Deccan Chronicle

Disenchant­ed voters bad news in ‘wave-less’ polls

- Shikha Mukerjee Shikha Mukerjee is a senior journalist in Kolkata

The forecast for the 2024 Lok Sabha election, till it was actually called, was it would be a triumph for the Narendra Modi-led Bharatiya Janata Party. In his last speech at the concluding session of the 17th Lok Sabha, the Prime Minister predicted that his side would win 370 seats and with the allies the total would top 400 seats out of the total 543 seats.

Obviously, the machinery of the BJP and the resources available to the Modi government anticipate­d a wave of support that would top the 2019 one. It became apparent by the first phase on April 19 that there was no wave. After the second phase of the mega seven-phase election and votes cast in 190 constituen­cies, the drop in turnout clearly indicates voter disenchant­ment. That is bad news for the ruling party, according to convention­al wisdom. It is also bad news for the collective Opposition that is contesting against the BJP, in alliances and seat adjustment­s in some states, separately in others.

When voters don’t feel inclined to take the trouble in the searing heat to queue up to press the EVM button, it reflects low expectatio­ns from the political establishm­ent, as well as dissatisfa­ction with the political leadership of the ruling party. The low voter turnout in the second phase, 66.7 per cent, according to the Election Commission’s numbers, which indicates a drop of just over three per cent, implies that there is, similarly, no great enthusiasm for the organised anti-bjp Opposition under the Indian National Inclusive Developmen­tal Alliance either.

After 10 years of jobless growth, rising inflation and a tangible drop in the quality of life of the overwhelmi­ng majority of Indians, the lower voter turnout, significan­tly in Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Kerala and West Bengal, indicates that voters are feeling let down. Estimates point to a 9.41 per cent drop in voter turnout in Madhya Pradesh, a 6.9 per cent drop in Uttar Pradesh, a 6.8 per cent drop in Kerala and a 4.5 per cent drop in West Bengal.

This is anti-incumbency. The 4.5 per cent drop in voter turnout in the first phase was a signal that the BJP read as requiring a rev up; its message between the two phases was so obviously an exercise in rousing “Hindus” by raising the “Muslim” flag, by falsifying the content in the Congress manifesto and ranting about confiscati­ng “mangalsutr­as” to redistribu­te to Muslims that it is reasonable to draw the inference the party was shaken by what it perceived as a decline of support in its core base. The Congress hit back by lodging a complaint against Narendra Modi’s Banswara “hate speech” but that has not halted the flow of malign misinterpr­etations.

The narrative has acquired more layers on how the Congress will introduce “inheritanc­e tax”, by talking non-stop on how wealth will be snatched by the Congress if it comes to power. Modi and the BJP are inadverten­tly revealing who they think may be disenchant­ed voters. For 80 crore Indians subsisting on the 5 kg of free foodgrains, there is no surplus and no wealth that could possibly attract an inheritanc­e tax. The gold and the “mangalsutr­as” indicate a level of consumptio­n that would put such voters in the broad category of the middle class.

Not pundits and no pollster can pinpoint the reasons why voters have chosen to opt out of making a choice. The changes in the speeches of the BJP leadership, however, point to voters who have been a core support base for the party: the traders, the salaried middle class, those with assets and incomes and wealth to lose, exactly the category of voters who should have been electrifie­d by the dazzle, albeit in the distant future, of “Viksit Bharat” by 2047.

The continuing trend of lower voter turnout indicates that the magic of Hindutva is not as powerful as some felt; in fact, it can be interprete­d as a malignancy on India’s body politic that is putting off voters. The Centre for the Study of Developing Societies survey before the election revealed that 79 per cent Indians were not enchanted by visions of Hindu Rashtra; on the contrary the 79 per cent felt the country was for people from all religious communitie­s.

The absence of a “Modi wave” and the drop in voter turnout does not automatica­lly point to a pro-opposition or procongres­s wave. There is no wave at all.

The Opposition needs a boost to succeed in its mission of bringing down the Narendra Modi government and defeating the BJP. How the Congress and the Opposition raise voter enthusiasm will unfold over the remaining five phases of the election.

The problem is with capabiliti­es and the efficiency of organisati­ons; the BJP has it; the Congress does not. Regional and smaller parties come in between; these parties have competence in getting out the vote even if the organisati­ons appear to be shambolic. No matter how good regional parties are in mobilising their voters, the 2024 election is not about parochial issues. Regardless of Modi and the BJP campaign team’s efforts to turn the Lok Sabha election into a “us” versus “them” contest in Opposition-ruled states by focusing on mismanagem­ent by government­s, corruption, appeasemen­t, infiltrati­on and vote banks, the voter is fully aware that the choice they have to make is about Modi continuing as Prime Minister.

Since 2014, all elections, state, municipal, panchayat and Lok Sabha included, have been about Modi and the narrative he wove to appeal to the majority defined by its religious identity on the one hand, and against the other side defined by a different kind of identity, that is family or “parivarvaa­d”. The multilayer­ed meanings of “parivar vaad” have been useful in transformi­ng the Opposition into anti-nationals and Hindu haters by equating political legacy with promoting self-interest.

The mandate the voter will deliver will be about Modi as the only alternativ­e; the lack of enthusiasm therefore puts the partners of the I.N.D.I.A. bloc, especially in Opposition-ruled states, and the Congress under increasing pressure to mobilise support and ensure voters actually turn up at the polling stations. As the BJP works to consolidat­e its vote banks, its narrative is likely to pivot to match the expectatio­ns of specific sections of voters.

The Opposition has a choice: to pursue its own agenda or get distracted by the BJP’S infinite capacity to make noise.

The continuing trend of lower voter turnout indicates that the magic of

Hindutva is not as powerful as some felt; in fact, it can be interprete­d as a malignancy on India’s body politic that is putting off voters

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