Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

BJP may drop 50% of MLAS for ’22 state polls to blunt anti-incumbency

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: After changing chief ministers in Gujarat and Uttarakhan­d, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is looking to drop as many as half of the sitting legislator­s to blunt anti-incumbency in the states going to polls in 2022, said party functionar­ies aware of the details.

In the previous assembly elections, the party had dropped 15-20% of the sitting MLAS, but the figure could be much higher this time given public dissatisfa­ction over a host of governance issues, said a senior party functionar­y.

Assembly polls will be held in Punjab, Manipur, Uttarakhan­d, Uttar Pradesh, Goa, Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh in 2022.

“In several states, the party has carried out ground surveys to assess the mood. MLAS were also asked to submit their report cards of the work done in the last five years, which were tallied with the party’s own findings. Those whose performanc­e has not been up to the mark will not be repeated,” the functionar­y said, requesting anonymity.

The legislator­s are being assessed on parameters such as the spending of local area developmen­t funds, projects done to empower the marginalis­ed, and their contributi­on to the bigticket Seva Hi Sangathan programme — the party’s welfare programme launched during the pandemic. Surveys were done across constituen­cies where people’s feedback on the government’s performanc­e was sought.

“The Covid-19 pandemic came with an unpreceden­ted challenge. While the government did its bit by ramping up the health infrastruc­ture, ensuring vaccinatio­n and scaling up medical supplies, the party also did its bit by organising relief work. The party president (JP Nadda) had asked each state unit to carry out camregardi­ng paigns to feed the needy, assist those who lost their jobs and ensure 100% vaccinatio­n in their respective booths under the Seva Hi Sangathan campaign. The work done by the MLAS on the seva front will also be counted,” said the functionar­y.

Countering anti-incumbency has been a key concern for the party. It is for this reason that the central leadership decided to replace Vijay Rupani as the CM of Gujarat. An all-new cabinet was also sworn in to help reinvigora­te the party cadre in the state that will go to the polls towards the end of 2022.

“It is not unusual for the party to deny sitting legislator­s tickets based on various reasons. For instance, in Rajasthan in 2018, the BJP dropped 43 sitting MLAS, including four ministers. In Jharkhand, too, over a dozen sitting MLAS were dropped for younger and newer faces representi­ng women and SC/ST communitie­s,” he said.

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