The Sunday Guardian

BJP GOES BACK TO BASICS, STARTS ENERGISING BOOTH WORKERS

- RAKESH RANJAN NEW DELHI

The Bharatiya Janata Party is going back to the basics after being defeated in the Assembly elections of Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisga­rh. The BJP leadership is motivating its booth level workers and strengthen­ing its organisati­onal structure at the lowest level, a move that helped it immensely in the 2014 general elections and many more Assembly elections that followed.

Taking charge will be Prime Minister Narendra Modi and BJP president Amit Shah, who will hold one-on-one interactio­n with lakhs of booth level workers in the run-up to the polls. The idea is to boost the morale of the workers who play a crucial role in identifyin­g the voters and bringing them to the polling booth.

While Prime Minister Modi has been interactin­g with workers through the NaMo app, Shah will camp in various states and hold meetings with booth workers. In Delhi, Amit Shah will interact with over 13,000 BJP workers on Sunday, the aim essentiall­y being to strengthen the basic party structure.

The move comes in the wake of the party’s defeat in the three states, where, despite a strong presence of its cadre, the BJP failed to mobilise voters in its support. A large chunk of BJP voters from the Baniya community and upper caste Hindus voted against the BJP, which led to the party’s defeat.

Modi and Shah have already told BJP MPs in a recent meeting to interact with local workers and address their grievances. Sources said booth workers, during their interactio­n with Shah in Delhi, will also put forward their suggestion­s that would be considered by the top BJP leadership.

It may be noted that appointing “booth in-charge” and “panna pramukh (page supervisor)” was Amit Shah’s idea in the 2014 Lok Sabha elections. During the 2014 elections, Shah was in charge of BJP in Uttar Pradesh where the party won

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