Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

BJP has lot at stake in its citadel

HIGHOCTANE CONTEST Party can illafford a poor performanc­e in Modi’s home state as it could put a spanner in saffron surge and provide the elixir Congress needs to revive itself before the 2019 general elections

- DK Singh letters@hindustant­imes.com

What Gujarat does, India will have to do tomorrow….” This was the blurb of a cover story of Vishwa Hindu Sam a char, a mouth piece of Vishwa Hindu Parishad, after the BJP’s victory in 2012 assembly elections.

The blurb aptly contextual­ises the hopes and trepidatio­n in the Congress camp. Already battered in a stringof elections over the past four years, the Congress’ hopes of revival at the national level hinge much on Gujarat.

But as Professor San jay Kumar, director at the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, a Delhi-based think tank, says, the stakes are “much bigger” forth eB JP .“Imagine for a second that the B JP loses or its seats go down in Narendra Modi’s and Amit Shah’s home state, it will bea huge blow. This would be a moment when the road to 2019( general election) will change .”

December 18, the day election results will be out, could be crucial for national politics and the B JP’ sp referred governance model, too. If the B JP, as indicated by an India Today-Axis survey of voters, maintains its 2012 voteshare and seats—47.9 % and 115 MLAs in 182-member assembly—it would come as another vindicatio­n of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government’ s decisions to demonetise highvalue banknotes and roll out the goods and services tax (GST).

A renewed mandate in Gujarat, where the opposition party has made the Cent re’ s handling of the economy one of its main poll plan ks, would be seen as an endorsemen­t by the people of the government’s policies and even embolden it to bite the bullet on re forming labour laws, a lingering dragon India’ s manufactur­ing sector.

“If the B JP wins but with a reduced vote share—by 5-10%— and seatshare, it will have a major impact. It will bring the central government down from its high horse or what you see as I-know-it-all approach,” says Professor Sebastian Morris of the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad.

“The B JP will then also re ali se that there are limits to jingoism .” The other fallout, Morris said, could be decentrali­sation of power at the Centre. But the BJP’s loss in voteshare might not necessaril­y be the Congress’ gain, he said.

On Tuesday, a day before the Election Commission sounded the poll bug le in Gujarat, the government unveiled a₹9lakhcro re plan to shore up the economy.

C SD S’ Kumar believes that regardless of the outcome of the polls, the government will continue to pursue the same economic path. Losing or winning one state should ordinarily not have a significan­t bearing on the political suzerainty of a party that is in power in 18 states.

But it’s Modi’s Gujarat andsymboli­sm matters in politics. The BJP can ill-afford to lose in the Prime Minister’s den because it could provide the elixir the principal opposition party needs to revive itself before the 2019 general elections.

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