Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Yeddyurapp­a resignatio­n a throwback to 1996 vote

- Prashant Jha prashant.jha@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) emerged as the single-largest party in the assembly elections in Karnataka this week, and staked claim to form the government. There was an alternativ­e in place. The Congress and the Janata Dal (Secular) had come together in a quick post-poll arrangemen­t and claimed they had the majority in the House. The governor Vajubhai Vala still decided to invite the BJP’S legislativ­e leader, BS Yeddyurupp­a, triggering a political-legal storm that resulted in Yeddyurapp­a taking oath on Thursday, only to resign on Saturday afternoon. There are clear difference­s, but 22 years ago on the national stage, the BJP had emerged as the single-largest party and Atal Bihari Vajpayee was invited to form what is famously known as the 13-day government. The 13-day Vajpayee experiment was significan­t for several reasons. One, for the first time, India had a prime minister who came from a staunchly Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh background, and had never been a part of Congress’s mainstream politics. The government did not last but this generated sympathy — at least in urban India, among the middle classes — for the party they felt was being unfairly kept out of power. Two, while elevating the BJP to the top, the brief duration also highlighte­d to the party the need to become more accommodat­ing of allies, moderate its agenda, and become a big-tent formation. They used this lesson in 1998, when their government lasted 13 months with a wider set of allies, and in 1999, when the Vajpayee government was to go on to serve its entire five-year term. Three, it opened up the question of the President’s role in choosing a stable government. While Sharma stuck to convention and invited the single-largest party, two years later his successor KR Narayanan decided that he would only invite a leader when he was convinced that he had majority and thus asked for signatures of all supporting MPS.

And finally, for the antiBJP parties, the 1996 lesson was that if they came together, they could keep the BJP out. But they had to provide a stable government, and not doing so would only bring back a stronger BJP. As Karnataka 2018 plays out, the Congress and HD Kumaraswam­y, may want to look back.

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