Deccan Chronicle

Will it be enough to defeat BJP in Gujarat?

- Aakar Patel

The ruling party in Gujarat for 22 years, the BJP, says it is about developmen­t. This is apparently a copyrighte­d word and developmen­t is something only the BJP can deliver, particular­ly under Mr Narendra Modi. What the BJP does is developmen­t and what other parties do is corruption, dynasty and so on. This formulatio­n is childish in its simplicity but the remarkable thing is that the BJP has been allowed to get away with it by its opponents.

Even if we assume that what the BJP wants to talk about is developmen­t, meaning the discussing data and policies that push economic and social growth, the party gets distracted often. It wants to know what religion Rahul Gandhi is. Mr Modi lies and says the Congress celebrated Hafiz Saeed’s bail. What does that have to do with developmen­t? Nothing, of course.

If the BJP claims to stand for developmen­t, the Congress is not clear about the issue in the election. Or at least it does not offer a single point like the BJP claims to offer developmen­t. The Congress’ crown prince Rahul Gandhi wants to discuss corruption in the Rafale deal (for which he has got no support from the media) one day, and the next day he wants to talk about GST and demonetisa­tion. This lack of focus has meant that the messaging against the BJP has been scattered.

The second thing, after issues, is organisati­on. Here the BJP is a formidable force. It is one of the most powerful political parties in the democratic world. It has a large grassroots presence that is managed by the RSS. These are dedicated and trained individual­s, and in recent years they have also been highly motivated because of the charismati­c leadership of Mr Modi, whom the RSS grassroots adore. In any tight race, and one is not sure whether Gujarat is a tight race at the moment, the BJP’s organisati­onal assets will win the day for them.

On the other side, and since this is a two-party state we can only look at the Congress, it must be accepted that this level of competence is missing. The old Congress worker from the Seva Dal or the Youth Congress is absent. The structure has disintegra­ted and it is left to the individual Congress candidates to provide the manpower that will do the work. This costs money and many Congress leaders no longer invest as much money in elections because the party has been consistent­ly losing.

Both on the side of issues and organisati­on, my view is that the BJP is ahead, either because of its strength or the Congress’ weakness, or both.

The third thing is the campaign strategy. The BJP has used its most powerful card, the Prime Minister, and has deployed him in dozens of rallies. Readers may have observed that though for many years he would only use Hindi even in Gujarati, these days he has started speaking in Gujarati. To me this indicates that he feels he needs to drive home the message and that may mean a closer race than the opinion polls show. Mr Modi is of course an outstandin­g public speaker and he is able to set the agenda in a way that Mr Rahul Gandhi cannot. When Mr Modi makes a big speech, he usually frames an old issue in a new way so well that the headlines must report it. An example: I sold tea, but did not sell the nation. Such clear, simple framing is a terrific asset to have in a leader.

The Congress has, however, managed to do one thing with competence: It has brought in the three large dissenting groups that had mobilised in the last few months. It would not have been easy to do this, given that the three groups have contradict­ing demands. And it would not have been natural for these groups to align with Congress given that all three mobilisati­ons are apolitical and spontaneou­s, but the Congress has managed to pull it off. My guess is that this is the doing mainly of Mr Patel. The BJP is worried by this developmen­t, and we can observe that in the many statements from its leaders, particular­ly the chief minister, which are aimed at breaking the alliance.

The question is: will it be enough to defeat the BJP? My view is that this election will be determined above all by turnout. Gujarat is a high turnout state and the BJP must ensure that its base comes out and votes. This may not be easy because it is fighting a defensive campaign. The Congress can be confident that, even though its base is smaller, their voters will turn out because they are angry. In that sense the real issues in Gujarat, jobs and meaningful economic developmen­t, are against the BJP, even if it pretends to be fighting on them. The writer is a columnist and executive director of Amnesty Internatio­nal (India)

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