Hindustan Times (Patiala)

BJP banks on tested faces for role of state presidents

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an smriti.kak@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The organisati­onal rejig that was supposed to take place with the election of new state-level office bearers has not thrown up major surprises as the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has retained most of the incumbents appointed during outgoing president Amit Shah’s term.

To pick a new party president at the national level, the BJP began the process of elections in over 50% of the states, as is required by its constituti­on. However, while new faces have been announced in states such as Nagaland, Himachal Pradesh, and Odisha, in most others the incumbents have been given another term, for example in Bengal that will go to the polls in 2021, Jammu and Kashmir and Assam.

The need to reinvigora­te the party structure was flagged after the BJP failed to form government­s in states like Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisga­rh, and Jharkhand, where it had been in power for long. Electoral loss in Maharashtr­a was also seen as a setback for the party. The suggestion to recast the state leadership was also given by the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS), the ideologica­l fount of the BJP. The RSS has cautioned the BJP against the rise of regional leaders that can halt its pan-India expansion.

Replying to a question on why the leadership has opted for repeating the leaders, a BJP functionar­y said, “…By re-electing the office bearers, the high command has signalled the endorsethe

ment of their leadership.”

Consequent­ly, leaders like Dilip Ghosh in West Bengal, who have courted controvers­ies, were reappointe­d. Among others who got a second term include Ravinder Raina in Jammu and Kashmir, where the process of electionee­ring will begin only after process of delimitati­on is conducted in keeping with the provisions of the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisa­tion Act.

In Assam, where the party faces stiff opposition to its fasttracki­ng of citizenshi­p to persecuted minorities from the neighbourh­ood through the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act, the party chose to renominate Ranjit Kumar Dass, who was first elected as the party state president in 2017. “A new person in the midst of an uncertain situation would require time to settle in. If the incumbent has been delivering, there is no reason to deny him or her chance,” said the functionar­y quoted above.

Incumbents have also been given a second stint in Uttar Pradesh, where Swatantra Dev Singh was elected unopposed as the president of the state unit.

Among the new ones are Nalin Kumar Kateel, whose elevation after BS Yediyurapp­a became CM, came as a surprise to the party unit. A member of Parliament from Dakshina Kannada, Kateel hit headlines during the Lok Sabha elections by tweeting Nathuram Godse had killed only one person, Mahatma Gandhi, whereas former Prime Minister Rajeev Gandhi had killed 17,000. The tweet was later deleted.

Most of the party unit heads also have the RSS’s backing.

“Some of these leaders have been active members of the Sangh. Their organisati­onal skills have been honed by their experience in the Sangh and it comes as an added advantage,” said a second functionar­y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India