Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Why the south is ready for the BJP

- Shiv Visvanatha­n is a social science nomad The views expressed are personal

In a way, what one sees here is the decline of acts of political justice. The new aspiration­al, mobile, global south Indian is more ready for the BJP and Narenda Modi than for epic battles of ideology and electoral politics.

The BJP knows its footprints are still new. It has to adapt local styles and heroes and the irony is that film which once kept it out is becoming the vehicle for its belated entry. In the earlier era, that film scripted a theory of politics that made the BJP irrelevant. But one must remember it was in an era where the film star and the politician was one person, like the DMK script writers, like Rama Rao, or Raj Kumar. Film and politics were warp and weft of one imaginatio­n. Today the ideologica­l power of the film is over. What it however left behind was the fan club, cadre of fans who were as powerful as the CPI(M) cadre or the RSS shakha. In a pragmatic way, the BJP has decided to co-opt the stars with fan clubs, giving them a fan base which eventually becomes a party base.

There is something surreal about the possibilit­y of a Rajinikant­h joining hands with a Modi. It is like a confluence of two badly scripted films. It is like politics as a symbolic fiction and film as a symbolic politics combining to create a new utopia, a hybridity to fill up the emptiness of southern politics. It is as if a pan-Indian second-hand state is being created, which makes pragmatic sense to both sides. A Rajinikant­h keeps southern populist honour intact as RSS cadre merge with is fans in surreal delight. Rajinikant­h could have been a counter to the Modi wave, giving a respite to southern politics. Unfortunat­ely, an alliance of convenienc­e might make him the Trojan horse of Indian politics. For an oldfashion­ed politico like me, it is the ultimate nightmare. Politics is the happy transition actors in the twilight of stardom are looking for and the BJP has a pragmatic sense of this.

The BJP is a master of factional politics in Andhra Pradesh. Fundamenta­lly, it acts as if every party is a regional extension to its nationalis­t presence. It becomes both a complement and an opposition to each party, capturing the opposition­al space, which is a temptation to many out of power politician­s.

Its real politics is its politics of patience. And pragmatism. The arrival of the BJP will create a new pragmatic politics without the old colour and character of the south. It will be an irony of democracy, which political pundits will take years to recover from.

 ?? SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO ?? In an electoral sense, the BJP is an outsider to south India
SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO In an electoral sense, the BJP is an outsider to south India

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