The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

On Gujarat street, refrain once again is for ‘ jaisa chal raha hai’

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knows him. That was his first election anyway. We tell the people about the persecutio­n he has faced by the BJP,” says Italia. Now on bail, Vasava has been booked in a case of alleged assault on a forest officer, as a result of which for over three months he could not set foot in his constituen­cy.

The AAP has joined forces with Congress in Surat to appeal against the Returning Officer’s decision to disqualify the Congress candidate, but it has barely concealed disdain for its ally’s organisati­onal capabiliti­es. On the impact of Rahul Gandhi’s nyay yatra, which passed through Bharuch, says Italia: “Don’t ask about yatra impact, ask what Congress leaders and cadres did after that.” Asking for more — but ‘ Modi does the work’

Congress does not seem to be reciprocat­ing AAP support on the Surat matter in political kind, at ground level, at least not visibly.

At the joint Opposition rally held in Delhi’s Ramlila Maidan, top Congress leaders shared the stage with AAP to denounce the arrest of Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal by the ED. But in district headquarte­r Vyara, where Rahul’s nyay yatra made a halt, the father- son Congress duo of

Amarsinh and Siddharth Chaudhary — the father is a former MLA and MP, the son is fighting this election from the tribal constituen­cy of Bardoli — deny that Kejriwal’s arrest is an issue, as they rock gently at home on a traditiona­l swing.

“You ask the AAP people ( on Kejriwal’s arrest),” says Siddharth. “Yahan pe issue hi nahi hai ( it is not an issue here).” The Congress will win, they say, because the people have understood they have made a mistake, the people have tired of the BJP.

Given the BJP will to dominate, in a state of visible developmen­t and visible polarisati­on, a Congress that is steadily leaking into the BJP when it is not passing on the task of defeating it to the people, and an embattled AAP, it is not surprising perhaps that a majority of the people The Indian Express spoke to on the Gujarat street said: “Jaisa chal raha hai ( let the present dispensati­on go on)” — even as they expressed particular discontent­s and specific anxieties.

In Songadh taluka of Tapi district, tribal activist Deepak Gamit says that this time, the BJP’S “400 paar” slogan has stirred up worries: “( Christian) tribals fear that they will do away with Article 25, the right to freedom of religion.”

“Land is being taken away from tribals because of the design of projects in the BJP regime... how can they be trusted not to change the Constituti­on to bring in ek rashtra, ek dharam ( one nation, one religion), if they can change even a CM overnight,” says Pinabhai Manilal Gamit, in a village in Vyara’s fringe. And then, both say, there is price rise or mehengai.

But in village Moti Naroli in Surat district, Rakesh Balwan, also a tribal, says that while the Modi government is not working for the poor, he cannot vote elsewhere — because “Hindu ka raj khatam ho jayega, musalman raj aa jayega ( Hindu rule will come to an end)”. Modi has controlled the bomb blasts, he says, and the terrorists.

In the same village, a group of Rajputs articulate their anger against Parshottam Rupala, the BJP’S Rajkot candidate, who has made a controvers­ial statement about their community — while swearing loyalty to Modi. “Modi is Ram, Amit Shah is Hanuman, Rupala is Meghnad… Modi is Amitabh Bachchan,” says Ranjitsinh Vasi.

If the so- called Kshatriya rebellion against the BJP sounds more like a lover’s tiff, many young voters also mostly give the benefit of doubt to the BJP.

Outside Surat’s Kavi Narmad Central Library, Maarisha Khetan says that she worries that “democracy kam ho rahi hai ( democracy is shrinking), a sitting CM has been arrested... To keep the powerful accountabl­e, competitio­n should be healthy”. But, she says, “Modi has made a place for himself, there is no alternativ­e.” She counts out BJP “achievemen­ts”: “PM awas, foreign policy, a better face of India abroad, Ram mandir”.

“I was too young when Congress was last in power, and Kejriwal is in jail, how will he run a government,” says Palak Asopa. “BJP is misusing power, but the BJP is also working,” says Sukoon Khetan, who talks admiringly about “Yogi ji, Amit sir, and Modi ji”.

“I went to visit the Statue of Unity and for me it represents how jobs can be created by private sector companies,” says Mahendra Singh Bhandari, who studies at Bharuch’s KJ Polytechni­c.

In village Juna Chhapra, also in Bharuch, a flood came in September 2023, and devastated 20- 25 homes overnight. “Last time I voted for the BJP, now I don't care,” says Bhavnaben Vasava, whose home was one of those ravaged by the waters. Says Sureshbhai Vasava, “I want change, but I cannot bring change on my own, and then Modi has also worked, kaam karta hai Modi.”

In a small group of small and medium scale businessme­n in Vadodara city, who don’t wish to be named, the talk is about how absolute power corrupts absolutely. “What was the fault of the voters of Surat, whose right to vote has been snatched suddenly?” Corruption on the BJP government’s watch, they say, has spiked. In Vadodara, the BJP faced internal challenge, changed the candidate and gave a ticket to someone who does not belong to the constituen­cy. “You are taking Vadodara for granted, because it is your safe seat.” And yet, the consensus is, “there is no strong option on the other side”.

In an election with no big emotive issue, and several scattered discontent­s, the BJP slogan of “400 paar" still evokes disbelief — it’s like the magician who says “gaadi ko gayab kar doonga, wahan se ladki nikal loonga”, says AAP’S Italia — but few give a chance to the Opposition.

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