Deccan Chronicle

BJP stooped to conquer, Congress must not follow it

- Sunanda K. Datta-Ray Reflection­s

Singapore’s veteran leader Lee Kuan Yew surprised Indians and possibly displeased his host, Morarji Desai, by calling on the defeated Indira Gandhi when he visited India in 1978. While she had gone to Rashtrapat­i Bhavan to see British PM James Callaghan, Lee took the trouble of visiting her Willingdon Crescent bungalow. Indians had written Indira off. Singaporea­ns were surprised at his graciousne­ss to someone in the political wilderness. Lee had a practical explanatio­n for the gesture — a turn of the electoral wheel would return her to power, not necessaril­y because of any inherent virtue she possessed or because of any weakness in Desai’s Janata Party government but because of what is nowadays called the antiincumb­ency factor. “In your system the electorate would soon get dissatisfi­ed and would bring her back,” he told me. “Must do! You can never get what you really want. No government can deliver. So after a while, it says, okay change again.”

The results in Gujarat and, to some extent, in Himachal Pradesh have intensifie­d that sense of electoral uncertaint­y, reminding us that Rahul Gandhi’s debut as Congress president wasn’t such a damp squib after all. Whether or not he won his spurs by gaining more than a dozen seats, he can’t be written off any longer as the perpetual crown prince who never reigns as king. If the Congress lost some constituen­cies in Himachal, so did the BJP in Gujarat. Both sides will keep up the tempo of chanting, gyrating and shoving laddus into each other’s open mouths (and some that weren’t open since cut-outs of Mr Modi were also fed), but appearance­s can be deceptive. The results fell short of expectatio­ns for both parties. There are bound to be glum faces in Akbar Road, but the wringing of hands and gnashing of teeth are likely to be far more spectacula­r behind the BJP’s victory-is-victory bravado at its Ashoka Road headquarte­rs.

Normally, one would venture to suggest a ruling party that controls almost the entire country can afford to lose one state. But the win-some-losesome or live-and-let-live spirit is alien to the BJP’s winnertake­s-all thinking. Treated as a prestige issue, Gujarat was accorded an importance unimaginab­le for any other state. Of course, it’s the home state of a larger-than-life Prime Minister who can teach Donald Trump a thing or two in presidenti­al flamboyanc­e. The BJP has ruled Gujarat for 22 years. It’s been called the laboratory of the future, meaning the Hindu rashtra of the dreams Hindu zealots (and occasional non-Hindu soldier of fortune) visualise for the future. The BJP leadership could hardly have invested more in the campaign. Someone counted 34 rallies that Narendra Modi addressed. Amit Shah campaigned for over two months. The entire machinery of governance seemed to be in suspense while more than 4.35 crore Gujarati voters, half of them aged between 18 and 39, were coaxed and cajoled, bribed and bullied, to vote in favour of the designated candidate. It would be interestin­g in this context to ascertain exactly how much money the two parties actually spent on electionee­ring. There was grumbling that despite some 3,000 complaints, chief election commission­er Achal Kumar Jyoti was neither seen nor heard to the extent needed to sustain confidence in the process. Presumably, allegation­s relating to hacking and rigging will be fully and impartiall­y investigat­ed to set at rest misgivings that the government has co-opted the CEC.

Any proper post-mortem examinatio­n must await the full disclosure of voting figures. Ahmedabad has expanded exponentia­lly in the last decade or so. Saurashtra, where the Congress did exceptiona­lly well, remains mainly agricultur­al. Demonetisa­tion and GST will have impacted differentl­y in these and other regions.

The Congress was accused of concentrat­ing too much on caste and community but not, it must be stressed, of fanning communalis­m. Another criticism is that Mr Gandhi visited temples instead of highlighti­ng the economy’s importance. He started late, possibly neglected micromanag­ement, and didn’t identify a publicly trusted local Congressma­n of stature who could have taken over as chief minister in the event of a Congress victory. If the party’s young hopefuls — Sachin Pilot, Jyotiradit­ya Scindia, Milind Deora and others of proven ability and integrity — took part in the campaign, the media didn’t adequately highlight their activities. Instead, we had the vision of a tireless Mr Gandhi canvassing morning, night and noon. That speaks volumes for his capacity for hard work and his ability to connect with and inspire people but it also seems to confirm the image of a one-man party, and that one man the heir to the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty.

That is something Mr Modi, with his stinging jibes about the Delhi sultanate and shehzadas and his nasty habit of referring to Ahmed Patel as “Ahmed Mian”, will exploit for all he’s worth. Dragging Pakistan into the campaign was dangerous. Dragging Manmohan Singh into it was despicable. It was mischievou­s deliberate­ly to misreprese­nt Mani Shankar Aiyar’s remark. Gujarat will be followed by Karnataka, Mizoram, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Tripura, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisga­rh and Rajasthan before the country goes to the polls again in 2019. A resuscitat­ed Congress under Mr Gandhi will now be fighting to win. It’s to be hoped for the country’s sake that he will do so without stooping to pander to the sectarian instincts of primeval man. Victory on those terms might win an election but can lose the war for India. The writer is a senior journalist, columnist and author

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