Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

India’s opposition challenge to Modi may be imploding

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(BBC) - In July, over two dozen Indian opposition parties formed a coalition to challenge the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) led by Narendra Modi in the upcoming general election.

Made up of the main opposition Congress and smaller, regional parties, the coalition cleverly named itself INDIA, an acronym for a rather florid Indian National Developmen­tal Inclusive Alliance.

The alliance’s success hinged on the allies’ ability to stick together and agree to a strategic seat-sharing arrangemen­t, ensuring a unified front against the BJP with a single primary candidate in each constituen­cy.

In India’s “first past the post” multiparty system where the winner takes it all, a fragmented opposition always benefits a ruling incumbent - in the 2019 general election, Mr Modi’s party received 37% of the popular ballot, but mopped up a whopping 303 of the 543 seats.

But barely six months after its birth, India’s motley opposition coalition is in disarray. The latest trigger was Nitish Kumar, a regional leader, exiting a state-level ruling coalition in the northern state of Bihar and re-joining the BJP. Mr Kumar had previously departed from a BJP-led alliance 18 months ago. Now the BJP will bank on Mr Kumar’s Janata Dal (United) party to pick up a majority of the state’s 40 seats.

Turncoats are not uncommon in India’s messy politics, but the defection of the doughty 72-yearold Mr Kumar, who was once touted as a potential future prime minister of an opposition coalition, came as a shock to many. “His departure is a big blow to the INDIA alliance. It also sends a signal that the alliance is not working,” says Gilles Verniers, a scholar of Indian politics.

That’s not all. Two regional leaders in the alliance, Mamata Banerjee of Trinamool Congress (TMC) in West Bengal and Arvind Kejriwal of Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) in Delhi and Punjab, have distanced themselves from the Congress and made it clear that they will go it alone in their respective states. In other words, minimal to no seat-sharing is expected in these states.

The turmoil in this infant alliance comes at a time when Mr Modi looks unstoppabl­e.

In December, the BJP swept Chhattisga­rh, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh in key state elections in India’s sprawling Hindispeak­ing heartland. In January, Mr Modi appeared to mark the unofficial launch of the BJP’s election campaign for the April and May polls by inaugurati­ng the promised grand new Ram temple in Ayodhya.

“Things have changed dramatical­ly for the BJP after December. The odds in favour of the party’s electoral prospects in the elections have increased,” says Rahul Verma of Centre for Policy Research, a Delhi-based think tank.

The fragility of the opposition alliance stems, in part, from differing perspectiv­es on the Congress party, led by Rahul Gandhi - it is the sole pan-Indian alternativ­e to the BJP. The party secured less than 20% of the vote and a mere 52 seats in 2019 and continues to struggle.

“It then makes unreasonab­le demands for seats that regional partners are unwilling to accommodat­e,” says Mr Verniers. “The perception is that the Congress is a toxic alliance partner because of its own weakness and ability to drag down the ticket.”

To blame the Congress entirely for the opposition’s troubles would be unfair, many believe. In India’s intensely competitiv­e political landscape, pragmatism prevails as each party prioritise­s its own interests.

“Every other member of the [INDIA] alliance is putting their own interest ahead of the general interest. What matters to them is their own state. If they lose the general election can they fall back on the state they rule,” says Mr Verniers.

Yet, seat-sharing is only part of the battle. The opposition, say scholars, is unable to provide a compelling alternativ­e narrative to the BJP’s popular blend of Hindu nationalis­m and developmen­t. Also, as Asim Ali, a political scientist, says, this narrative enjoys the support of a large section of the media, business and society. “Issues only come to the fore when they have widespread social support,” he says.

There’s no lack of issues for the opposition to rally around. They have highlighte­d Mr Modi’s “failure” to tackle the acute jobs crisis. They have condemned the BJP’s anti-Muslim rhetoric, and its alleged attacks on media and think-tanks and the harassment of political rivals using government agencies. They have united in protest in defence of more than 140 opposition MPs who were suspended for disrupting proceeding­s in parliament in December.

Yet, as Mr Verniers says, there appears to be no “ideologica­l binding force” uniting the opposition, particular­ly in relation to the robust Hindu nationalis­m promoted by Mr Modi and the BJP.

To be true, cobbling together an alliance to take on a well-oiled and amply resourced BJP led by a hugely popular leader is easier said than done. It took decades for the fragmented opposition to come together and defeat the dominant Congress, which ruled India uninterrup­tedly for 30 years from independen­ce to 1977.

The Janata Party coalition, uniting disparate parties - from socialists to Hindu nationalis­ts - fought against Indira Gandhi’s Emergency rule when civil liberties were suspended. (The coalition collapsed within two years due to internal contradict­ions and personal ambitions of its leaders. But it did succeed in toppling an opponent considered invincible.)

“Only a serious existentia­l crisis or exogenous shock can create conditions for [disparate] allies to come together and put up a formidable challenge to a dominant ruling party,” says Mr Verma. “In normal circumstan­ces, it is difficult”.

So is the INDIA alliance doomed? “The alliance is in troubled waters, but they can still find ways to contest together,” says Mr Verma. The elections hinged on the Congress’ performanc­e in over 250 seats in the BJP stronghold of northern and western India, rather than on the outcomes of regional allies in their respective states, he argues.

Mr Verniers offers a solution. “Regional parties are not willing to accommodat­e the Congress, which still sees itself as a major national player. So the Congress should concentrat­e on states where it is in direct bipolar contests with the BJP. And it should defer to the regional partners in the rest of the states”. Again, as with a lot else in Indian politics, this is easier said than done.

Things have changed dramatical­ly for the BJP after December. The odds in favour of the party’s electoral prospects in the elections have increased,” says Rahul Verma of Centre for Policy Research, a Delhi-based think tank.

 ?? ?? The Congress party, led by Rahul Gandhi, is the only pan-Indian alternativ­e to the BJP. AFP
The Congress party, led by Rahul Gandhi, is the only pan-Indian alternativ­e to the BJP. AFP
 ?? ?? Narendra Modi is eyeing a record third term in the upcoming elections. AFP
Narendra Modi is eyeing a record third term in the upcoming elections. AFP

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