The Asian Age

A first: PM, Prez, V-P all from the RSS stable

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The name of the BJP’s candidate for vice-president, M. Venkaiah Naidu, Union minister and an old RSS hand from Andhra Pradesh, was announced on Monday even as the President of India was being elected. Ram Nath Kovind, BJP’s candidate for the presidency, is thought to be so far ahead of the Opposition candidate Meira Kumar in the electoral college votes that Prime Minister Narendra Modi offered his congratula­tions to Mr Kovind “in advance”.

When names of the two candidates first emerged, pro-BJP voices held that Mr Kovind was a top-class personalit­y and had the necessary qualificat­ions. In light of this, it was argued, the Congress should not have offered a contest although Ms Kumar’s personalit­y or qualificat­ions were not questioned, and that a unanimousl­y elected first citizen might have been the ideal outcome. In any case, their argument ran, why contest when defeat is certain.

From the start, this was a questionab­le argument, meant to obscure Mr Kovind’s deep RSS background. The so-called dalit-versus-dalit race was also a diversion promoted to further the same objective and many non-suspecting individual­s bought into it. The respective merits of the two candidates were also brought into the equation by others.

Ms Kumar and Congress chief Sonia Gandhi best summed up the reality by declaring it “a contest of ideologies”. The expression does call a spade a spade. The facts are clear. For the first time since Independen­ce, the stamp of Hindutva would be left in Rashtrapat­i Bhavan at the same time as a Hindutva leader is Prime Minister. This can conceivabl­y raise doubts about whether the present Constituti­on, to which Hindutva votaries have been opposed from the beginning, can be preserved, in its spirit.

When an electoral challenge is offered in such a situation, and in the context of severe electoral disadvanta­ge, it signifies that voices which question the ruling establishm­ent and its presiding deities are alive. The critical importance of this for a democracy can hardly be overstated.

It is interestin­g that when the Congress and its Opposition partners named Gopalkrish­na Gandhi, the distinguis­hed grandson of Mahatma Gandhi and former governor of West Bengal, the argument of supporting a good, solid candidate did not issue from the supporters of the RSS-BJP establishm­ent. It was self-evident that it was hard to think of a more suitable candidate than Mr Gandhi, a sensitive writer, a former civil servant and diplomat, and a man of probity whose intellectu­al personalit­y challenges the Hindutva vision of India. However, for ideologica­l and political reasons alone, the BJP’s choice fell on one of the most steeled of RSS-background leaders, whose accomplish­ments outside of BJP politics are, alas, yet to be advertised.

The country will soon have the PM, President, and vice-president, all from the RSS stables, an extraordin­ary achievemen­t for the religious far Right.

For ideologica­l and political reasons alone, the BJP’s choice fell on one of the most steeled of RSS-background leaders, whose accomplish­ments outside of BJP politics are, alas, yet to be advertised

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