Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

The shift in PM Modi’s strategy

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Beyond immediate polls, he is conscious of the need to come across as caring and benevolent when it comes to the poor and farmers ith Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi, expect the unexpected: Unpredicta­bility is an offensive armour for a crafty leader who likes to keep his opponents constantly guessing. This is why, two weeks since he rather dramatical­ly announced on Guru Nanak Jayanti that he was withdrawin­g the contentiou­s farm laws, laced with an apology, no one is still quite sure yet just why the PM finally relented.

Those who have observed Modi’s politics closely will recognise that repentance has never been part of the leader’s well-cultivated, strongman image. The truth is, this isn’t about a sudden change of heart, but a deliberate change in strategy.

Which begs the question: Why did Modi allow a farmers’ agitation — that was primarily limited to three states in north India — to force him to publicly

Wretreat?

The most plausible explanatio­n lies in the fact that, as an astute politician, Modi recognised that the protests could prove electorall­y detrimenta­l ahead of a string of assembly elections, especially in the politicall­y critical state of Uttar Pradesh (UP). Elections are Modi’s “go-to” oxygen cylinder. Even as PM, he has plunged into every electoral battle with the same zeal that he once showed when riding pillion to put up posters at night for an Ahmedabad municipal corporatio­n election in the mid-1980s. But while electoral concerns might explain the timing, they don’t quite reflect the manner in which the PM appears to have personally acknowledg­ed his failure in not being able to push through the farm laws. After all, Modi could easily have got any of his Cabinet colleagues to step up and take the blame for misreading the mood of the agitating farmers.

If Harsh Vardhan as health minister was made to pay the price for the Centre’s failure in anticipati­ng the second Covid-19 wave, agricultur­e minister Narendra Singh Tomar could have been made the scapegoat for the farm law debacle. That Modi chose to accept the responsibi­lity reveals a strategic shift, howsoever momentary, in leadership style — from an imperious supreme leader to humble pradhan sewak. It is almost as if the seemingly indestruct­ible “Big Boss” is trying to rebrand himself as an occasional­ly fallible leader, if only to remove the sting from his opponents’ prime criticism of being an arrogant autocrat. Recall also how the previous “suit boot ki sarkar” critique perhaps influenced the 2016 demonetisa­tion decision and restored the PM’S credential­s as an anti-corruption crusader.

This time, the apology can be seen as a tactical move linked to refurbishi­ng the PM’S self-image as a protector of the garib kisan (poor farmer). Go through any major Modi speech on the campaign trail and he almost always refers to his commitment to the garib kisan. Modi could afford to antagonise India’s wealthy with his demonetisa­tion gambit; he could even anger the middle-class by allowing fuel prices to climb. A large section of India’s rich and neo-middle class can, after all, be lured by a promised Hindutva haven that taps into sharp religious emotions.

But for the wider national constituen­cy of the poor and farmers, the PM needs to be seen as a caring and benevolent patriarch above all else.

Ahead of the 2019 elections, the launch of the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi was an attempt to woo farmers with a minimum income support scheme. But this pro-kisan image took a hit when farmers were barricaded at the Delhi borders with iron spikes and barbed wires.

Some people even attempted to demonise the agitators as “terrorists”, a toxic campaign that only invited a backlash, especially among the farmers of Punjab. By the end, the battle was unfortunat­ely no longer about the nitty-gritty of the farm laws, but about the optics of being perceived as “kisan virodhi” (anti-farmer), something which the PM could ill afford.

This is where the viral video of protesting farmers being run over in UP’S Lakhimpur Kheri by a speeding jeep on October 3, was arguably the turning point. The alleged involvemen­t of a Union minister’s son in the gruesome incident was a major embarrassm­ent. In a digital age, where news knows no geographic­al boundaries, it angered farmers in areas far removed from the original conflict zone. That a Rakesh Tikait-like figure was now attracting sizeable crowds even in Maharashtr­a showed that the Modi government could no longer afford to take the “andolan-jeevi” farmer protesters for granted.

In a sense, the government, secure in its massive parliament­ary majority, has paid a price for not taking the farm agitation seriously enough for way too long. In the end, all the PM could do is cut his reputation­al losses. The repeal of the laws, therefore, isn’t about addressing the farmers’ anxieties, but rather because, in politics, there is always one inner voice that no leader can ignore: The sound of the election bugle.

Postscript: Just days before the farm laws repeal announceme­nt, a senior Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) leader reportedly met the PM to “persuade” him to reconsider his stand. Then, Modi allegedly brushed aside the apprehensi­ons by insisting that the new laws were a matter of conviction for him. What suddenly changed may seem mystifying to Modi watchers, but often ideologica­l conviction in Indian politics must cede ground to electoral expediency.

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