Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

All contradict­ions resolved, the hard work begins now

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CM’S AYODHYA VISIT CAME AND WENT WITHOUT MUCH REMARK BEYOND THE USUAL EXPECTATIO­NS

ANANDAN ON WEDNESDAY

One has to know if they mean it because the shiv Sena’s history speaks quite the opposite.

The fact, however, is if Raut and Uddhav Thackeray were not of the conciliato­ry kind, the Maha Vikas Aghadi government in Maharashtr­a would never have come into being and on that count the party needs to be given an opportunit­y to shed its past baggage and adopt a more mainstream approach to politics that should raise no doubts about its secular credential­s.

It is only becoming apparent now but the recasting of the Shiv Sena in a less unsavoury mould that would be more acceptable to those wary of its previously lumpen image began years ago, when Uddhav Thackeray realised he could not find comparable candidates vis-à-vis other political parties to represent the Shiv Sena in Parliament. From poaching from other political parties to building his own set of committed intellectu­als, like Raut, has been a long haul, but the party seems to have finally arrived where he wanted it and it is unlikely now that they will jeopardise everything they have built over the past two decades or more to trip themselves up in the conflict between ideology and government.

Now most of the tough issues, including like that of the citizenshi­p amendment law, have been done and dusted for the government. What remains is for Uddhav Thackeray to return the party to its original moorings – the aspiration­al youth who may, this century, be looking for rather more than jobs just as turners, loaders and fitters and scale the heights that other youngsters across the country are aspiring to.

That is going to be the real test of the party’s mettle and could make or break it at the end of its term in government. Ayodhya was a cakewalk by comparison.

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