Khaleej Times

India’s grand coalition in self-destruct mode

Desire to oust the BJP might have brought discordant voices together, but opposition admits electoral calculatio­ns will depend on state-level arithmetic

- AmitA shAh —Open magazine

On a drizzly morning of a prolonged winter in New Delhi, India, five jeans-clad youngsters carrying backpacks filled with pages on the rights of forest dwellers huddle around a senior Congress leader in his living room. The activists zealously reel out figures, laws and discrepanc­ies to argue against the rejection of the claims of hundreds of thousands of forest dwellers under the Forest Rights Act. The Supreme Court, which on February 13 ordered eviction of these forest dwellers in over 20 states, had stayed its own order a fortnight later following protests. In the party’s assessment, the issue could impact 63 Lok Sabha seats.

The politician hears out the youngsters patiently. This was just one among the 170-odd meetings (120 public ones, and the rest, private) on issues with various groups that the Congress has had as part of an exercise to draft a common agenda for governance for the opposition. The draft is expected to be ready in a couple of weeks.

The common agenda was to be discussed at a meeting of opposition parties, posing as a front against the Narendra Modi-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA), scheduled for February 27. The Left parties declined to be part of such an effort in a pre-poll scenario where constituen­ts of the opposition were fighting for the same political space in several states — the Left Front itself is pitted against the Congress in Kerala and the Trinamool Congress in West Bengal; the Congress and Arvind Kejriwal’s Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) have failed to arrive at an electoral understand­ing in Delhi; the Samajwadi Party (SP) and Bahujan Samajwadi Party (BSP) have kept the Congress out of their alliance in Uttar Pradesh; N Chandrabab­u Naidu’s Telugu Desam Party (TDP) is taking on the Congress in Andhra Pradesh.

By the time opposition parties met in Parliament House on the afternoon of February 27, the agenda on their table had altered. A day before, India had retaliated to the terror attack in Pulwama in which at least 40 CRPF jawans were killed, firing at a Jaish-e- Mohammad training camp in Balakot, Pakistan. The Left Front joined the meeting and together 21 opposition parties deliberate­d for three hours on taking a unanimous and cautious approach on the issue, at a time when ‘nationalis­m’ appears to have a sway over the masses. This was an issue that had the potential to lend political muscle to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the upcoming Lok Sabha elections, overshadow­ing the policy and economic matrix of the Government that the opposition was planning to target in the run-up to elections.

UPA Chairperso­n Sonia Gandhi, who had invited leaders of the parties for the meeting, set the tone, calling for a minute’s silence for the Pulwama martyrs. The seating at the long oval table was strategic. On one side of Gandhi was Congress President Rahul Gandhi, former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Nationalis­t Congress Party (NCP) Chief Sharad Pawar, CPM General Secretary Sitaram Yechury, while on the other was Loktantrik Janata Dal’s (LJD) Sharad Yadav, West Bengal Chief Minister and Trinamool Congress Chief Mamata Banerjee and Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister and TDP supremo Chandrabab­u Naidu.

Each of them spoke — some guardedly, some aggressive­ly. A resolution was drafted, precarious­ly

balancing politics and the sentiments of the moment. While expressing solidarity with the armed forces in crushing terrorism, the resolution castigated the BJP.

While the desire to oust the BJP might have brought discordant voices on a common platform, opposition leaders admit that electoral calculatio­ns will depend on state-level arithmetic. A nationalle­vel projection of a grand anti-NDA front eludes them, given state dynamics. The BJP, meanwhile, is counting on the absence of a formidable challenger to the Prime Minister. In effect, Modi is pitted against a baffling question mark. Moreover, the several prime-ministeria­l aspirants among opposition leaders, compulsion­s of state politics and ideologica­l difference­s have left the lineaments, or even a silhouette, of an anti-Modi front hazy.

Barring Maharashtr­a, Karnataka, Bihar, Tamil Nadu and Jharkhand, a grand alliance of anti-BJP parties has evaded the opposition. In UP, the SP, which had aligned with the Congress in the 2017 Assembly polls has entered a mahagathba­ndhan with Mayawati’s BSP. Political analysts say the entry of Priyanka Gandhi as general-secretary in eastern UP could marginally boost the Congress’ prospects, making it a multi-cornered contest, to the advantage of the BJP. A Congress leader says the party is banking on anti-BJP votes from outside the SP-BSP share, particular­ly from among the upper castes. At the same time in a state like UP, Rahul

Gandhi’s primary concern would be reviving his party’s political relevance and credibilit­y.

In Maharashtr­a, the NCP and Congress have aligned and reached out to smaller parties. The Left Front, which had a bitter parting with the Congress as an outside supporter of the United Progressiv­e Alliance in the Manmohan Singh Government over the Indo-US nuclear deal, is in power only in Kerala, where its arch rival is the Congress. In West Bengal, where the BJP seems to have become the de facto opposition despite only three seats in the 295-member Assembly, the Congress and Left will consider a tactical alliance on six seats. “At the ground level things are still happening. The objective should be pooling of anti-BJP vote… It all depends on dynamics of ground reality,” says Sitaram Yechury.

In Bihar, the two main opposition forces — the Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) and Congress — are finalising a seat-sharing formula. In Tamil Nadu, the Congress and Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) have sealed an alliance against an alliance between the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) and BJP. Vaiko’s Marumalarc­hi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK) is part of the DMKled combinatio­n, but A Ramadoss’ Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK) has joined the rival alliance. Delhi, besides UP, West Bengal and Haryana, will also see a multi-cornered contest. As usual, states which will witness a direct Congress-BJP face-off are Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisga­rh, Gujarat, Assam, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhan­d.

The Left Front has made it clear they would get on board a common minimum agenda only after the polls. The SP and BSP are unlikely to sign up to such an agenda ahead of the polls. Parties keen on projecting a united anti-BJP picture through a common agenda, an idea mooted by Naidu, have left the task of preparing the first draft to the Congress. The document will be vetted by other opposition parties and then finetuned. The Congress leaders say ‘listening to people’ to draft the agenda was Rahul Gandhi’s idea. The document is unlikely to be called a ‘Common Minimum Programme’.

The recent developmen­ts on the Indo-Pak front have eclipsed all other polemics in the country, that too around the General Election, casting a shadow on the opposition’s attempt to put forward an agenda addressing bread-and-butter issues. Off the record, opposition leaders admit concern over ‘nationalis­m’ becoming the defining focus of the election with Modi leading the campaign. They, however, counter the argument that uncertaint­y over a prime ministeria­l candidate gives the BJP an upper hand. In the 2004 Lok Sabha elections, a faceless Congress-led coalition was voted to power defeating incumbent Atal Bihari Vajpayee, despite the BJP’s campaign against Sonia Gandhi as an ‘Italian’ prime minister.

“At that time, the same logic was given. BJP then was relying on its ‘India Shining’ campaign and a potent slogan asking people if they wanted a foreigner as Prime Minister,” says Yechury.

As India’s strikes in Balakot hold sway, electoral battleline­s may firm up once the political dust thrown up by the Indo-Pak tension settles, if it does, at all, before the elections.

The recent developmen­ts on the Indo-Pak front have eclipsed all other polemics in the country casting a shadow on the opposition’s attempt to put forward an agenda addressing bread-and-butter issues

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