The Sunday Guardian

Hard times for profession­al poll managers

‘The personal charm of political leaders and ideology of parties make an impact on voters.’

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Sethi and Shubrastha Shikha spearheade­d the poll campaign and succeeded.

Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar then hired Kishor for the Assembly elections in 2015, which saw a grand victory for the Grand Alliance of RJD, JDU and Congress, following which the Congress roped him in for managing poll campaigns in UP, Punjab and Uttarakhan­d. Though Kishor got success in Bihar, and later in Punjab, his strategy failed in UP and Uttarakhan­d.

“The mixed results have led us to conclude that profession­al poll managers are no guarantee for winning elec- tions. The personal charm and aura of political leaders, booth level mobilisati­on of voters, policies and ideology of parties are ultimately the factors which together make an impact in the minds of voters,” said a PR official. According to Dilip Cherian, a senior political campaign advisor, poll management is a complex job. “It requires surveys, media management and involvemen­t of purely political persons who could mobilise people and take charge of booth management. Some people thought that everything could be outsourced to one person, but that did not work,” he told The Sunday Guardian.

In UP, Akhilesh Yadav roped in Harvard University professor, Steve Jarding, to help the Samajwadi Party design a campaign for the elections in UP. But it was the BJP which won the elections. It was due to the charisma of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and achievemen­ts of the BJP-led government at the Centre.

Recently the YSR Congress of Jaganmohan Reddy hired the Prashant Kishor-headed Indian Political Action Committee (I-PAC) to help the party come to power in Andhra Pradesh, where elections are due in May 2019.

A JDU leader added: “Everybody gave credit to Prashant Kishor for the victory in the 2015 Assembly elections. But in the byelection­s earlier, in which the JDU and RJD contested together, the alliance had won without him.”

According to a BJP leader, “packaging alone cannot help sell a product”. “The ‘product’ has to be good for it to be sold. As regards the BJP, we feel that reaching out to people at the grassroots is the only way to achieve success. Therefore, our party president Amit Shah has been working hard to strike a chord with each and every voter,” he said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Participan­ts in raincoats take part in a full dress rehearsal for Independen­ce Day parade, in Kolkata, on Saturday.
REUTERS Participan­ts in raincoats take part in a full dress rehearsal for Independen­ce Day parade, in Kolkata, on Saturday.

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