Business Standard

Working behind the scenes

General secretarie­s( organisati­on ), invisible hands of the BJP, are busy strategisi­ng for elections in Madhya Pradesh, Raj as than, Chhattisga­rh and Telangana

- RADHIKA RAMASESHAN

General secretarie­s of the Bharatiya Janata Party are busy strategisi­ng for elections in key states. RADHIKA RAMASESHAN writes

Adegree of opacity always clouded the appointmen­t to what the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) indubitabl­y considered the most important post in the hierarchy after that of the national president. It’s the designatio­n of general secretary (organisati­on) or GSO, national and state. In state units of the BJP, the GSO is often more powerful than the provincial president because he/she has direct access to the national president and even the prime minister.

The incumbents remain shadowy and rarely speak with the media.

Among other reasons, a GSO is important because he/she is the BJP’s artery to the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) and transmits all that the Sangh wants and needs to know about its political progeny. Given the GSO’s distinctiv­e position, it’s hard to tell if the RSS has the carte blanche in choosing him/her or merely proffers suggestion­s to the BJP. Article XVII 5 (a) of the BJP’s constituti­on stipulated two conditions: The

GSO, national or state, will be appointed by the national president and in a state, he/she can be chosen from outside the state’s apex executive committee. Article XX 5 is more specific; it says “only a whole-time worker” shall be appointed, he/she cannot contest an election as long as the person holds the post, and, even after forfeiting, he/she must wait for two years before jumping into electoral politics. The exceptions were Narendra Modi, who was national GSO before relocating to Gandhinaga­r as chief minister, and Manohar Lal Khattar, the Haryana chief minister who was the state’s GSO until the 2015 assembly elections.

Modi’s and Khattar’s success stories are held up as parables of the rewards that toil can bring because that’s what a GSO does: Work in unsparing conditions. And, that’s why “only a whole-time worker”— a euphemism for an unmarried RSS

pracharak— was eventually ordained for the post after the Bharatiya Jana Sangh experiment­ed with family men and concluded that a “grihasta (householde­r)” was not cut out for it.

A senior BJP office-bearer said, “Keeping away from contesting elections enables them to rise above factional politics and vests the post with a moral authority that few in the organisati­on exude. We who are in politics get entangled in group rivalries and dilute our moral position. GSOs are the BJP’s bone and muscle and we are its skin. Their job is to burnish the skin.” To a Telangana leader, the GSOs represente­d an “old school of organisati­on-building that entailed building organisati­onal blocks, strengthen­ing the party at the grassroots and creating durable networks of human contacts.” The GSOs are not supposed to own anything. They live in party offices, eat meals at workers’ homes, travel extensivel­y to “spread our ideology”, identify talent, and, in BJP President Amit Shah’s regime, straighten the creases in booth management. “The GSOs are not political patrons who meet people waiting in queues, seeking and expecting instant favours,” said the BJP’s national secretary,

Come election and for the leaders, the invisible GSO is the primary source of informatio­n and assessment about ticket aspirants

Sunil Deodhar.

Come election and for the leaders, the invisible GSO is the primary source of informatio­n and assessment about ticket aspirants.

Chandrashe­khar (40) was cherrypick­ed by Shah a year-and-a-half ago as GSO for Rajasthan, a state which appears challengin­g for the BJP in the upcoming Assembly election.

A resident of Banda in Uttar Pradesh, Chandrashe­khar was an RSS

pracharak who was “loaned” to the BJP in 2013. His first assignment took him to Modi’s Varanasi war room. His specific brief was to reach out to Varanasi’s students and youths. Impressed with his execution, Shah later entrusted Chandrashe­khar with the charge of western UP in the 2017 Assembly polls and he delivered a winner. “Without throwing his weight, he forces people to hear him out,” said a former Varanasi colleague.

However, sceptics in Jaipur believe Rajasthan is another ball game. The persona of the chief minister, Vasundhara Raje, loomed large even over the party apparatuse­s. She seldom got on with an “unwanted guest”, the exception being Saudan Singh, who is a national joint GSO. That was because Singh had served her mother, Vijaya Raje Scindia, in the past. But Chandrashe­khar is buffered by Shah and is “slogging as no other GSO had”, said a Rajasthan BJP functionar­y.

In Madhya Pradesh, the Suhas Bhagat-Atul Rai duo replaced Arvind Menon in 2016. Although all three are RSS “pracharaks” and bound by the commandmen­t of “keeping a distance from the BJP”, Menon was “transferre­d” from Bhopal for “seeming too close” to Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan. Bhagat, who is from Bhopal, was a pracharak in MP’s Madhya

Bharat region, while Rai, whose parents were migrants to Gwalior from UP’s Mau, was a bal swayamseva­k like Modi, having been associated with the RSS since childhood. One of them admitted to still being an “alien” in the BJP and “overwhelme­d” by media attention and the tête-à-têtes with the chief minister.

Chhattisga­rh has Pawan Sai, a protégé of Saudan Singh, as its GSO. Member of a backward community, Sai belongs to the Jashpur region of Chhattisga­rh. His family has a long associatio­n with the RSS.

Telangana’s nuts and bolts are being put together by Mantri Sreenivasu­lu, a former RSS pracharak who had also worked for the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad.

In the end, the GSOs can do this much and no more in an election that’s always conditione­d by the atmospheri­cs a party whips up.

 ?? Photos: BJP, TWITTER ?? Pawan Sai (Chhattisga­rh)
Photos: BJP, TWITTER Pawan Sai (Chhattisga­rh)
 ??  ?? Chandrashe­khar (Rajasthan)
Chandrashe­khar (Rajasthan)
 ??  ?? Mantri Sreenivasu­lu (Telangana)
Mantri Sreenivasu­lu (Telangana)
 ??  ?? Atul Rai (Madhya Pradesh)
Atul Rai (Madhya Pradesh)
 ??  ?? Suhas Bhagat (Madhya Pradesh)
Suhas Bhagat (Madhya Pradesh)

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