Deccan Chronicle

Picking Bommai for CM, BJP bows to BSY wishes

-

The resignatio­n of Karnataka chief minister B.S. Yediyurapp­a, which was on the cards for some time, came on Monday, the second anniversar­y of his government after the Lingayat leader turned a minority into a majority for the BJP in 2019 through “Operation Kamal” — the name given to the manoeuvre of getting Opposition MLAs to resign and contest by-elections on the BJP ticket. Thus was brought down the Congress-JD(S) government that came to power after the 2018 Assembly election.

The defection manoeuvre amply shows that the BJP is not able to form government in the state on its own even if Mr Yediyurapp­a has taken the saffron party to rural areas in the past 15 years and ensured the allegiance of the Lingayat community, the largest caste bloc.

This is why the BJP cannot afford to treat the outgoing CM lightly, and accommodat­ed his wishes in the selection of his successor, who is Basavaraj Bommai, his trusted aide. It is noteworthy that Mr Yediyurapp­a is not a Modi protégé. He made his mark as a farmer leader and not as a Hindutva protagonis­t though his associatio­n with the RSS makes clear his moorings.

The BJP has to keep these circumstan­ces in mind though it has had to ease out the Lingayat leader on account of his age. The party has to weigh the prospect of going into the next state polls under the leadership of an 80-year-old, and then bet on him remaining in good shape. In addition to age-related matters, there were also strong allegation­s from within the BJP of the outgoing CM’s nepotism and corruption, which was taking a toll of the saffron party’s reputation in the only state in south India were it has managed to form a government. In 2012, too, Mr Yediyurapp­a had been obliged to put in his papers on corruption-related charges.

The perception of lack of probity had clung to the tallest BJP leader in Karnataka, and this has raised ambitions of other Lingayat and nonLingaya­t leaders in the party to aspire to the CM’s position. A weak point is the block of 16 defector MLAs who had been lured with the prospect of being made ministers or compensate­d suitably otherwise. With Mr Yediyurapp­a, their patron, gone, they are likely to be fearful of the changing scenario. The BJP’s difficulti­es can increase if the Congress can overcome its factional cracks and form bridges with JD(S).

The BJP’s top priority will be to win the next Assembly election in 2023, and select Mr Yediyurapp­a’s successor accordingl­y, which they did while keeping the outgoing CM in good humour. This was not a small ask. In north India, typically, the BJP is seldom faced with a challenge of this nature on account of the wider spread of the RSS that goes back decades. Also, Mr Yediyurapp­a is a mass leader unlike most BJP leaders in other states. Although the taint of corruption sticks to him, so does his mass following. The central BJP leadership — in effect, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union home minister Amit Shah — needed to be very mindful of this as they decided on Karnataka’s next CM, from Yediyurapp­a’s stable as it were.

The party has to weigh the prospect of going into the

next state polls under the leadership

of an 80-year-old, and then bet on him remaining in good

shape

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India