Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

How eliminatin­g the ego helped the Opposition

The pursuit of power feeds on the ego.Rahul Gandhi’s conduct in Karnataka is, therefore, atypical in politics

- GOPALKRISH­NA GANDHI

As the anointment­s of office settle on HD Kumaraswam­y, he knows that he has become more than the chief minister of Karnataka. The timing of the Karnataka election has given him, adventitio­usly, this national dimension. Coming just after the one in Gujarat and just before the ones due in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisga­rh, the Karnataka poll became a dress rehearsal for those and, more significan­tly, for the general election in 2019. The rehearsal that gave no clear verdict did hold one clear lesson to the Congress and the JD(S) in Karnataka: coordinate or perish. And one clear lesson to the Congress and all non-BJP parties in the country: unite or face another defeat in 2019.

The Congress’s reaching out to the son of the JD(S) chief H D Deve Gowda and forming a coalition had to be hailed by parties across the country, from the CPI-M to the Trinamool, the AAP to the Telugu Desam, the National Conference to the DMK. It was inevitable that Kumaraswam­y should become a ‘Kashmir to Kanyakumar­i’ mascot. A BJP defeat in 2019 requires electoral coordinati­on by non-BJP parties and, today, that coordinati­on requires such a mascot.

A similar hailing had occurred last year around the son of another regional leader with a national profile — the DMK chief M Karunanidh­i’s chosen heir, M K Stalin. Leaders of parties from across the country, including Nitish Kumar, who was later to move to the NDA, gathered on the Marina sands to celebrate father and son, very like they did last Wednesday at the Vidhan Soudha in Bengaluru. That coming together did not go in vain. Opposition unity at the time of the elections of the President and Vice President last year could not have changed the outcome of those. But it showed that the Opposition, if it wants to, knows how to hold together.

The recently-concluded Gujarat elections, and the by-elections in Uttar Pradesh showed that when opposition forces group, the notional 69% that did not vote for the BJP in 2014 becomes real. Jignesh Mevani’s election to the Gujarat Assembly from Vadgam, Gujarat, in December 2017 as an independen­t candidate backed by the Congress and AAP showed how the BJP could be routed by a consolidat­ed opposition in its own fortress. He polled some 20,000 votes more than the BJP’s Harkhabhai. Jignesh’s charisma plus the Congress and AAP vote was unbeatable. Likewise, Pravin Kumar Nishad of the SP winning the Gorakhpur Lok Sabha by-election in March this year over the BJP’s Upendra Dutt Shukla was quite simply because the BSP had backed him. The SP-BSP combine was invincible. Nishad polled 4,56,513 against Shukla’s 4,35,632. The Congress’s Surheeta Kareem polled 18,858. If the Congress too had supported him, Nishad would have won more comfortabl­y. There are other examples as well, but Vadgam and Gorakhpur stand out.

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