Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

The X factor in Karnataka

The JD(S) could decide the fate of the BJP, Congress in the state

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The Karnataka election campaign has picked up intensity. If Narendra Modi is speaking to party leaders and workers on video, Rahul Gandhi is doing roadshows. If Amit Shah is aggressive­ly building the party organisati­on down to the booth level, Chief Minister Siddaramai­ah has launched a campaign with very strong sense of regional assertion. The intensity of the campaign reflects the high stakes for both national parties in this poll. For the BJP, a win is necessary to counter the perception that the party is facing serious political challenges and discontent; it is also needed to enter the south, the one region where it has not been able to make a breakthrou­gh. For the Congress, a win is essential to counter the perception of decline, for the party is reduced to ruling only four Indian states. It will also boost Mr Gandhi’s leadership credential­s soon after he has taken over as president and give the party resources which are needed for the subsequent set of state elections and the general elections in 2019.

The outcome of the elections, however, may well depend on the third party in the fray. Erroneousl­y thought of as only a bipolar state, Karnataka has a third force in the form of the Janata Dal (Secular), led by former PM HD Deve Gowda and his son HD Kumaraswam­y. Reports from the state, and opinion polls, suggest that the contest is very close, the assembly could well be fragmented, and the JD(S) could emerge as a key swing force. The party hopes to win a substantia­l section of the Vokkaliga community; it has tied up with the BSP and hopes this will help them win a section of the Dalit vote; and, it is projecting itself as a secular party to win a section of the Muslim vote. This is precisely what the BJP is hoping too: for all these three segments otherwise have a stronger associatio­n with the Congress. Any split in Dalit, Muslim, and Vokkaliga votes helps the BJP. The Congress has, for this reason, been castigatin­g the JD(S) as a B team of the BJP.

In yet another quirk of Indian electoral politics, the fortunes of the two national parties will depend on the performanc­e of the third regional party. And that constitute­s the X factor in the Karnataka elections.

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