Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

‘Who leads Opposition front immaterial’

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iments — of 1977, 1989, and 1996 — but they did not last and collapsed in a few years.

This is a mischievou­s logic. There was Emergency in the country. But we protected India’s Constituti­on. Wasn’t that aim achieved? Now you cannot declare Emergency. Didn’t the Morarji government ensure that? How long the government survived is an important question. But the more important issue is that people came together to respond to the Emergency, and we ensured a constituti­onal amendment to ensure this cannot happen again. Protecting the Constituti­on is the first priority. Stability comes next. Yes, I admit that the government­s on all three occasions could not remain stable. We have to ensure stability too.

But how will you assure the people that this Opposition front can provide stability now?

Our past experience will show us the light. We have to learn lessons and give a government for five years.

The BJP has built a broad social coalition. From being seen as a Brahminban­ia party, it has both substantia­l OBC (other backward class) and Dalit support. How do you see this shift?

Our Janata Dal was a party of farmers and peasants. Chaudhary Charan Singh left us with the second-largest party.

It got fragmented in 11-12 parts – Chimanbhai Patel, Devi Lal, Ajit Singh, Mulayam Singh, Ram Vilas Paswan, Nitish Kumar, Lalu Prasad, Navin Patnaik, HD Deve Gowda slowly left. The UPA (United Progressiv­e Alliance)-2 was tainted with scams, it could not respond effectivel­y. We all campaigned against it, and the Congress slipped to its worst. So in 2014, there was a vacuum. The BJP benefited from this vacuum.

When Mulayam and Mayawati came together in UP, see what happened. When the Mahagatban­dhan was formed in Bihar, see what happened. The class you are referring to came back as soon as it saw that the old Janata Dal is one, with Congress on its side. Our fragmentat­ion led to our supporters moving away. But they have now understood very clearly that the BJP is not their party. I can guarantee you that they will return as soon as fragmentat­ion diminishes.

See, despite our fragmentat­ion, non-bjp parties got 69% votes last time. Assume that 15% of that vote is minority vote, including Muslims, Christians and others. That still leaves the Opposition with 54% Hindu votes; it includes caste Hindus, backward classes, Dalits, and Adivasis. Assume all 31% of the BJP votes are Hindu votes. So the Opposition still got 23% more Hindu votes than the BJP. It is a misconcept­ion that Hindus are with them. There is no one Hindu. It is a social order. They will fail in their attempts to unite it.

To unite Hindus?

Yes. They will be completely unsuccessf­ul. I have already given you the data. 54% Hindus are with us. If there is possible unity, not even complete unity, they will consolidat­e. The BJP will be cleaned up from the Ganga (Gangetic) belt. The Samajwadi Party and the Bahujan Samaj Party are together in UP; we will see them (in Bihar); Mamata (Banerjee) will take care of them in Bengal.

Count the number of seats here. They came from the Ganga and they will disappear from the Ganga.

But this Ganga belt has also seen serious Hindumusli­m conflicts, from the Jatmuslim tensions to Dalitmusli­m violence. How will you manage that?

Their (the BJP’S) election speeches are geared towards religious tensions. Their aim is to trigger caste conflict. All that they do is act against the Constituti­on and composite culture. There are so many religions, castes, subcastes. There are so many contradict­ions here.

Even if one was to agree that the BJP benefits from a Hindumusli­m rift, isn’t it the case that you benefit from intracaste tensions within Hindus?

This is a big lie. Caste is an institutio­n that goes back thousands of years. It is a reality, a reality recognised by the Constituti­on. To blame us for it is deeply unjust. The constituti­on has provisions for the disadvanta­ged. What the BJP and RSS (Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh) go around doing is inter-dining. But the institutio­n of marriage keeps the caste system alive. The caste system is in this country’s soil. Resolving it is a long-term issue.

How will you cement the religious divide?

It is healed. See what happened in (bypolls in) Ajmer, Alwar, Gorakhpur, Phulpur, Araria. In Opposition unity, people from different communitie­s can see their faces.

You split from Nitish Kumar on the question of understand­ing with the BJP. How do you assess his politics now?

He caused great damage to the nation, betrayed the faith of the millions who voted for the Mahagathba­ndhan. I had told him, I will never accept this. He did not listen to someone like me who made this party. He had promised to fight for Sangh-mukt Bharat. By going back on your commitment, you weaken democracy. He will be consigned to the dustbin of history.

There are some indication­s he has difference­s with the BJP. Is your door open, the Opposition’s door open, for him?

This is a hypothetic­al question. What he has committed is a big crime. He was giving me all kinds of greed. He collaborat­ed with the BJP to take away my party and symbol. They have been vindictive. They have gone to court. They want me evicted. He has shown what depths a person can plunge to. What is the point of him returning here? There is no question.

 ?? PHOTO: PARWAZ KHAN/HINDUSTAN TIMES ??
PHOTO: PARWAZ KHAN/HINDUSTAN TIMES

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