Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Rahul’s poll call: Over to cadres

- Aurangzeb Naqshbandi aurangzeb.naqshbandi@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW DELHI: The two-day 84th plenary session of the Congress that concluded on Sunday saw the grand old party and its chief Rahul Gandhi outlining their strategy to defeat the Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic Alliance in the next Lok Sabha elections.

Sounding the bugle for 2019, Rahul gave a clarion call to the Congress workers to oust Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s regime by fighting like a “discipline­d force”.

The message for the voters, especially the young, was that the “drunk on power and corrupt” BJP has “failed” in providing jobs and, in fact “destroyed” all the avenues of creating employment with its “ill-conceived policies”.

By maintainin­g its focus on the farmers and the young in the speeches delivered and the resolution­s passed on both days of the session, the Congress has desperatel­y tried to win back the support of the two sections.

The young voters increasing­ly became disillusio­ned with the Congress and gravitated towards the BJP in the run up to the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, and the disenchant­ment hasn’t thawed since but has formulated in support for Modi in regions the BJP did not have a significan­t following before.

But the Congress hopes to tap the disenchant­ment over Modi’s “failure” to provide the promised two crore jobs in a year. The grand old party is also of the view that the deepening agrarian crisis will push the farmers to its side in 2019.

By likening the BJP to Kauravas and the Congress to Pandavas, Rahul sought to set the agenda for 2019. It is now for the BJP to respond.

Political analysts suggest that Rahul’s reference to Mahabharat­a could help Congress mobilise fence sitters.

“The voters angry with the Congress might like such an analogy. Rahul Gandhi wanted to convey that the 2019 election between the BJP and Congress is going to be like the fight between Kauravas and Pandavas who were small in number but on the right side,” said Sanjay Kumar of the Delhi-based Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS). “This might help in mobilising the fence sitters who have not yet made up their mind about which party to vote for in next elections,” he said.

If Rahul’s personal attacks against the Prime Minister and BJP chief Amit Shah and the ongoing war of words and personal attacks between the leaders of the two parties are any indication, the country is headed for the one of the fiercest and bitter electoral battles in 2019.

While Rahul positioned himself as the Prime Minister’s primary challenger, the political resolution was silent on the issue of the leadership of the coalition of the like-minded parties.

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