Khaleej Times

Congress is blowing it under Rahul Gandhi

Once a national party, it is now reduced to a notional one without a strong leadership and vision

- Sumantra BoSe REALPOLITI­K

There is an expression in the colourful vocabulary of Bengali slang: laejur. The laejur is a creature that, lacking a face, body and voice that can enable it to exist independen­tly, attaches itself as a tail to someone else in order to survive. In other words, a parasite.

Indian politics has a laejur in the form of the tragic remnant of the party once helmed by Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi and led by Jawaharlal Nehru and Subhas Chandra Bose, among numerous other luminaries. On no less than three occasions during just the past one year, this ragged, lost outfit has affixed itself as the proverbial laejur to other parties in assembly elections in large, populous states in three different parts of the country. Each time, the outcome has been the same and the lesson unmistakab­le.

In 2011, the Communist Party of India (Marxist) was booted out of power in West Bengal after 34 years in government. The Bengal CPM, self-reduced to little more than an election machine over three decades, proved unable to use the opportunit­y provided by defeat to rejuvenate and rebuild itself as a political force. Instead, deprived of the power that had been its sole source of oxygen for many years, it behaved like the proverbial fish taken out of water. It floundered about aimlessly as Mamata Banerjee seized the initiative—on a far smaller and provincial scale, not unlike how Narendra Modi has built his brand nationally since his 2014 triumph—to consolidat­e her position as the new voice of Bengali regionalis­m on the Indian political scene and an advocate of the state’s poor and their needs. The CPM’s popular base in Bengal shrank progressiv­ely and alarmingly. It was routed by the Trinamool Congress in panchayat polls in 2013 and got through in just two of the state’s 42 Lok Sabha constituen­cies—both by very thin margins—in 2014. As the 2016 Assembly elections approached, the growing crisis of self-confidence of the Bengal CPM leadership led them to calculate that they lacked the capacity to confront the Mamata juggernaut on their own. Grasping for succour from any quarter, the party’s central leadership acquiesced in a prepoll alliance with the Congress.

The Bengal opposition alliance was grandly billed as a ‘janaganer jote’—an alliance of the people—by its proponents in both parties. Its statistica­l basis was that in the 2014 General Election, the TMC’s vote share was 39 per cent, equal to the vote shares combined of the Left Front and the Congress. The plurality vote share had netted the TMC 34 of the state’s 42 Lok Sabha seats (a nearly identical vote share has given the BJP an almost identical proportion of the Uttar Pradesh Assembly elected in 2017). So, the reasoning went, if the LF and the Congress joined forces and jointly attacked Mamata— focusing in particular on the ruling Trinamool’s weakest spot,

The more the Congress fades and the tail shrivels to a stub, the more its owners’ comical band of retainers bang on that theirs is a ‘national party’. The pretension is in exactly inverse proportion to the unfolding reality.

its reputation of financial avarice at all levels—the eviction of Mamata from power was distinctly possible.

This was a delusion. Electoral politics is fluid and dynamic, and as the BJP has shown in Uttar Pradesh, a winning strategy has to go beyond crude, static calculatio­ns of prior voting percentage­s. The CPM-Congress alliance had no alternativ­e vision or positive agenda to offer for Bengal. Its sole point was the rudderless, drifting CPM’s desperatio­n to reclaim the lost fortress that had for over three decades given it a limited weight in national politics from Mamata’s strangleho­ld, and the Congress ‘high command’, equally bankrupt and desperate, was willing to go along. The tie-up in fact made no political sense from the perspectiv­e of the CPM’s ambition because in approximat­ely three-fourths of West Bengal’s Assembly constituen­cies, about 220 of 294, the Congress vote was negligible (in the lower single digits in percentage terms). The addition of this derisory percentage to CPM’s own steadily dwindled vote would thus make no difference to the outcome in the large majority of Assembly constituen­cies. But the delusion steamed on regardless, drunk on its own propaganda.

The defining moment of the Bengal election of 2016 came as the campaign neared its climax. The erstwhile Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattachar­jee, the quintessen­tial bespectacl­ed bhadralok communist, giddily rushed forward on the dais, eyes glazed over with adoration, to envelop a newfound comrade visiting from New Delhi in a warm embrace. It made for a touching photograph­ic image, just as the two fortysomet­hings exerting themselves together on the Uttar Pradesh campaign trail. The embrace of the septuagena­rian communist and the middle- aged dynastic scion visiting from New Delhi, and the opportunis­t gang-up it symbolised, rebounded to Mamata Banerjee’s advantage. The TMC won close to a three-fourths majority, 72 per cent, in the West Bengal Assembly, 211 of the 294 constituen­cies (with a decisive edge in the vote share, 45 per cent to the alliance’s 38 per cent). It could easily have been more; the TMC lost at least a dozen seats due to factional in-fighting.

In Uttar Pradesh, had the SP contested in UP on its own, it is still very unlikely that it would have been returned to power, given the appeal of the Modi factor, the finely tuned campaign mastermind­ed by Amit Shah, and the gross public spectacle of the SP’s inter-generation­al and family feud. But it is now clear that the Congress albatross damaged Akhilesh’s chances further and squandered the goodwill his government had earned. Rahul Gandhi should have been left in peace to continue his shambolic khatia gatherings.

The more the Congress fades and the tail shrivels to a stub, the more its owners’ comical band of retainers bang on that theirs is a ‘national party’. The pretension is in exactly inverse proportion to the unfolding reality. After the 2014 debacle, any national party worth its salt would have striven to protect its base from further erosion, especially in states where it still had a sizeable presence. In the just concluded rural polls in Odisha, the Congress has been nearly wiped out through decay, neglect and drift, while the BJP has emerged as a strong challenger to the ruling BJD, and as the leading party in the state’s non- coastal interior districts. In Maharashtr­a’s party politics, the BJP has catapulted itself from fourth to first place in just a few years, with the shrunken Congress now reduced to competing with its aimless offshoot, the NCP, for the last position among the big four. At this rate of attrition, it looks likely that the one larger state where the Congress still has a government—Karnataka — will fall to a resurgent, reunited BJP in the Assembly elections just a year away.

In the patches of the country where the Congress survives as a political force, it does so in spite of the high command, not because of it. Old warhorses like Captain Amarinder Singh in Punjab and Ibobi Singh in Manipur knew very well that the dynastic heir is truly blessed— with what is known as the reverse Midas touch—and made sure to keep him at arm’s length to the greatest extent possible. The Captain, it may be recalled, was on the verge of quitting the party in disgust just a year or two ago. His forbearanc­e paid off. The fed-up Punjab electorate put their trust in the seasoned Patiala royal, rather than the posturing clique around Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal.

The increasing­ly uphill task of stitching together a viable opposition to the Modi regime remains essential, and will become ever more urgent over the next two to seven years. Those who will have to engage in this complex endeavour should heed this warning: beware the tail that barely wags. — The Open

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