Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

K’taka voters to decide today, result on May 15

Neither Congress nor BJP has a clear advantage; local candidates, Lingayats, minorities, Dalit votes could make the crucial difference

- Vikram Gopal vikram.gopal@hindustant­imes.com

BENGALURU: Karnataka, one of the three states where the Congress is still in power, votes on Saturday, with the party trying to retain power in the face of a stiff challenge from the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which is in power in 20 states, either by itself or along with allies.

The Janata Dal (Secular), the third corner of this three-cornered fight, will be hoping to get enough seats to do what it has done best in the past — punch above its weight.

A forecast of unseasonal rains accompanie­d by thunder and lightning, especially in southern and coastal parts of the state, is a worry for all parties.

If the forecast comes true, its impact on the turnout — and, therefore, the outcome — will preoccupy all the contenders. Karnataka has 50.6 million eligible voters.

In the last assembly election in 2013, voter turnout was a high 71.45%.

The Congress has built its campaign around chief minister Siddaramai­ah and the achievemen­ts of his government, including his welfare measures.

BENGALURU: It looks like there is no obvious headwind or tailwind for either the Congress or the BJP in the Karnataka elections. Three factors might be responsibl­e for this.

Yeddyurapp­a’s ‘ghar wapsi’ might not bring as much gains to BJP as it expects: Had BJP not re-inducted Lingayat strongman BS Yeddyurapp­a, the elections would have been a walkover for the Congress. In 2013, the Karnataka Janata Paksha (KJP), which was floated by Yeddyurapp­a, cost the BJP as many as 35 seats in the state. Putting the KJP and BJP vote share together reduces the Congress’s seat tally to 99 in 2013 (See Chart 2).

Still, it is unlikely that the BJP’s vote share in 2018 would be a simple addition of the KJP and BJP vote in these elections. Most Lingayats would probably still vote for the BJP. However, a Lingayat village, which HT visited in Haveri district four days before polling, suggested that not all of them were committed to voting for the BJP.

A host of factors, including local candidates, and posturing (if at all) by influentia­l Lingayat mutts before elections due to the government’s decision to recognise Lingayats as a separate religion, could influence their decision. A small shift in the BJP’s Lingayat vote towards the Congress could become crucial if it is backed by a consolidat­ion of the AHINDA (the Kannada acronym for minorities, Dalits and backward castes) vote, which is what Siddaramai­ah is aiming for.

Potential erosion of the non-Vokkaliga JD(S) vote: JD(S) polled around 20% of total votes in the past two assembly elections. This is much more than the Vokkaliga population, which is its primary support base. What happens to JD(S)’s non-Vokkaliga’s vote bank could well decide this outcome. In the 2013 elections, the JD(S) played spoiler in as much as 45 seats, out of which 41 were outside its traditiona­l stronghold of southern Karnataka (See Chart 3).

The only clear communityb­ased polarisati­on, which one comes across in the state, is among Muslims. It goes beyond the communally sensitive region on the coast this time. Muslims, who admit to having voted for the JD(S) in previous elections, are explicit about voting for the Congress this time. Scepticism about JD(S)’s overall performanc­e and the likelihood of it doing business with the BJP in case of a hung assembly are the factors they cite. In case the JD(S)’s non-Vokkaliga non-Muslim voters outside Southern Karnataka also shift towards the Congress, the latter could gain a lot. To be sure, a consolidat­ion of Muslim votes behind the Congress could also create a counter-polarisati­on behind the BJP.

An AHINDA consolidat­ion might be very difficult to read: Interviews across multiple assembly seats in the state clearly show one thing: no party can hope to win a seat on the basis of support from one of the two dominant caste groups, Vokkaligas and Lingayats, or Muslims. The caste arithmetic explains this. These three groups accounts for just over one-third of the state’s population (See Chart 1). It is not very easy to read how the other caste groups are planning to vote, except probably the Kurubas, who share their caste with Siddharama­iah.

Although a large number of Dalits appears to be behind the Congress, the division between so-called touchable and untouchabl­e Dalits and alienation of Dalits in some pockets due to an aggressive backward caste consolidat­ion might also bring some gains to the BJP. The government’s welfare programmes have also bought it some extra support and most likely muted anti-incumbency among the poor, most of whom are likely to be from backward castes and Scheduled Castes (SCs). Some farmers among the caste groups who have been historical­ly sympatheti­c to the Congress are angry because they think farming was more profitable during the previous two government­s. At some places, people across caste groups have formed a cohort of sorts due to issues such as GST and demonetisa­tion. For each such case there are many instances of the economic pain becoming secondary to the cause of supporting Hindutva.

Each of these factors will matter when the results are declared on May 15. The Karnataka elections will definitely have a lot of influence on the course of national politics in the run-up to 2019. However, the reverse does not seem to be true from what we saw in the field. By and large, the contest is driven by local issues.

 ?? PTI FILE ?? BJP's chief ministeria­l candidate BS Yeddyurapp­a (centre) shares a lighter moment with Prime Minister Narendra Modi at an election rally in Chamarajan­agar.
PTI FILE BJP's chief ministeria­l candidate BS Yeddyurapp­a (centre) shares a lighter moment with Prime Minister Narendra Modi at an election rally in Chamarajan­agar.

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