Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

NDA’s reform agenda to receive fresh momentum

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: VERDICT EMPOWERS MODI GOVT TO BRING IN REFORMS IN LABOUR SECTOR AND CARRY ON WITH IMPLEMENTA­TION OF THE DIRECT TAX CODE, RESOLUTION OF NPAS AND THE FRDI BILL

The BJP’s electoral victory is likely to give fresh impetus to the National Democratic Alliance government’s reforms agenda even as the results might propel disparate and desperate opposition parties to make a fresh bid to cobble up a mahagathba­ndhan or grand alliance at the national level.

The results reinforced the widely held view that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s popularity and credence outweigh any reservatio­ns or apprehensi­on that some people might have about his bold policy decisions. The opposition Congress, for instance, sought to tap into the perceived disgruntle­ment among a section of traders over the goods and services tax (GST) and last year’s demonetisa­tion drive. But the BJP swept the polls in Surat, the epicentre of agitations over GST.

Gujarat also went to polls at a time when the opposition parties were feeding off apprehensi­ons about the interests of small depositors being compromise­d by the financial resolution and deposit insurance bill. The Oppocamp sition also accused the NDA government of favouring a few industrial­ists by converting their bank loans into non-performing assets.

Monday’s poll verdict came as a repudiatio­n of these naysayers as people chose to repose faith in the Prime Minister. It could embolden the NDA government to eschew its diffidence about some urgently required reforms in the labour sector and also carry on with a host of others such as the direct tax code, resolution of NPAs and the FRDI bill.

Opposition leaders interprete­d the Gujarat results as a win-win situation for all parties. Newly appointed Congress president Rahul Gandhi, for instance, emerged as a doughty leader who could take the fight to the BJP’s on Modi’s and BJP president Amit Shah’s home turf. The Congress is expected to project the gain of over a dozen seats in Gujarat to declare Gandhi’s arrival as a leader who could hold his own against the saffron juggernaut.

There was near-unanimity among political observers and leaders that but for Modi’s blitzkrieg the BJP would have found it difficult to beat 19 years of anti-incumbency in Gujarat. With the BJP in power in 19 states now, the party will be facing double antiincumb­ency in a majority of states and at the Centre when it seeks a renewed mandate for Modi in 2019.

Congressme­n believe that Gandhi’s ability to forge alliances with young leaders representi­ng different caste groups—Hardik Patel, Alpesh Thakor, and Jignesh Mevani— in Gujarat proved his ability to play alliance politics at the national level, too.

For now, there might be a pause, though temporary, to the rancorous debate on the state of the economy, which could enable the government push through some contentiou­s legislatio­n in the current Winter session.

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