Business Standard

More than a rare Ajatshatru

- ARCHIS MOHAN New Delhi, 16 August More on www.business-standard.com

In his preface to a biography of Atal Bihari Vajpayee published in 2016, Home Minister Rajnath Singh described the leader as a rare Ajatshatru, a man without enemies, in Indian politics. Eulogies tend to ignore the inconvenie­nt. While Vajpayee was indeed one of the craftiest yet endearing politician­s of contempora­ry Indian politics, he also had his share of enemies.

Nearly all his known enemies were from the Sangh Parivar. At different junctures in Vajpayee’s political career, Balraj Madhok, Nanaji Deshmukh, and Subramania­n Swamy emerged his foremost critics or rivals. Vajpayee was a man known to be generous to a fault, but he could never forgive the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) general secretary K N Govindacha­rya, who had once described Vajpayee as an Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh mukhauta, or mask.

Vajpayee climbed quickly in the Bharatiya Jana Sangh hierarchy. First, Syama Prasad Mookerjee, and after his death in 1953, Deendayal Upadhayaya, seven years older to Vajpayee, found him to be a talented speaker. By 1952-53, Mookerjee and Upadhayaya started sending Vajpayee to deliver speeches across India, particular­ly to Maharashtr­a. Since Vajpayee had grown up in Gwalior, he was fluent in Marathi.

In 1955, Vajpayee contested his first Lok Sabha elections — a bypoll when Vijayalaks­hmi Pandit, the younger sister of Jawaharlal Nehru, quit her Lucknow seat. Vajpayee lost. He contested from three seats in the 1957 Lok Sabha polls, including from Lucknow. Vajpayee lost from Lucknow, forfeited his security deposit in Mathura, but won the Balarampur seat. It was one of the four seats that the Jana Sangh won in 1957.

But in 1962, Vajpayee couldn’t retain the Balarampur seat, losing to the Congress’s Subhadra Joshi by a mere 2,000 votes. His party sent him to the Rajya Sabha.

After Upadhayaya passed away under mysterious circumstan­ces in 1967, Vajpayee became Jana Sangh’s frontline leader. His rivalry with Madhok also came to a head. Madhok shot off letters to RSS chief M S Golwalkar to complain about Vajpayee. The letters were full of insinuatio­ns of a personal nature, as to how Vajpayee was misusing the Jana Sangh office. Madhok found himself thrown out for anti-party activities.

In the Emergency years, the RSS thought of Swamy as a potential future leader of the Jana Sangh. But Swamy couldn’t continue with the party. In 1997, Swamy wrote a series of articles about Vajpayee in a Tamil publicatio­n. He didn’t spare the BJP leader’s personal life. Swamy had his revenge when he played a key role in the downfall of the 13month-old Vajpayee government in 1999. Deshmukh, another potential rival, also quit active politics and took to social work.

But these four men were exceptions. When the National Integratio­n Council was set up in 1961, Nehru insisted that Vajpayee be included in it. Vajpayee was the external affairs minister in the Janata Party government and he famously ensured that Nehru’s portraits were not removed from South Block.

H K Dua, who was Vajpayee’s media advisor, remembers his sharp sense of repartee. On a hot summer day in 1968, Dua was on his way on a two-wheeler to the Jana Sangh office at V P House to cover a press conference. He saw Vajpayee waiting for a taxi at the corner of his residence at 1, Ferozeshah Road. Dua offered Vajpayee a lift, which Vajpayee gladly accepted and rode pillion. As they reached the party office, Jana Sangh leader J P Mathur said next day’s headline would be “Vajpayee rides Dua’s scooter”. “No. It could be ‘Dua takes Vajpayee for a ride’,” Vajpayee replied instantly.

In mid-1990s, Dalit leader Sanjay Paswan joined the BJP and organised a public rally where he invited Vajpayee. Addressing the rally, Paswan frequently raised the slogan ‘Jai Sri Ram’. According to him, an upset Vajpayee told him that the BJP had enough leaders to raise the cry of ‘Jai Sri Ram’. “You are here to take our message to the Dalit community. Please continue raising your slogan of ‘Jai Bhim’,” Paswan reminisces.

After the 9/11 attack, there was immense pressure from the US on the government to put Indian boots on the ground in Afghanista­n. Some in the Vajpayee Cabinet were also in favour and the prime minister himself couldn’t be seen to be opposing the US. The Left parties were the most vociferous in opposing the move. A Parliament session was on the anvil. Vajpayee engineered to have a meeting with the Left leaders. The Left had wanted to raise issues related to the Vajpayee government’s economic policies, and it surprised Harkishan Singh Surjeet,

A B Bardhan and others that the PM had so readily agreed to a meeting.

The issue of sending troops to Afghanista­n also came up during the meeting. To the further surprise of Left leaders, Vajpayee said he couldn’t possibly start dictating what Opposition parties should do on the issue, and asked how could he dissuade the Left parties if they were to organise protests outside Parliament? That was enough of a hint for the veteran Left leaders. Protests were organised and Vajpayee pointed at these to convince members of his Cabinet, as well as the Americans, how it would be a political hot potato for him to send Indian troops to Afghanista­n.

In the 1990s, Vajpayee once attacked the then finance minister Manmohan Singh’s performanc­e in Parliament. Singh was so upset that he offered to quit. P V Narasimha Rao, who was the PM, didn’t want to let go of his finance minister and phoned his old friend — Vajpayee — for help. The BJP leader understood that Singh wasn’t a career politician and didn’t possess a thick skin. Vajpayee phoned Singh and convinced him not to quit.

Unlike other BJP politician­s and RSS workers, Vajpayee never made any secret of his peculiar domestic arrangemen­t, his love for alcohol and meat. “Kunwara hoon, brahmachar­i nahin hoon,” Vajpayee once said famously. As senior BJP leader

L K Advani has written in his autobiogra­phy,

My Country My Life, the two of them were also fond of watching movies. Advani says after one severe defeat, the two of them headed to New Delhi’s Regal Cinema to watch Raj Kapoor’s Phir Subah Hogi.

Vajpayee won from Lucknow in successive elections from 1991 to 2004. It was at Lucknow’s Kalicharan College that Vajpayee first recited one of his favourite poems: “Hindu tan man, Hindu jeevan, rag rag Hindu mera parichay.”

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