Hindustan Times (Noida)

BJP banks on Dhami to lead the U’khand election battle

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: In Uttarakhan­d, where it faces anti-incumbency and a slew of charges from mismanagem­ent of the Covid-19 pandemic to the failure in compensati­ng for job losses, the Bharatiya Janata Party is banking on chief minister Pushkar Singh Dhami to address doubts about governance deficit and leadership crisis ahead of the 2022 assembly polls.

The party is also hoping that with Dhami now in the saddle, the attention that the party drew for playing musical chairs with the chief ministers, which hinted at political instabilit­y, will be diverted. In March, the party replaced Trivendra Singh Rawat, who was in office for four years, with Tirath Singh Rawat who in turn was replaced by Dhami after four months of taking oath in July.

According to senior party leaders, following a recent round of meetings between the state and national leadership of the BJP chaired by party president JP Nadda, the CM was asked to sort out with speed governance issues in the last phase of the BJP’S five-year tenure.

The state government has been asked to address concerns about job losses, listen to the demand for land laws that restrict the purchase of land to locals, and mitigate public anger about constructi­on activities in the ecological­ly sensitive region, particular­ly the Char Dham road project.

“Because of the hilly terrain and the limited avenues for employment generation in the state, jobs is always a key concern in the elections. However, this time because of the pandemic there has been severe job losses. Tourism has been affected and an overall slump in

the economy has deepened the crisis. In such a scenario, people expect the government to step in and create more jobs,” said a state BJP functionar­y.

The party is hopeful that Dhami’s announceme­nt promising 22,000 jobs in various government department­s, increasing the salaries of government teachers and resumption of jobs on contract basis will shore up the party’s fortunes. “Even though the appointmen­ts will take about five to six months since the service commission has to be roped in, it will subside the anger to a large extent,” the leader quoted above said.

Another issue that has been simmering in the state that the CM has been asked to tackle right away is the issue of temple management through the Devasthana­m Board.

The new management model envisaged by Dhami’s predecesso­r Trivendra Singh Rawat was met with protest in the hill state and was given as a reason for his removal. While the government argued that the board was formed to administer and manage the properties of the temples including the four major centres of pilgrimage — Badrinath, Kedarnath, Gangotri and Yamunotri — the priests led a stir against it and still want it to be scrapped. The issue is also likely to figure prominentl­y in the elections early next year.

Earlier this week, Dhami had an hour-long meeting with a group of priests to assure them that the Devasthana­m Board that was created in 2019 to serve as a management board for 51 temples in the state would not impinge on their rights.

“Unlike his predecesso­rs (Trivendra Singh) who had rubbed people the wrong way, Dhami is young and possesses the quality of taking people along. He listens and reaches out, a quality that helps in keeping the party flock together,” said a second leader based in Delhi on condition of anonymity.

The leader, however, admitted that the party will have to think on its feet to counter the public perception about governance issues as the opposition has been quick to raise issues ranging from land laws to employment.

With AAP throwing its hat in the ring and promising subsidised amenities as it does in Delhi, the BJP is being forced to come up with matching incentives and ingenuity to counter the promised sops. Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal has promised up to 300 units of free electricit­y per month to every family in Uttarakhan­d and free electricit­y to the farmers.

The Congress, for its part, has stated that it will quash the amendments made to the Uttarakhan­d (Uttar Pradesh Zamindari Abolition and Land Reform Act, 1950) Amendment Act, 2018, that did away with a 12-acre ceiling on purchase of agricultur­al land for industrial purposes. Former CM Harish Rawat, too, has been vocal about the need for laws restrictin­g the sale and purchase of land to locals.

The BJP is also expecting the spate of landslides to snowball into a poll issue. As per details by the Uttarakhan­d government, there have been over 100 landslides in 2021 alone leading to loss of life and property.

 ??  ?? Pushkar Singh Dhami
Pushkar Singh Dhami

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