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A foot in the door ...

With the Electoral College numbers likely to be favourable, the BJP-led NDA candidate looks set to lay his hands on the keys to the presidenti­al palace in New Delhi

- Hindutva

uring a chat with some of his family members, Pranab Mukherjee, after being administer­ed the oath-of-office as India’s 13th President, was asked whether he had ever dreamt of entering the august precincts of the Rashtrapat­i Bhavan (the presidenti­al palace in New Delhi) as its foremost occupant. In reply, Mukherjee reportedly said, albeit in a lighter vein: “I had often told myself that being the president is a far cry, but in my next life — if there’s one — even if I am born as one of those horses that pull the president’s ceremonial carriage to that red-sandstone palace, it will be an accomplish­ment of sorts!”

It is not known yet whether a septuagena­rian by the name of Ram Nath Kovind had ever nurtured a similar desire as Mukherjee’s, but come July 20, once the last ballot of the Electoral College is counted, this low-profile politician from Uttar Pradesh (UP), who had served as the governor of Bihar until last Tuesday, may well be the new occupant of the 340-room colonial-era palace in Raisina Hill: Home of the president of the world’s largest democracy. With Kovind, a Dalit (backward caste), being named as the candidate of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA), the die has been cast by the Narendra Modi-Amit Shah duo, turning the pitch for the presidenti­al polls into a matrix for caste politics, thereby forcing a combined opposition led by the Congress party to field another Dalit, Meira Kumar, as its choice for the post. However, with Janata Dal (United) leader and Chief Minister of Bihar, Nitish Kumar, and Naveen Patnaik, the Biju Janata Dal supremo and Odisha Chief Minister, openly coming out in support of Kovind’s candidatur­e, and given BJP’s majority in the Lok Sabha (Lower House), the opposition’s choice of Meira Kumar is unlikely to pose much of a challenge to the NDA candidate.

Since the day the former prime minister the late Indira Gandhi chose Giani Zail Singh as the Congress’ presidenti­al nominee – presumably to appease the Sikh community – the office of India’s First Citizen has often been used by the ruling party as well as the opposition as a potent bargaining chip and a handy tool for a favourable interpreta­tion and dispensati­on of constituti­onal authority in times of crisis over governance and politickin­g by the executive branch. Kovind’s selection as the NDA candidate is in keeping with that tradition. Eager to shake off its image as a primarily upper-caste outfit, the BJP needed to send out a message loud and clear to placate sentiments among lower-caste voters, particular­ly in view of recent atrocities by rightist, ultra-nationalis­t elements against Dalits in various parts of India. In more ways than one, having Kovind as the BJP’s choice for president is a masterstro­ke by Prime Minister Modi and BJP party chief Shah. Kovind’s associatio­n with the rightist Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS), to which the BJP owes its political DNA, is only too well-known. The fact that Kovind had even donated his ancestral home in Derapur to the RSS helps lend credence to his unflinchin­g allegiance to a saffron worldview and a staunch (Hindu nationalis­t) agenda. A Dalit, who also has the RSS ideology baked into his intellectu­al template, is a win-win for the Modi-Shah combine and in terms of Electoral College numbers, a certainty to clinch the July 17 duel.

There were several high-profile names among BJP ranks that had come up in the last couple of weeks as the party’s likely choice for president. Former deputy prime minister Lal Krishna Advani, former Union human resources minister Murli Manohar Joshi and Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj being the most promnent inent among them. However, BJP sprang quite a surprise with its choice of a political lightweigh­t.

Rare opportunit­y

Kovind, 71, with his agrarian family background — born in the Dehat district of UP — is in no way a claimant to the ivy-league of Indian politics that an Advani, a Joshi or a Swaraj would find easy access to. After having completed his bachelor’s degree in Law from Kanpur University, Kovind, like the many thousands of aspirants from his state, left for Delhi to try and make the cut for the coveted Indian Administra­tive Service (IAS). He cracked the gruelling Union Public Service Commission examinatio­n on his third attempt, but his marks were not enough to qualify for the administra­tive cadre. The IAS dream having turned sour, Kovind preferred not to take up a government job and instead turned to cutting his teeth in the legal profession. And thus began a fairly fruitful stint, first at the Delhi High Court and later at the Supreme Court. It was during his days as a legal profession­al that Kovind’s dash with politics took a serious turn and he joined the BJP in 1991. His formative years with the RSS making the choice of the political party all the more obvious. Later, he went on to become a BJP member of the Rajya Sabha (Upper House) and served two terms from 1994 to 2006. It was during his tenure as a Rajya Sabha member that he had the rare opportunit­y to address the United Nations General Assembly in 2002. And a career high-point was reached on August 8, 2015, when Kovind was appointed as the governor of Bihar — a post he held until being named the NDA candidate for the president of India.

For someone with such a humble background, who has been through the rough and tumble of life and career for long — right from the dust-bowl of the hinterland­s of India’s ‘cow belt’ to the cut-throat realm of legal rectitude in the corridors of Supreme Court and on to the pristine lawns of the Governor’s House in Patna — being elevated as the likely president of the second-most populous nation in the world is indeed fascinatin­g. There is little doubt that if and when he gets to walk down the red carpet at the Durbar Hall in Rashtrapat­i Bhavan, his challenges as a public figure will get magnified manifold — knocking the sheen off a hitherto mundane existence for good. And make no mistake, his Dalit credential­s will have a lot to do with his entry into that haloed portal. After K.R. Narayanan, Kovind may well be only the second person from his caste to be elected as the president of India. But one only hopes that if and when Kovind becomes the president, the issue of caste as a catapult will be laid to rest and the new incumbent at Raisina Hill will be judged on his merits as a protector of the Indian Constituti­on and the republic. While negating demands for reservatio­ns in jobs for backward caste Muslims and Christians in India, Kovind, as the then BJP spokespers­on, had once stirred quite a controvers­y, saying: “Including Muslims and Christians in the Scheduled Caste category will be unconstitu­tional.” It remains to be seen whether on such sticky issues of socio-economic propriety and empowermen­t, a ‘president’ Kovind prefers to put on his habitual lawyer’s gown or opts to play the natural arbiter with a constituti­onal guardian’s heart and soul.

Keep watching!

You can follow Sanjib Kumar Das on Twitter at www.twitter.com/@moumiayush.

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 ?? Luis Vazquez/ © Gulf News ??
Luis Vazquez/ © Gulf News

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