Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Cong builds on alliance lessons from Maha, Hry

- Aurangzeb Naqshbandi

NEW DELHI: In the Lok Sabha elections, the grand alliance of the Congress, the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha, the Rashtriya Janata Dal and the Jharkhand Vikas Morcha (Prajatantr­ik) won only two of 14 seats. The Bharatiya Janata Party won 11, and its ally, the All Jharkhand Students Union, won one.

Apart from the larger national reasons for the debacle — the Modi wave, the BJP’S successful strategy of focusing on welfare schemes, and the Opposition’s inability to make the economy and the agrarian crisis issues — the Congress identified lack of coordinati­on between the alliance partners on the ground as an important local factor that worked against the grouping in Jharkhand.

Ahead of the assembly elections, while one of the constituen­ts of the grand alliance Babulal Marandi’s JVM(P) parted ways, the others decided to focus on better coordinati­on.

At one level, this took the form of the local leaders of all three members of the alliance campaignin­g together.

The JMM contested 43 of the 81 seats, the Congress 31, and the RJD seven.

Meanwhile, the BJP and the AJSU could not come to an understand­ing over seat-sharing and fought the assembly elections separately.

JMM chief Hemant Soren was present at all rallies addressed by former Congress president Rahul Gandhi and his sister, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra. While Rahul held five rallies, Priyanka Gandhi addressed one on the last day of campaignin­g for the fifth phase of polling on December 20. Like in Maharashtr­a and Haryana, Congress president Sonia Gandhi did not campaign in Jharkhand.

At another level, the Congress decided not to split the tribal vote, even in traditiona­l stronghold­s, and conceded these to the JMM. It took the BJP head on in seats where tribals were in a minority, and in urban constituen­cies.

Interestin­gly, the Congress’ s campaign strategy in Jharkhand was shaped by the election outcome in Maharashtr­a and Haryana where the BJP’S sustained focus on the scrapping of Article 370, which gave special status to Jammu and Kashmir, could not help it electorall­y.

It kept the spotlight on local issues, economy and jobs.

The BJP made Article 370, Ayodhya, and the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act, its main talking points. The alliance engaged its rival on local matters, and limited its discourse on national issues to the economic slowdown, inflation and unemployme­nt.

“We fought the elections for the people of the state by raising issues that affect their lives and livelihood­s. The BJP tried to divert the attention of the people from fundamenta­l issues...the results are a defeat of the BJP’S arrogance and diversiona­ry tactics,” RPN Singh, the Congress’s Jharkhand in-charge, said.

Ghulam Nabi Azad, leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha, said, “Slowly and steadily, BJP is being exposed and the people are realising that it has not fulfilled even a single promise in the last six years.”

By winning 15 seats, the Congress registered its best-ever performanc­e in Jharkhand after the state was carved out of Bihar in 2000. The party won 14 seats in the 2009 assembly elections.

Another Congress functionar­y said on the condition of anonymity that the party will give due “place and respect” to its alliance partners in all poll-bound states in future, and also “appropriat­e space” to the local leadership in drafting election strategies.

LK Kundan, an associate professor of political science department in Ranchi University, said, “Strong anti-incumbency against the CM and his arrogance are two main reasons for the BJP’S defeat. Hemant Soren, Congress and RJD for the first time changed their mindset of outdoing each other and worked for the victory of the alliance.”

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