Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Fadnavis in catch-22 situation over silent Maratha uprising

- Ketaki Ghoge letters@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: Will Maharashtr­a chief minister Devendra Fadnavis meet the same fate like his Gujarat counterpar­t Anandiben Patel?

As the BJP-led government completes two years next month, Fadnavis is facing one of his biggest challenges so far in the form of the silent Maratha uprising in Maharashtr­a similar to the Patel agitation in Gujarat (minus the violence) that ultimately cost Anandiben her job.

Last week, as the Maratha silent rallies touched 20 districts, rumours were triggered about Fadnavis’ ouster in favour of a state minister, a Maratha, like the public works minister Chandrakan­t Patil, considered close to BJP president Amit Shah. The rumours are unfounded, at least at this stage. Patil, the CM-candidate, himself was asked to refute this as speculatio­n.

But it’s clear Fadnavis is rattled, perhaps to the glee of some of his own ministers. That’s why he chose to voice this speculatio­n himself at a rally in Navi Mumbai saying he didn’t really care how long he would stay in the top job as long as he worked every day to bring transforma­tion to the state. The reason for Fadnavis’ worries are manifold, but chief among them is that as a Brahmin CM, he has no real community constituen­cy and is faced with the angst of a dominant community that makes up 32% of the state’s population.

What makes problems worse is there is no way to really meet the two central demands — special reservatio­n for Marathas in jobs and education and review of the Atrocity Act. Fadnavis has repeatedly made overtures for holding talks with protesters. As one of the Maratha leaders told HT, “There is nothing to discuss and our protests don’t have leaders. The CM knows our demands and he should just declare they will be met.’’

“For the CM it’s a catch-22 situation. And even though these are faceless protests, they are backed and funded by Maratha politician­s from the Congress and NCP, who are feeling threatened about losing their hold on power structures,’’ said analyst Surendra Jondhale.

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