Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

KCR’S early election gamble in Telangana put to the test

- HT Correspond­ent

HYDERABAD/MAHBUBNAGA­R/WARANGAL: It was the most unlikely pairing that defined the Telangana election. On Wednesday, Congress president Rahul Gandhi and Andhra Pradesh chief minister N Chandrabab­u Naidu held a joint rally where they attacked both PM Narendra Modi and caretaker CM K Chandrasek­har Rao for shattering the ‘dreams’ people had when Telangana was created five years ago.

And thus culminated a journey that had begun with Gandhi and Naidu walking out of the former’s house in Delhi to declare they would be allies: the formation of the Maha Kootami (Grand Alliance that also comprises the Communist Party of India and the Telangana Jana Samithi). Together, the two leaders - with their allies - made the December 7 polls far more competitiv­e than anyone had thought. The incumbent, KCR, as the CM is popularly called, perhaps realises the challenge. After spending the past month criss-crossing the state, he spent the final day of campaign in his own constituen­cy of Gajwel.

KCR had decided to dissolve the assembly early. The Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS) chief had perhaps calculated that with a fragmented opposition, the sheer weight of his own personalit­y, his governance record and party strength, the election would be a walkover, and give him time to play a larger role in 2019. Whether the gamble will pay off will be clear only on December 11.

The Telangana assembly has 119 seats. In 2014,the TRS won 63 seats with a vote share of 34%. But it won over legislator­s from other parties, primarily Congress and Telugu Desam Party (TDP), and eventually grew to 90 seats. The Congress won 24% of the vote share, and TDP - then in partnershi­p with BJP - won 14%. So by the logic of arithmetic, the Maha Kootami believes that it has the numerical edge.

What adds to its confidence is local anti-incumbency. The TRS has repeated most of its legislator­s. The TRS believes its wide margin gives it enough cushion. Even if there is a slide, the party has to lose over 30 seats to be pushed out of power. It is also banking on the support of the AIMIM, the influentia­l Muslim party of Hyderabad.

As the campaign ended, two broad themes became clear identity, and welfare and jobs.

The 2014 election, right after the state was formed, was an emotive one, for a long and cherished demand had just been met. KCR has sought to recreate the same emotions, by both claiming that people should reward those who struggled for statehood and by pointing to Naidu’s presence as proof that ‘outsiders’ - code for those from Andhra Pradesh want to control Telangana politics. But the Telangana card got partly neutralise­d by Sonia Gandhi’s successful speech where she called Telangana her child and Rahul Gandhi’s repeated assertions that UPA decided to create the state.

The second broad theme is welfare. KCR believes a range of concession­s and services he has offered to citizens will see the TRS home. The Maha Kootami has upped the ante on welfare too with the Congress alleging KCR did not meet his promises. The Maha Kootami has also claimed that KCR has failed on job creation and instead promised that a lakh young people will be given jobs within a year of it coming to power.

As India’s newest state heads to polls, it is this mix of a complex arithmetic and campaign themes that will define the elections. JASOL: This township in Rajasthan’s mineral-rich Barmer district has had two celebrated sons: one a politician, the other a war hero. BJP veteran Jaswant Singh was India’s minister for defense and finance; his cousin, Lt General Hanut Singh the hero of the 1971 Indo-pak battle of Basantar in Punjab.

Neither of them used the Jasol surname which Jaswant’s son Manvendra Singh, a member of the outgoing assembly, has started using. Elected from Barmer’s Sheo in 2013 on the BJP ticket, he has since joined the Congress and is the party’s candidate against chief minister Vasundhara Raje at Jhalrapata­n in the Hadoti region.

Jasol is part of the assembly constituen­cy called Pachpadara where Manvendra held the massively attended swabhimaan rally to seek his constituen­ts’ view on his plans to quit the BJP. In that sense, he has earned the suffix Jasol, as his community’s aspiring political face.

The commonly shared view in the state’s political circles is that he has committed hara-kiri by agreeing to fight Raje on her turf. These perception­s are based on the argument that he has excluded himself from the Barmer equation by moving out of Marwar to the Hadoti region.

The inference makes sense. The journalist-turned-politician won the Barmer seat by a big margin in 2004, defeating Col Sona Ram of the Congress who’s now the sitting BJP MP. In 2014, the latter defeated Manvendra’s father Jaswant Singh, who contested as an Independen­t and the Congress’s Harish Chaudhary in the Lok Sabha elections.

Interestin­gly, it was Chaudhary who wrested the seat from Manvendra in the 2009 polls. He and Sona Ram are contesting the upcoming assembly polls in the district: from Barmer and Baytu respective­ly where the contest is close.

Among the many reasons that caused Manvendra to exit the BJP are Raje’s proximity to Sona Ram and her strained ties with Jaswant Singh. Regardless of the outcome in Jhalrapata­n, his potential to emerge as the leader

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