Deccan Chronicle

The Mahatma Brand: From Nehru to Prashant Kishor

- Sanjayovac­ha India’s Power Elite: Caste, Class and a Cultural Revolution.

Kishor not only chose a Gandhian quote as his motto — ‘the best politics is right action’ — but also chose a Gandhian location, Champaran in Bihar, to launch his padayatra preceding the launch of a political party

Ma h a t m a Gandhi remains the most enduring global political icon of the past century. From Vladimir Lenin to Che Guevara, from Ho Chi Minh to Nelson Mandela, many national leaders have acquired global prominence and a following to match. Each of them remains a true and genuine “Vishwa Guru”, continuing to inspire millions of idealistic and patriotic people around the world. However, while the global appeal of some may have waxed and waned, the power of Mahatma Gandhi’s brand endures and continues to acquire traction around the world.

Gandhiji’s appeal to his fellow Indians is such that even political parties critical of him, like the Communist parties and the BJP, have had to come to terms with his iconic status. It is, therefore, not surprising that the latest entrant to the Indian political stage, Prashant Kishor, has also sought to launch himself and his new political project in the name of the Mahatma on his birth anniversar­y later this year.

Prashant Kishor not only chose a Gandhian quote as his motto — “the best politics is right action” — but also chose a Gandhian location, Champaran in Bihar, to launch his padayatra preceding the launch of a political party, making the announceme­nt with Gandhiji’s visual presence.

The Indian National Congress was the first political party, inspired by the Mahatma, to successful­ly launch itself as a party of government. It’s first major challenger, the Janata Party of 1977, was led by a Gandhian, Jayaprakas­h Narayan, and also launched itself in the presence of the Mahatma’s visible symbols. On being elected to Parliament in March 1977, members belonging to the Janata Party gathered around Gandhiji’s samadhi at Rajghat in New Delhi and swore to adhere by his ideals.

Over time, however, Gandhiji has come to be remembered only on his birth and death anniversar­ies, or when the Opposition political parties decide to stage a demonstrat­ion outside Parliament House in the shadow of the Mahatma’s inspiring statue.

It would be interestin­g to see if Prashant Kishor adopted the Mahatma as his political icon and inspiratio­n because the data that he gathered shows a countrywid­e urge to return to the roots of the national movement that united a divided India? Is an India that is once again being divided along communal, caste, linguistic and regional lines yearning for a leader that will bring them all together?

Aware of the power of brand in politics, has Mr Kishor encountere­d a hunger for secular patriotism among a growing number of young people across the country?

Gandhiji ignited patriotism by uniting Indians cutting across their many divides. He also projected India’s unique personalit­y on the world stage. At a time when India is internally divided and its external image is dented, a new Gandhian narrative could restore domestic peace and harmony and enhance external prestige. Gandhiji’s message of non-violence and social equality are as relevant to India today as they were in his time.

Most political parties have increasing­ly come to draw inspiratio­n from sectional or provincial leaders representi­ng narrow political platforms. The Congress Party, now morphed into the Sonia Congress, promotes itself as the inheritor of a political dynasty from Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi, Rajiv and Sonia to Rahul Gandhi. The Left parties continue to seek ideologica­l inspiratio­n from Marx and Lenin, but at the party political level count on the legacy of an EMS, a Sundarayya, an Achutanand­an and a Jyoti Basu.

The BJP, especially in recent years, has tried hard to overcome the historic legacy of its deep ideologica­l difference­s with Gandhiji but has so far been unable to ignore the widespread national and internatio­nal affection and respect for the Mahatma. One problem for the BJP has been its inability to elevate any of the pre-Independen­ce leaders of the Sangh Parivar to Gandhiji’s status. They have instead had to borrow Sardar Vallabhbha­i Patel from the Congress.

While the Congress has over time subtly replaced Gandhiji with Nehru and Indira as its principal icons, Narendra Modi and Amit Shah’s BJP is not yet comfortabl­e elevating Atal Behari Vajpayee to that kind of iconic status. Even though there is still a wellspring of affection for him within the Sangh Parivar, Hindutva hardliners resent the softer, liberal face of Hinduism that Vajpayee came to represent. On the other hand, Narendra Modi loyalists are working hard to elevate the Prime Minister to iconic status, most recently demonstrat­ed by the manner in which a book marking his two decades in political office has been launched.

For the sectional and regional political parties, their founders are their icons. Thus, a Chaudhary Charan Singh remains the icon for those who remain loyal to his legacy just as Kanshi Ram and Mayawati inspire their supporters. Regional political leaders have appealed more to sectional loyalties rather than a larger ideology, though some have been more nationally inspiring than others.

Annadurai was the inheritor and preserver of a Dravidian identity while Charan Singh represente­d farmers’ interests. N.T. Rama Rao focused on Telugu pride but also ended up mobilising the wider national sentiment against the authoritar­ianism of a dominant political force. When the party he created reduced itself into just another regional outfit, it lost the elan that NTR imparted to it.

It remains to be seen what ideology or platform Prashant Kishor will come to represent, given his eclectic record as a political consultant. Arvind Kejriwal initially built his brand around good governance and the fight against corruption, but has settled down to being just another politician.

However, just as Mr Kejriwal has earned his credential­s with victories in Delhi and Punjab, Mr Kishor will have to first prove his mettle in his home state of Bihar before he can be taken seriously elsewhere.

Mr Kishor would know that politics is not just about numbers but also about tapping identifiab­le and quantifiab­le loyalties. Both are important in the age of informatio­n warfare and symbolic campaignin­g. Has Mr Kishor discovered through his political data mining a new reverence for the apostle of non-violence in a country increasing­ly riven by violence in the pursuit of sectional interests and naked power? How he translates Gandhian idealism into a political and economic policy platform remains to be seen.

The writer is an economist, a former newspaper

editor and was media adviser to former Prime

Minister Manmohan Singh. His most recent

book is

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