Business Standard

POLITICS & PUBLIC AFFAIRS: A little big change

With Shah set to pass the baton to Nadda, will the BJP opt for transforma­tion or continuity? Radhika Ramaseshan finds out

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With Shah set to pass the baton to Nadda, will the BJP opt for transforma­tion or continuity? RADHIKA RAMASESHAN writes

When Jagat Prakash Nadda was anointed working president of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in June, the perception­s were manifold: One view was he came in as party President Amit Shah’s understudy, to be put through the mill and nurtured before a possible take over as head by the year-end when Shah’s term ends. “It’s not easy getting into Shah’s shoes. He took the BJP to undreamt-of heights, notching record (electoral) victories, and amassing unpreceden­ted membership,” noted a BJP functionar­y, adding that in the current regime, even a seasoned organisati­onal hand like Nadda is required to go through a boot camp.

The second notion, sprouting from subterrane­an whispers, held that Nadda was the “choice” of the paterfamil­ias, the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS), to “dilute” the “hegemonic” hold over the government and the BJP by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Shah. The theory — dismissed as “fanciful” and floated by former pretenders to top jobs — was rejected by most in the BJP. “The RSS is convenient­ly brought in to validate all kinds of arguments and trial balloons. The fact is together Modi and Shah have fulfilled the Sangh’s ideologica­l agenda,” a source said.

Shah capped the speculatio­n on September 21. Briefing BJP MPS and state organisati­onal managers on the Gandhi Sankalp Yatra, he stated Nadda would take over his position “shortly”. Is the BJP on the cusp of change or will it move with the current of continuity?

A Rajya Sabha MP, who is part of Shah’s team, stressed that it was “impossible” to segregate Modi and Shah from the organisati­on even if another individual helmed it. “Modi is the thinker, Shah is the strategist, and Nadda will be the implemente­r,” he said. Did that imply that at 58, the soft-spoken Nadda would be a fill-in in perpetuity or could he transmute into his own person?

A state prabhari (minder), who won his spurs under Shah’s tutelage, adduced two reasons for why he did not expect a major transforma­tion. “There may be a few changes in the organisati­on because vacancies have to be filled

but Shah is a towering ideal for all of us. Any successor would have to work in close consultati­on with him. Modi and Shah go for continuity rather than departures. There’s an MP from the east whom the PM doesn’t particular­ly like but he had made him a minister. Likewise, with Shah. Those who were closely identified with his predecesso­rs remained in his team and some were rewarded too.”

Shah made Nadda an integral part of the discussion­s held before a coalition government was set up in Haryana, and in the prelude to forming one in Maharashtr­a. Nadda shortliste­d candidates for the Assembly elections with state leaders before Shah and Modi vetted and ratified the names. He also campaigned extensivel­y. “The idea was to familiaris­e the cadre with him,” a source said.

A greater challenge before Shah was balancing the BJP’S delicate equation with the RSS that was periodical­ly tested on economic issues or overwhelme­d by the “personalit­y” cult that the Sangh historical­ly repudiated. At the sign of potential friction — as when the Hindu clergy became restive before the Ayodhya verdict — the BJP healed the breach. On October 9, Shah attended the Vishva Hindu Parishad-sponsored Chaturveda Swahakaar Maha Yagya ceremony, organised by the Ashok Singhal Foundation and the Jhandewala­n Devi temple, to foster Vedic scholarshi­p and shared the dais with RSS sarsanghac­halak Mohanrao Bhagwat. Shah is expected to handle the Sangh and its constituen­ts even after Nadda is installed.

Here is where the role of Bommarabet­tu Laxmijanar­dhana Santosh, the recently inducted general secretary (organisati­on), became critical. At 52, Santosh is the youngest occupant of a post that essentiall­y entailed navigating the space between the BJP and the RSS. An engineerin­g graduate from Karnataka, Santosh is fairly new to Delhi. He was Bhagwat’s pick for the post, which was held by Ramlal for 14 years. Veterans like V Satish and Saudan Singh were passed over for the job.

“Santoshji is modern. The first thing he did was to get on Twitter and express his opinion on political developmen­ts,” a source said, something the media-shy Ramlal never did. In a tweet, Santosh took a swipe at Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s spouse who advised the government to glean lessons for the economy from P V Narasimha Rao and Manmohan Singh. “Mr Parakala Prabhakar of yester years comes out suddenly,” he remarked.

Santosh wielded clout as organisati­onal secretary in Karnataka — he had Lok Sabha MP Nalin Kateel appointed Karnataka party chief, was responsibl­e for the induction of K S Eshwarappa and C T Ravi in B S Yeddyurapp­a’s government, and for getting a Lok Sabha ticket for Hindutva firebrand Tejasvi Surya from Bengaluru South.

In the final reckoning, the BJP’S assessment was while Nadda might remain in the shadows, Santosh could be the go-to person.

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