Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Nadda elected BJP’s chief as top brass rallies for him

Selecting his new team, fending off accusation­s of fostering polarisati­on in the country and building bridges with allies will be among the first challenges facing the BJP chief

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW DELHI: Jagat Prakash Nadda was on Monday elected unopposed the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) president, taking over from Amit Shah after the latter’s fiveand-a-half-year tenure, even as Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the party will scale new heights under the 59-year-old Nadda’s leadership.

A senior BJP leader from Himachal Pradesh, Nadda was picked to lead the party months after it retained power in the 2019 Lok Sabha elections. He takes over the reins at a time when the BJP is facing opposition from political rivals over the new citizenshi­p law. Political analysts said consolidat­ing the party’s electoral strategy after recent setbacks in states will be a key task for him.

His election as the 11th president of the BJP was announced by Radha Mohan Singh, who is in charge of the organisati­onal election process. Nadda will have a three-year tenure.

“The BJP may face more difficulty in the future and we must be ready… as per the needs and desires of the nation, moulding the workers and taking India ahead is our target,” Modi said shortly after Nadda’s appointmen­t was announced at the BJP headquarte­rs in the national capital.

The PM and the BJP parliament­ary board congratula­ted the newly elected party president at a ceremony that was also attended by veterans LK Advani and Murli Manohar Joshi.

After his election, Nadda said: “I thank Prime Minister Narendra

Modi for showing faith in me. Today, we are the world’s largest party that is in power in India. We have the highest number of MPs and MLAs in the country. We are not going to stop at this. There are some states left and we will make sure we reach to them as well.”

Nadda’s elevation was expected. He was appointmen­t the BJP working president last June, after Shah joined the Modi government as the Union home minister.

NEWDELHI: The transition that took place with Jagat Prakash Nadda’s elevation as the Bharatiya Janata Party president will be closely watched for several reasons with key among them being the selection of his new team and how the party will do in the assembly elections in Delhi next month and Bihar months later.

The term of Nadda’s predecesso­r, Amit Shah, who became the BJP’s youngest president, ended in January 2019. But he continued to hold the position as the organisati­onal elections in the states, a prerequisi­te for the new national president’s selection, had not been concluded. The party under Shah saw a surge in its membership and made inroads into states beyond its traditiona­l bastions.

Nadda’s role will be closely watched when the BJP is trying hard to fend off accusation­s of fostering polarisati­on. The protests against the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act, the proposed National Register of Citizens and faltering economy are issues that confront the party. The issues are expected to have electoral ramificati­ons in state elections in West Bengal and Bihar. The state elections are crucial for the party following a string of losses in Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisga­rh, Rajasthan in 2018 and Jharkhand last month.

Nadda, 59, will have the task of building bridges with allies, some of whom have made their difference­s public, particular­ly after the oldest ally, Shiv Sena, ended its alliance with the BJP to form the government in Maharashtr­a with the Nationalis­t Congress Party and Congress last year.

“Working as a national president requires working with a broader perspectiv­e, and diverse regional political interest groups. The north is different from the northeast, the west from the south. So, that will be a challenge facing the new president,” said Milind Awad, a professor at the Jawaharlal Nehru University.

BJP functionar­ies HT spoke to said Nadda will bring with him organisati­onal skills he honed first as Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad general secretary and later as a BJP functionar­y in Himachal Pradesh. He will follow Shah’s template for growth, but will have a working style that will set him apart, they added.

“Nadda is a hard-working, patient and affable personalit­y. He keeps a low profile, but is proficient in skills required for leading an organisati­on based on ideology yet made up of diverse people. His style of functionin­g will not be overshadow­ed by that of his predecesso­rs,” said a leader familiar with Nadda’s style.

While comparison­s are inevitable, party leaders said, they are expecting Nadda, who was first appointed as the party’s working president in June 2019, to continue the processes establishe­d by the “[Prime Minister Narendra] Modi-Shah duo”.

“It is the Prime Minister and Shah who galvanised workers and led the party to its current position. Nadda will complement the duo. It will be a successful troika,” said a second functionar­y. The reappointm­ent of several state unit presidents, who were appointed during Shah’s tenure, is being perceived as an indication that his writ will continue to run.

BJP leader Murlidhar Rao said the party will make the most of the gains made under Shah and added there will be collaborat­ive efforts between the old and the new guard to keep the party’s momentum going.

“Shah had a free hand for five years and it was under his watch that party won several state elections and the last Lok Sabha polls. For the new president, his... experience and tremendous knowhow will be an added asset. He can reach out for advice and assistance and that will be the extent to which Shah’s influence will continue.”

Several leaders said that Nadda’s “man-management skills” and “cordiality” will prove advantageo­us. “He has a sharp mind, is a good listener and can work without creating waves… sometimes that is also necessary to bind people,” said the second functionar­y.

Nadda, who served as the Union health minister during Modi’s first term, belongs to a Brahmin family from Himachal Pradesh. He began his political career as a student leader in Bihar, where his father, N L Nadda, served as Patna University’s vice-chancellor.

According to Nadda’s biodata on the Rajya Sabha website, he was inspired by the Bihar students’ movement in 1974 (also called JP movement) before his associatio­n with the ABVP and BJP’s youth wing, which he also headed.

› Shah had a free hand for five years and it was under his watch that party won several state elections and the last Lok Sabha polls. For the new president, his... experience and tremendous knowhow will be an added asset. ›

MURLIDHAR RAO , BJP leader

Nadda is a patient and affable personalit­y. He keeps a low profile, but is proficient in skills required for leading an organisati­on based on ideology yet made up of diverse people. His style of functionin­g will not be overshadow­ed by that of his predecesso­rs

A BJP LEADER

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi and home minister Amit Shah with ■ new BJP president JP Nadda in New Delhi on Monday.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and home minister Amit Shah with ■ new BJP president JP Nadda in New Delhi on Monday.
 ?? SANJEEV VERMA/HT PHOTO ?? (From left) Senior BJP leader LK Advani, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, new BJP chief JP Nadda and Union home minister Amit Shah at the BJP headquarte­rs in New Delhi o n Monday.
SANJEEV VERMA/HT PHOTO (From left) Senior BJP leader LK Advani, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, new BJP chief JP Nadda and Union home minister Amit Shah at the BJP headquarte­rs in New Delhi o n Monday.

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