The Borneo Post

India’s Modi faces key test as home state votes

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SURENDRANA­GAR, India: India’s Narendra Modi will face a key test of his popularity after a series of controvers­ial economic reforms when the state where he forged his political career goes to the polls on Saturday.

Modi built his reputation as an economic reformer in his prosperous home state of Gujarat, which boomed under his rule, attracting investment from around the globe.

But turning around the national economy has proved more difficult and the Modi government reforms have hurt the very constituen­cy of traders and small business owners who were his biggest supporters in the western state.

Analysts say voter anger over the reforms and a desire for change after 22 years of rule by Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party ( BJP) could boost the flagging fortunes of the opposition Congress Party.

That the Congress campaign has been fronted by Rahul Gandhi — the man likely to challenge Modi for the premieresh­ip in the next general election in 2019 — has only added to the pressure on the prime minister.

The election is seen as a chance for Gandhi to finally prove his mettle before he is named president of the party his mother Sonia has led for more than two decades.

“The Gujarat election’s national and psychologi­cal impact makes it all-important,” said Indian political commentato­r R Jagannatha­n.

“This state saw Modi’s rise, and if he gets humbled here, then even his allies will doubt if he can still win in 2019. An upset here will be unlike any other state.” Modi’s personal popularity remains high, with 88 per cent of Indians surveyed by the Pew Research Center earlier this year saying they viewed him positively.

Rahul, the 47-year- old scion of the Gandhi-Nehru dynasty that has led the centre-left Congress Party for much of its history, trails behind him on just 58 per cent. But the poll preceded the introducti­on in July of a new nationwide goods and services tax that has poleaxed small businesses in India, creating widespread anger.

That came just months after a currency ban aimed at tacking widespread tax fraud that created a months-long cash shortage and economists say the two major reforms have hit India’s growth.

Gujarat has seen major protests, particular­ly around the city of Surat, home to textile and diamond trading industries that employ tens of thousands of people.

Manoj Agarwal, who heads a local textile traders’ associatio­n, said they had been hard hit by the chaotic implementa­tion of the new goods and services tax.

“It has hurt all of us, particular­ly the smaller ones who’re being squeezed out under the fresh tax and paperwork burden,” he told AFP.

Another threat to Modi’s dominance comes from two prominent groups — the Patidars, who make up almost 14 per cent of Gujarat’s 43 million voters, and the lowest Dalit caste. The Patidars, a relatively well-off caste of farmers and traders, came out in force to support Modi in previous polls.

But their 24-year- old firebrand leader Hardik Patel is a fierce opponent of Modi who regularly attracts tens of thousands of supporters to his rallies.

Although at 24 he is a year too young to stand for election in India, Patel has played a key role in the election with his calls for preferenti­al access to government jobs and education for his caste. — AFP

 ??  ?? Modi (centre) waveing on his arrival to address a political rally at Surendrana­gar. — AFP photo
Modi (centre) waveing on his arrival to address a political rally at Surendrana­gar. — AFP photo

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