Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

How local dynamics hold the key

- Prashant Jha

JASDAN (RAJKOT): Off the Rajkotamre­li highway in Lilapur village, Rameshbhai is clear about his poll preference­s. A voter in Rajkot’s Jasdan constituen­cy, a Congress stronghold, he will vote for the BJP.

“The Congress has done nothing in the years it held this seat. For two and a half years, between 2009 and 2012, Bharat Boghra of the BJP was the MLA and he brought a high school and vikas (developmen­t) here. I will vote for him.” A few minutes into the conversati­on and there is a twist in the tale. Boghra is from the Patidar community, so are Ramesh and most residents of Lilapur. When asked about the community’s unhappines­s with the BJP, he says, “Yes, we are angry with the BJP. I don’t want it to form the government. But in this seat, I will vote for Bharatbhai. He is from my samaj.”

All politics is indeed local in this Gujarat election, particular­ly in the swing region of Saurashtra that sends 48 MLAS to the 182-member assembly. In this southweste­rn region that spans 11 districts, seat dynamics are often far more important than the meta-narrative in determinin­g voters’ choices. Ramesh’s desire to see the BJP ousted in Gandhinaga­r but elected in Jasdan reflects how immediate loyalties overwhelm the larger anger.

On the other side, a considerab­le section among the Kolis, supposed to be BJP loyalists, is backing the Congress candidate, who is from their community, but wants the BJP in the state. It also illustrate­s the larger dilemma a Gujarati voter confronts in navigating local and provincial concerns, and the importance of smaller castes in determinin­g the poll outcome. Jasdan votes on December 9. The second round of voting is on December 14.

ELECTING AN MLA OR A GOVERNMENT

In Jasdan town, Nilesh Prajapati is doing his books as a group of customers wander around his shop.

Vithalbhai Patel, a farmer with about 10 bighas, says, “This is a Congress territory. Its candidate, Kunvarji Mohanbhai Bavaliya, is strong because he is a Koli and Kolis are the dominant group here. They are 80,000 or so and Patidars 55,000. We will vote for Bharatbhai.”

The Kolis are the dominant group among the many other backward classes in Gujarat.

Asked about the Patel anger, Prajapati’s words echo those of the voters in Lilapur. “I don’t like the BJP and don’t want it to win Gujarat, but I like my Patidar candidate,” he says.

It is to quell this larger community’s anger and to tap into local loyalties that the BJP has given more than 50 tickets to Patel candidates, far in excess of their population share of 12% among the state’s 60 million people.

“In the seats where the BJP has Patidar candidates, the community will not go against us. That is our calculatio­n,” a BJP activist in Rajkot said. If Patel voters in Jasdan care more for their local leader, others like Prajapati wants to be on the right side of the dispensati­on in Gandhinaga­r. “See, we have been electing the Congress but the BJP is in power in Gandhinaga­r. So our work gets stuck. We still have water issues. It is better to have an MLA from the ruling party, I will vote for the BJP,” says Prajapati.

THE OTHER SIDE

If the Patels want the BJP to win the seat and lose the state, the Kolis want the opposite. And, this gives Congress’s Bavaliya the edge, for Kolis outnumber other communitie­s. Add to it the Patidar anger and his credential­s – a former MP and MLA – and Bavaliya is in business. “Kunvarji has been our leader for many years. He will take care of the constituen­cy,” Binodbhai Rajabhai says, only to add the BJP should win the state. “The Congress can’t run Gujarat,” says the man from Baldoi, who drives a tractor.

 ?? REUTERS FILE ?? Sealed ballot boxes inside a polling centre in Gujarat.
REUTERS FILE Sealed ballot boxes inside a polling centre in Gujarat.

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