The Hindu (Kochi)

It’s national perspectiv­e vs local issues in this hill seat

- E.M. Manoj

The novelty of Congress leader Rahul Gandhi contesting the 2019 Lok Sabha elections from a second seat, Wayanad, catapulted this hill constituen­cy, spread across Wayanad, Kozhikode, and Malappuram districts, into the national limelight. The novelty factor may have withered away, but his landslide victory of over 4.3 lakh votes over Left Democratic Front candidate P.P. Suneer is still etched in the electoral history of Wayanad.

Now, as the political stage is set anew, the Left Democratic Front has fielded Annie Raja, general secretary of the National Federation of Indian Women and national executive member of the Communist Party of India, to challenge Mr. Gandhi’s dominance.

The Bharatiya Janata Party surprised observers by nominating its State unit president K. Surendran as its candidate. The party hopes to shake up the status quo in spite of it having little stake in the constituen­cy. In the previous election, Thushar Vellappall­y, president of the Bharath Dharma Jana Sena, a BJP ally, managed to secure only 7.25% of the votes.

The prospects of two formidable contenders from the INDIA bloc facing off, alongside the State president of a ruling party at the Centre, transforms Wayanad’s electionee­ring into a threeway battle.

This time, Mr. Gandhi is in the fray after the two editions of his yatra — Bharat Jodo Yatra and Bharat Jodo Nyay Yatra. Besides, he had successful­ly fought a legal battle in which the Supreme Court granted a stay on his conviction in a criminal defamation case .

While Ms. Raja is running for the first time in the Lok Sabha polls, Mr. Surendran had contested twice from Kasaragod and last time from Pathanamth­itta.

Mr. Gandhi had secured huge leads in all the seven Assembly segments of the United Democratic Front bastion n the range of 50,000 to 70,000 votes in 2019. The late Congress leader M.I. Shanavas had won this seat by a margin of over 1.5 lakh votes since its inception in 2009, but his victory margin had come down to 20,000 in 2014.

The constituen­cy comprises three Assembly segments in Wayanad — Kalpetta, Mananthava­dy, and Sulthan Bathery; Thiruvamba­dy in Kozhikode; and Eranad, Nilambur, and Wandoor in Malappuram. In the 2021 Assembly polls, the LDF won Mananthava­dy, Thiruvamba­dy and Nilambur and the UDF Sulthan Bathery, Kalpetta, Eranad, and Wandoor.

Minorities

Muslims account for 46% of the electorate, Hindus 40%, Christians 13%, and others less than 1% in the Wayanad constituen­cy.

Recurring humanwildl­ife conflicts, night traffic ban in the Bandipur Tiger Reserve on National Highway 766 and the Mananthava­dyBavali interState highway, dearth of medical facilities, delay in materialis­ing the NilamburNa­njangud railway line, and alternativ­e roads to Wayanad dominate the poll scenario. Wayanad’s electorate includes 7,05,128 men, 7,24,637 women, and 14 transgende­r voters.

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