Hindustan Times (Patiala)

NPP emerges as a key force in NE

The fiveyearol­d party has significan­t presence in three states with numbers to help form coalition government­s

- Utpal Parashar letters@hindustant­imes.com n

the BJP’s meteoric rise and the Congress’s steep fall, the National People’s Party (NPP) has emerged as the biggest regional player in three of the states in the Northeast region.

Founded by former Lok Sabha speaker and Meghalaya chief minister, late PA Sangma, the party is now managed by his children, James, Conrad and Agatha, who led it to its best showing in the just-concluded assembly elections. With 19 seats, NPP is second to Congress (21 representa­tives) in the Meghalaya assembly, but is well short of majority.

While Conrad, the party’s president, is a Lok Sabha MP, James and Agatha won assembly seats comfortabl­y on Saturday — a day ahead of PA Sangma’s second death anniversar­y.

It seems likely they would cobble up the numbers and form the government, and Conrad could become the next chief minister, a developmen­t which would make his father — who had reached the post three decades ago — proud.

He is likely to lead a coalition government with support from the UDP, HSPDP, PDF, and the BJP. He is expected to contest from one of two seats vacated by Congress’s Mukul Sangma, who won from Ampati and Songsak.

In 2013, NPP had secured nearly 9% of the total votes and bagged just two seats. This time, the vote share increased to over 20% and the party recorded wins across Meghalaya, not just from its stronghold, Garo Hills.

The party also registered its presence in Nagaland, winning two seats, and is said to have extended support to the NDPPBJP alliance to form the next government.

FOUNDED BY PA SANGMA

PA Sangma, one of the founders of the Nationalis­t Congress Party, a breakaway party of the Congress, had formed the NPP in 2012 and allied with the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance.

NPP won just two seats in the 2013 state polls. It also contested the Rajasthan assembly election that year and won four seats.

“Sangma wanted consolidat­ion of tribal constituen­ts and make NPP a tribal party with national presence. If he had lived longer, it would have materialis­ed by now,” said Patricia Mukhim, editor of The Shillong Times.

The fledgling party suffered a setback with Sangma’s death in 2016. But his children, James, Conrad, the party’s national president, and Agatha have been able to expand NPP’s footprint in the past two years.

“Both James and Conrad have sharp political acumen. While James takes most political decisions, Conrad, who is younger, focuses on the management part,” Mukhim said.

An ally of the NDA at Centre, NPP is also part of the BJP-led North East Democratic Alliance — a conglomera­tion of parties in the Northeast opposed to the Congress. NPP fielded 20 candidates in the 2017 Manipur elections where four of them won. With no party securing majority, NPP’s support helped BJP form its first government in the state.

“NPP is emerging as an alternativ­e to Congress, especially in tribal areas where the BJP has failed to penetrate. But in Manipur, all its 4 winners were from the Imphal Valley and not the hills,” said Pradip Phanjoubam, editor of Imphal Free Press.

GOING ALONE PAID OFF

Despite its existing alliance with BJP, the party decided to contest election in Meghalaya and Nagaland independen­tly — maybe as a strategic move not to be seen as too close to BJP’s Hindutva image in the two Christian-majority states. BJP’s image had suffered a setback among a section of voters in Meghalaya over the Centre’s proposed beef-ban move. Church organisati­ons in Nagaland had warned voters to be wary of the saffron outfit.

The move paid off and the results are for all to see.

 ?? PTI ?? National People’s Party (NPP) candidate James Sangma displays victory sign after winning in Dadenggre constituen­cy in the Meghalaya assembly elections on Saturday.
PTI National People’s Party (NPP) candidate James Sangma displays victory sign after winning in Dadenggre constituen­cy in the Meghalaya assembly elections on Saturday.

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