Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

With rising tensions, BJP faces a political dilemma

- Rahul Verma Rahul Verma is with the Centre for Policy Research (CPR), New Delhi The views expressed are personal

Over the past decade, the Hindu-muslim axis has once again emerged as the central pole of Indian politics. But now, a period of churn has set in, following a raft of incidents, the latest being the brutal daylight murder of a Hindu tailor in Rajasthan’s Udaipur by two Muslim men, because the former backed controvers­ial comments on Prophet Mohammed by a former Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) spokespers­on. There is a view that the current state of sectarian tensions was inevitable in a way, because majoritari­an rhetoric has been part of the ruling party’s electoral agenda. But signals coming from the top leadership of the BJP and its ideologica­l fount, the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS), indicate that the ruling party is increasing­ly finding itself in a tricky position due to the cascading effect of these events. The tipping point seems to have been breached.

It has not only exposed the inner fault lines of hardliners versus moderates within the Hindutva ecosystem, but also exposed a fundamenta­l contradict­ion between the party’s ideologica­l-political goals with its governance-related imperative­s.

How will the BJP proceed from here on? There are two views on what the party must do. The first believes that the BJP must pivot before it’s too late and course-correct before the 2024 Lok Sabha (LS) polls, because, though there is no nationally assertive Opposition, the party might find it difficult to counterbal­ance anti-incumbency sentiments emanating from continuous­ly winning LS seats for several terms in many parts of northwest India. Furthermor­e, as a ruling party, it must focus on establishi­ng order, and shift from agitationa­l routes of politics to implementi­ng its governance agenda, especially on employment. This necessitat­es that the party must rein in some supporters who are flirting with what amounts to hate politics, adopt a more restrained position on majoritari­an nationalis­m, and reach out to Muslim communitie­s.

The second believes that the uproar over the remarks on Prophet Mohammed was yet another organised attempt to undermine Hindus and the Modi government. According to this view, the riot-like situations in many parts of the country thereafter, the backlash from West Asia, and the selective response of the liberal-secular position on some of these incidents (including those who commented on symbols related to Hindu religious beliefs) have been hypocritic­al at best. A section of the Hindutva base – which has been unhappy with the BJP for not doing enough – has been further galvanised by the Prophet row and the gruesome murder in Udaipur. This group has likely imbibed the idea that having the BJP in power is necessary to protect its religious interest and keep so-called anti-hindu forces at bay.

The BJP confronts a clear dilemma and its strategies will depend on the party’s calibratio­n of the positive and negative fallouts on various fronts. The party realises that the impulse towards radicalism and polarisati­on has strained the rule of law and impacted governance. And, many of these controvers­ies will hurt investment and hinder the government’s efforts to rein in commodity prices and boost job growth. The current regime is already seen unfavourab­ly by large sections of the global civil society, including many internatio­nal media outlets, on questions of liberties, and it is now being forced to spend political capital in mending diplomatic strains.

The biggest challenges for the party are ideologica­l and political. Since coming to power in 2014, the Modi regime has delivered on two longstandi­ng ideologica­l goals – constructi­on of the Ram Temple in Ayodhya and changing the status quo in Jammu and Kashmir. The current set of controvers­ies – ranging from the Karnataka hijab row, the violent clashes on Hanuman Jayanti and Ram Navami and the revanchist campaign in Kashi and Mathura – has the ability to create new ideologica­l planks. For this reason alone, the top leadership has struck largely conciliato­ry positions, and even occasional­ly admonished more extreme elements.

Politicall­y, the BJP’S challenges are not merely electoral but also organisati­onal. All political parties have layered support bases, with a core forming the nucleus. In the BJP’S case, while hardliners have clear anti-muslim prejudices, the main concern of moderates is propagatio­n of pro-hindu politics. While these different support bases may share overlappin­g concerns, the BJP needs to figure out a way to engage with the hardliners, without alienating its more centrist base. The leadership understand­s that political power in India necessitat­es forging a broad-based social coalition. The current unhappines­s of hardliners may not lead them to think of forming an extreme-right wing alternativ­e or vote for non-bjp parties, but they are indispensa­ble for the party’s mobilisati­onal infrastruc­ture. A dip in their enthusiasm level will diminish the BJP’S mobilisati­onal capacity to rally noncore voting blocs.

On the one hand, current communal conflagrat­ions might bring clear electoral advantages for the BJP, and restrainin­g hardliners could give them greater incentives to unite and emerge as a more powerful lobby within the party system. On the other, it won’t be easy for the party leadership to reverse this rising tide after letting the hardliners set the terms of debate by raising the bogey of one controvers­y after another.

The die has been cast and the fallout of these events is unpredicta­ble – both for the BJP’S internal politics as well as its governance legacy. India is now in the midst of a cycle of incrementa­l polarisati­on, with periods of highs and lows, which will keep shifting the ideologica­l middle ground further to the Right. How the party treads this path will determine the future of not just the BJP, but also Indian democracy.

 ?? ANI VIA REUTERS ?? How the BJP handles this cycle of increased polarisati­on will determine the future of the party and Indian democracy
ANI VIA REUTERS How the BJP handles this cycle of increased polarisati­on will determine the future of the party and Indian democracy
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