Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Shivraj stands eclipsed but still remains a mass leader

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Shivraj Singh Chouhan may be down. But the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader from Madhya Pradesh is still a remarkable political figure of India’s second largest state. The close contest also shows that it will be premature to write him off.

The low-profile Chouhan was picked to lead the BJP after a period of political instabilit­y in the state. In 2003, Uma Bharti had led the party to victory in the state but was soon replaced with Babulal Gaur in less than a year. Gaur lasted just over a year before Chouhan took over. He had been a parliament­arian but was a low profile leader. It was a case of the organisati­on anointing an appropriat­e leader.

Soon, as Chouhan settled down, t he leader i n him emerged.

He focused on governance and delivered on infrastruc­ture. A major complaint against Digvijaya Singh’s regime was the condition of roads and power. Madhya Pradesh slowly transforme­d on both fronts. Primarily an agricultur­al state, this was Chouhan’s crowning success.

He delivered some of the highest growth rates and the state saw a boom in production. Chouhan positioned himself as ‘Mamaji’, a benevolent, paternal figure looking out for citizens, especially the women and the young. He also delivered a range welfare schemes to different social groups.

All of this helped Chouhan construct a wide social coalition of upper castes, who had traditiona­lly been with the party, Other Backward Classes (OBC) to which Chouhan himself belongs and segments of Dalits and tribals. This helped him win in 2008 and 2013. Factionali­sm in the Congress, with leaders pulling i n different directions, helped Chouhan.

In this election, Chouhan was facing two issues.

The first was that his success ended up sowing the seeds of failures.

Farmers were producing more, but they weren’t getting prices. And this alienated them. Chouhan’s efforts to meet this through the Bhavnatar scheme got mired in procedural difficulti­es and was not enough. The second was fatigue and a yearning for ‘badlav’ (change)— especially at the local level. It was not Chouhan as much as this local anti incumbency which proved to be the big challenge for the BJP.

Chouhan—a low key chief minister, close to the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS), seen as pro-poor and welfarist in his approach and a competent administra­tor—is now one of BJP’S most senior leaders. Victory or not, don’t rule him out just yet. At 59, he still has a long career ahead.

The intentions of making India ‘Congress-free’ and ‘opposition-free’ shows the arrogance of BJP. The people have made this nation ‘arrogance-free’ by voting out Bharatiya

Janata Party. The opposition leaders met yesterday except for leaders from two parties. We will contest elections together; our first aim is to defeat BJP and today’s result is the first step in that direction. I say this with all responsibi­lity that K Chandrasek­har Rao has all capabiliti­es and capacities to ensure that a nonCongres­s government comes into existence when the next Parliament election takes place.

 ?? HT FILE ?? Despite the defeat, the close contest shows that it will be premature to write Shivraj Singh Chouhan off.
HT FILE Despite the defeat, the close contest shows that it will be premature to write Shivraj Singh Chouhan off.

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