Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

BJP banks on OBC votes to counter Patidar rebellion

- Kumar Uttam letters@hindustant­imes.com

RAJKOT/JAMNAGAR/DWARKA: The Bharatiya Janata Party is convinced Other Backward Classes or OBCS hold the key to it retaining Gujarat, a state it has governed for the past 22 years.

The realisatio­n has come even as the party faces what some experts see as its toughest challenge in the state in two decades: an alliance of the economical­ly dominant Patidar community with the Congress, which is also banking on support from Dalits; farmers hard-hit by the agrarian crisis; and small traders upset at the prospect of having to pay tax under the new Goods and Services Tax regime.

The Patidars were once supporters of the BJP, but the primarily agrarian community is seeing its fortunes fade (as, indeed, are dominant agrarian communitie­s across India), and wants reservatio­n (anamat in local lingo) for government jobs and in colleges. The Patidars account for around 12% of Gujarat’s population and could influence the outcome in around 60 of the 182 assembly constituen­cies in the state.

The Congress has backed the Patidar demand, although its way of facilitati­ng the quota without falling afoul of a Supreme Court ruling that caps reservatio­ns at 50% could yet fail legal scrutiny.

Sentiments in the Patidar community are running high. Scars of a violent police crackdown on young Patidar agitators in 2015 are still fresh in the minds of the seven elderly Patidars this writer encounters in Jabalpur village in Tankara assembly constituen­cy of Morbi district. “We have to teach the BJP a lesson,” one says. The others agree.

“Is it a crime to ask for better education and employment prospects?” another asks.

But the equation isn’t a straightfo­rward one and the BJP plans to leverage that.

Other backward communitie­s are apprehensi­ve – the fear of sharing reservatio­n benefits with the affluent community is palpable among the socially and economical­ly backwards of Gujarat.

“Aren’t they (Patidar) well off? They have business, land and everything.

Why should they limit the scope for our kids? If Patidars get reservatio­n benefits, they will corner most of the benefits, leaving nothing for our sons and daughters,” says Devji Bhai of Mokhana village in Jamnagar Rural assembly constituen­cy.

He is an Ahir, or a Yadav equivalent of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh. The community has sizeable presence in Jamnagar and Dwarka, the fabled city of Lord Krishna. The sentiment reverberat­es in several parts of this region -- louder at some, subtle at many.

In Uttar Pradesh earlier this year, a consolidat­ion of the backward communitie­s did wonders for the BJP – the country’s most populous state that it won with a three-fourth majority.

THE ARITHMETIC

OBCS account for over 40% of Gujarat’s population, more than three times that of the Patidars. The backward classes have been almost equally divided between the BJP and the Congress in past elections. This election could be different, say experts, especially if their fear tilts the balance in favour of the BJP even by few counts.

The electoral gains would be much more than the loss that Patidars could inflict.

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