Millennium Post

OPPOSITION’S BY-POLL BOOST

The by-poll results have tilted in favour of a unified opposition. The momentum for 2019 is gradually gathering pace

- AMULYA GANGULI (The views expressed are strictly personal)

The writing is on the wall. It is now obvious that a united opposition can defeat the ruling BJP in the upcoming Lok Sabha elections of 2019. Just as much has been clear from the Kairana and Noorpur by-election results which are a continuati­on of the antibjp trends noted earlier in Gorakhpur and Phulpur.

These outcomes are of particular interest because they pertain to Uttar Pradesh where the BJP won 71 of the 80 Parliament­ary seats in 2014. The party’s dependence, therefore, on the need to put up a good show in the state is obvious if it wants to win the next general elections. However, Kairana and Noorpur have been a dampener for the party. The results in these constituen­cies must also be dishearten­ing for UP Chief Minister, Yogi Adityanath who is regarded as BJP’S poster boy.

It will not do well for BJP to describe the alliance between RLD, SP, BSP, and Congress in Kairana as an opportunis­t move because it had previously constitute­d similar tie-ups in Goa, Manipur and Meghalaya. Surely, what is opportunis­m for BJP’S opponents cannot be deemed “principled” for the lotus party at the Centre.

What the verdicts in UP have also highlighte­d is the failure of BJP’S communal agenda which again came to the fore during the sudden raising by the saffron cadres of the issue of a portrait of Mohammed Ali Jinnah, which has been on display on the walls of the historic Aligarh Muslim University since 1938. If BJP’S polarisati­on tactic failed, so did the positive idea of Narendra Modi’s charisma which could not influence the Kairana and Noorpur results despite the Prime Minister’s rallies and roadshows in the nearby areas.

Clearly, the promise of ‘vikas’ is not working either because developmen­t is not taking place, at least where the question of employment is concerned, or that the claims about growth are seen as a ‘jumla’ or a deceitful tactic since the saffron brotherhoo­d’s real focus is not on the economy but on creating communal rifts as could be seen from BJP MP Vinay Katiyar’s observatio­n that the Muslims have no right to live in India and should go to the neighbouri­ng Islamic states of Pakistan or Bangladesh.

If the Karnataka outcome showed that Modi’s 21 rallies were not enough to swing an election in BJP’S favour, the UP verdict was a further confirmati­on of the possibilit­y that the Modi magic is fading.

It is not only BJP which appears to be in trouble, even its ally in Bihar, the Janata Dal (United), must be realising the mistake it made when it switched its allegiance from the “secular” maha gathbandha­n (grand alliance) to the not particular­ly secular BJP.

If Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar wanted to get away from the dominance of RJD leader, Laloo Prasad Yadav, it was a miscalcula­tion in the sense that he came under BJP’S domination instead which has apparently not gone down well with not only the minorities but also the people of the state in general who do not like to see their Chief Minister being at the BJP’S beck and call. Hence, RJD’S success in Jokihat, which is also the third successive victory of RJD in recent months after its successes in Araria and Jehanabad.

There is little doubt that the Jokihat result will induce rethinking in the Nitish Kumar camp – not only about the ties with BJP but also about his favourite prohibitio­n policy as it evidently hasn’t enhanced his popularity.

BJP, on its part, will draw some comfort from its success in Palghar over Shiv Sena. But what it may be worried about is the possibilit­y of Shiv Sena joining the “secular” parties in an anti-bjp formation, at least in Maharashtr­a, if not in the rest of the country.

The reason why there may be such an unlikely combinatio­n is that it will not be easy for Shiv Sena to overturn its strident anti-bjp rhetoric of the past several years and makeup with its senior partner in Maharashtr­a. With NCP faring well in Bhandara-gondia, it may not be entirely fanciful to see a formal or informal Congress-ncp-shiv Sena alliance in the state.

If anti-incumbency saw the defeats suffered by Yogi Adityanath’s government in UP, it had no impact on the government­s in West Bengal and Kerala where Trinamool Congress and CPI(M) have won in Maheshtala and Chengannur, respective­ly. The former’s success shows that the countrywid­e outrage over the violence during the recent panchayat elections in West Bengal has had no effect on Mamata Banerjee’s popular image. Similarly, the unfortunat­e CPI(M)-RSS clashes and murders in Kerala has left the Pinarayi Vijayan government unaffected.

The lesson which the opposition at the national level will have to learn is that the anti-bjp forces must swim together if they do not want to sink. It remains to be seen whether the Janata Dal (Secular)-congress government in Karnataka will realise that it cannot give any impression of being an unstable combine even if the two parties do not appear to be natural allies.

If the Karnataka outcome showed that Modi’s 21 rallies were not enough to swing an election in BJP’S favour, the UP verdict was a further confirmati­on of the possibilit­y that Modi magic is on the wane

 ??  ?? The by-poll results, particular­ly in UP, will stagger BJP [Photo: PTI]
The by-poll results, particular­ly in UP, will stagger BJP [Photo: PTI]
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