Deccan Chronicle

BJP tactic of changing CMs appears to work

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Faster than it takes the Congress Party to decide on hiring an election consultant or shifting the responsibi­lity for data mining from an outsourcin­g team to an internal team, the Bharatiya Janata party changed its chief minister in Tripura, ahead of state Assembly elections early next year. Even before anyone in either the state, or the Opposition, had a whiff of what was likely to take place, the BJP summoned Biplab Deb, the first ever chief minister of the saffron party in Tripura, and summarily replaced him with an Upper House parliament­arian, Dr Manik Saha.

With less than a year to go for the next election, it was a bold move, ending the term of Biplab Deb, who was chosen leader of the House and state, after the BJP alliance with Indigenous People’s Front of Tripura, a local party, won an unpreceden­ted victory over the five-term reign of the CPI(M)-led Left Front in the northeaste­rn state. It has now become a standard operating procedure for handling the anti-incumbency at the state-level for the BJP in states across the country. A fresh face takes off the steam of anger against the state government, given how CM-centric states are in India’s federal system.

Earlier, the BJP had brought in change in Assam but for a very different reason — its then incumbent CM, Sarbananda In its future battles

Sonowal, in tandem with his subsequent replacemen­t, against regional Himanta Biswa Sarma, brought the party parties, the BJP back to power in the biggest state in the Northeast. could score well on The attributed reasons and analysis were most

academic, and likely part of a deal stuck internally this count... The

in the party.

Congress, on the

Elsewhere, during the Assembly elections to five other hand, makes states, in Uttarakhan­d, the dominant national

a mess of the party of the decade changed chief ministers not process of taking once but twice within a term, but reading the mood

of the electorate correctly, fought what could have decisions... been a tough election, smartly, and won an unpreceden­ted second term.

Similarly, in Gujarat, too, after Narendra Modi quit office to take over as Prime Minister, the party had shuffled the people at the helm more than once, and yet, went on to retain power electorall­y.

In a different set of circumstan­ces, the BJP also changed its CM in Karnataka, where B.S. Yediyurapp­a was initially sworn in as CM, but the government fell and the Congress took charge. Later, when a change of party at the helm was conducted, it was Basavaraj Bommai who took oath as the leader. The saffron party remains exceptiona­lly agile and alert to the dynamic and phantasmag­orical situations in different parts of the country at ground level; and the alacrity of its decision making would make a corporatio­n envious. Not every decision anyone takes — individual or a collective — can always be right but there is a correct approach to taking them, and the BJP currently sets the benchmark in it.

In its future battles against regional parties, the BJP could score well on this count, with its ability to sacrifice CMs, a luxury that regional parties, with their top bosses and reigning families, can never consider. The Congress, its national rival, on the other hand, makes a mess of the process of taking decisions, making even Hamlet look clear-eyed.

As long as people respect decisivene­ss, the BJP will continue to score.

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