Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

A lot at stake for BJP, Cong

- Gaurav Bisht gaurav.bisht@hindustant­imes.com

GOING ALLOUT Polls are also litmus test for BJP chief Amit Shah’s organisati­onal skills, who managed to quash intraparty squabbles

The state assembly elections in Himachal Pradesh have a lot at stake for the ruling Congress and opposition Bharatiya Janata Party.

For the hill state which does not wield much influence over national politics, the outcome of these elections along with Gujarat this time will set the tone for Lok Sabha elections in 2019 and are crucial for both the Congress and BJP.

SHIMLA:

ORIGINALLY A CONGRESS BASTION

The Congress continuous­ly ruled the state for three tenures from 1963 to 1977, before Bharatiya Janata Party’s (then Janata Party) Shanta Kumar broke the monopoly and formed the first non-Congress government. Since then, power in Himachal has alternated between the Congress and BJP.

This time, BJP is putting in all its might to make a comeback and is banking upon Narendra Modi’s charisma while highlighti­ng the schemes doled out during his three-year regime at the Centre.

Modi, who was once in-charge for BJP’s state affairs, repeatedly visited Himachal to bolster party’s campaign while national president Amit Shah himself focused on the party’s prospects holding rallies, meetings and convention­s in the hill state.

Elections in Himachal are litmus test for Shah’s organisati­onal skills, who managed to keep intra-party squabbles under control till the time polls were announced. The party so far has not announced its chief ministeria­l face in Himachal as stalwarts, former chief minister Prem Kumar Dhumal, Union minister Jagat Parkash Nadda and former CM Shanta Kumar made covert attempts to project themselves as party’s face.

In the last elections, BJP lost mainly due to factional fight between Dhumal and Shanta. The party won 26 of 68 member legislativ­e. It faced rebellion in 18

...voters will also evaluate the distance between the commitment and achievemen­t of the Prime Minister Narendera Modiled government . There is huge gap between what he promised and what he delivered.

HARISH THAKUR, head of political science, Himachal Pradesh University

seats and two of the candidates fought Independen­t.

On the other hand, the Congress is now grappling with intraparty fights and is depending on its old war horse, six-time CM Virbhadra Singh. However, going has been tough for Virbhadra in particular as he is facing cases of graft and disproport­ionate assets, using which, the BJP has oft targeted him.

Modi too accused Virbhadra Singh for “corruption and misrule” in the state.

Besides, the legal battle, Virbhadra this time faces a challenge within his own party as state party chief Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu, ebbed loyalist from Congress and managed to stay on his post in spite Virbhadra’s stiff opposition. The infighting reached a flash point when Virbhadra threatened to stay away from elections and complained to the party high command against functionin­g of Sukhu.

Virbhadra, 84, a scion of the royal family of Bushar, is also keen to pass on the political legacy to his son, state youth Congress chief Vikramadit­ya Singh this time.

“Elections in Himachal are crucial from the national point of view. It’s not that the mandate is against state government but the voters will also evaluate the distance between the commitment and achievemen­t of the Prime Minister Narendera Modi-led government . There is huge gap between what he promised and what he delivered.” says Harish Thakur , head of political science at Himachal Pradesh university.

The politics in Himachal has been bi-polar. It’s been twice — in 1977 and 1998 — that a third party unruffled the Congress, where as the power has usually swayed between BJP and Congress. Bahujan Samaj Party forayed into Himachal in a big way in 2008 but only managed to win one seat.

Later its lone legislator Sanjay Chaudhary joined the BJP. CM Virbhadra Singh and son Vikramadit­ya Singh (Cong) Virbhadra

Singh (83), a political warhorse, is a sixth-term

CM who entered politics in 1962. His son Vikramadit­ya Singh (27), is likely to contest polls. Vikramadiy­a put on the family mantle in 2012 when he successful­ly contested elections for president of state Youth Congress.

Prem Kumar Dhumal and his son Anurag Thakur (BJP) Prem Kumar

Dhumal (73), as Lok

Sabha member for the first time in 1989, has been BJP’s face in Himachal for two decades. Anurag Thakur, Dhumal's son and a cricketer administra­tor-turned-politician was elected as a Lok Sabha member in 2008. Thakur was re-elected to parliament in 2009 and again in 2014. J P Nadda (BJP)

Jagat Prakash

Nadda, who is regarded as the strongest candidate in BJP for the CM post, started out as a student leader in 1975 when he joined the then Sampurna Kranti movement started by Jayaprakas­h Narayan (JP) against Indira Gandhi. He entered state politics in 1993. He served stints as the minister holding forest, environmen­t and science and technology minister from 2007-2010. He was then appointed as BJP’s national general secretary. He was inducted as health minister in November 2014. DEMONETISA­TION AND GST LAW AND ORDER DEVELOPMEN­T AND INFRASTRUC­TURE ECONOMY & EMPLOYMENT AGRICULTUR­E

 ?? HT FILE ?? The Congress won 42.81% of the voteshare in the 2012 assembly polls while the BJP only managed 38.47%.
HT FILE The Congress won 42.81% of the voteshare in the 2012 assembly polls while the BJP only managed 38.47%.

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