Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Bonding for mutual benefits

BJP, TRS can come closer since they’re not rivals in Telangana

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The signals of rapprochem­ent first emerged during the no-confidence debate in this session of Parliament. Among the few leaders who Prime Minister Narendra Modi appreciate­d during his speech was the Telangana chief minister K Chandrashe­kar Rao. The Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS) reciprocat­ed by abstaining from the vote. This helped the government defeat the motion by an even bigger margin. The TRS offered a political argument — since the motion revolved around special status for Andhra Pradesh — Telangana had no stakes. But in politics, unstated motivation­s often are more important than stated explanatio­ns. The speculatio­n about warmth in ties grew last weekend, when Mr Rao met Mr Modi in Delhi.

The stated explanatio­n was that the discussion revolved around projects and central assistance. But many pointed out that many items on the agenda had already been discussed. There was a clear political subtext to the talks leading up to the elections in 2019. Within days, another signal has emerged. For the election of the post of the Rajya Sabha deputy chairperso­n, the TRS has decided to support the NDA candidate, Harivansh.

It would be inaccurate to think of this as a precursor to any alliance between the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the TRS. The TRS’s primary challenger in Telangana remains the Congress. Mr Rao’s party also relies on a substantia­l element of Muslim votes in the state. An open tie-up with the BJP does not suit him. While it would like to grow, the BJP, too, knows that it does not really have a chance to become a formidable or dominant player in the state. The fact that they are not direct competitor­s has thus allowed them to open channels of communicat­ion and doors for a post-poll tie-up in 2019. The BJP knows that if replicatin­g its 2014 performanc­e in the Lok Sabha becomes difficult, it will need such smaller outfits. The TRS knows that having a a friendly Centre would be useful for its developmen­tal programmes. It also does not harm them if an aggressive BJP grows — if only slightly — at the cost of the Congress in the state. It is these calculatio­ns which appear to be bringing the two parties closer in the run-up to 2019.

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