Gandhi, would not like to be photograph­ed in the same frame as Kejriwal.

On Wednesday, Rahul invited opposition leaders to an iftar party. Congress leaders pointedly told journalist­s that nearly all opposition parties and their leaders were invited, but for Kejriwal and AAP.

With both the BJP and Congress state units keen to rid Delhi of its “third force”, Kejriwal has decided to take recourse to his tried and tested strategy of politics of agitation. He has been sitting on a

dharna since Monday to demand the LG approve his government’s initiative to have home delivery of rations.

“Every right-thinking person is asking the same question — why is the Centre instigatin­g the strike by the IAS? How can the Centre not allow doorstep delivery of rations? These are simple and noncontrov­ersial demands of the people of Delhi,” he tweeted from the waiting room of the LG’s official residence on Thursday.

Yet again, Kejriwal has shown his penchant for picking up an issue that will resonate with Delhi’s poorest. Doorstep delivery would not only help plug leakages but also save the poor the hassle of queuing up at ration shops. On Thursday, Kejriwal also wrote to the PM seeking his interventi­on to break the impasse with IAS officers.

In his letter to Modi, Kejriwal said important civic works, including cleaning the drains before monsoon, setting up mohalla clinics and measures to curb pollution in Delhi were stuck because of the alleged strike by the IAS officers.

“Pollution is the biggest problem in Delhi. Earlier, there was a review and planning meeting every 15 days on the issue, but due to the strike (by the IAS officers), there has been no such meeting in the last three months,” Kejriwal said.

Kejriwal has said they will not leave Baijal’s office until their demands are met. The AAP has threatened to stage a dharna at the Prime Minister’s Office on Sunday if a solution to the issue was not found this week.

Delhi is set to witness interestin­g times, probably a repeat of the events of the 49-day Kejriwal government in 2013. With a little more than a year to go for the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, the target of Kejriwal’s ire then was the Congress-led UPA government. With less than 10-months to go for the 2019 Lok Sabha polls, this time it would be the Modi government. But with the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh cadre firmly behind the Modi government, Kejriwal this time would need all the support he can get from other opposition parties, particular­ly the Congress, to make AAP count.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY AJAY MOHANTY

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