Gulf Today

Pms-in-waiting queer the pitch

- BRP Bhaskar,

TPolitical Commentato­r he grand alliance against Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, which was being promoted by some opposition leaders, has not materialis­ed. The biggest stumbling block to a nationalle­vel alliance was the conflictin­g interests of opposition leaders with prime ministeria­l ambitions. Some of them believe a hung Lok Sabha with low Congress representa­tion will beter their chances.

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee and former Utar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati are among those who have an eye on the Prime Minister’s chair. Both are women who have risen to the top without any dynastic advantage.

Mamata Banerjee had broken away from the Congress in 1998, unhappy with its unwillingn­ess to take West Bengal’s ruling Communist Party of India (Marxist)-led Let Front head on. She then formed the All-india Trinamool Congress, which, despite the name, is essentiall­y a regional party. In 2011, it put an end to 34 years of Let Front rule.

Mayawati, a Dalit, was groomed by Kanshi Ram as leader of the Bahujan Samaj Party which he had founded in 1984. Overcoming the disabiliti­es of caste and gender, she became Chief Minister of Utar Pradesh, the country’s largest state. She held the post five times.

Adept in social engineerin­g, Mayawati furthered her career by devising schemes from time to time to atract Brahmins and Muslims. Recently she tied up with Akhilesh Yadav, leader of the Samajwadi Party, which draws support mainly from the other backward classes.

Until the last Lok Sabha election, Mayawati stayed out of electoral alliances. While most of the candidates she fielded outside UP forfeited their deposits, the tactics enabled the BSP to emerge as the third largest party ater the BJP and the Congress, in terms of popular votes.

In 2014, as a Modi wave swept the Hindi states, she could not win a single seat even from UP. This prompted her to revise her tactics but she is now on a course that may indirectly help Modi. The BSP-SP alliance’s failure to keep the Congress on its side and Rahul Gandhi’s decision to bring in his sister Priyanka Vadra to boost the party’s campaign in UP have opened the way for multilater­al contests.

Mayawati is keen to restrict the Congress strength in the new Lok Sabha. She reckons it will rule out the possibilit­y of a government led by Rahul Gandhi and improve her prospects in the prime ministeria­l race.

Soon ater the BSP-SP alliance was finalised, Akhilesh Yadav indicated his preference for a Prime Minister from UP. Many took this to mean he would back Mayawati for the post. But he has asked his father and former Chief Minister Mulayam Singh, a prime ministeria­l aspirant, to contest the election.

Some time ago Rahul Gandhi had said he was ready to accept Mayawati or Mamata Banerjee as the Prime Minister. However, many senior Congress leaders are against his conceding leadership of a coalition government to anyone else.

Three southern leaders, Tamil Nadu’s Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam leader MK Stalin, Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N Chandrabab­u Naidu and Telangana Chief Minister K Chandrasek­har Rao recently made interventi­ons calculated to influence the course of national politics.

Stalin, son and political heir of former Chief Minister M Karunanidh­i, is waiting for his turn to occupy the big chair in Chennai. He has endorsed Rahul Gandhi’s prime ministeria­l candidatur­e.

Chandrabab­u Naidu and Chandrasek­har promoted the idea of opposition unity, the former more vigorously than the later. It is not clear if they entertain prime ministeria­l ambitions or want to play the role of kingmaker.

The absence of a national-level alliance does not mean the BJP will have a walkover. Several small national parties and regional parties are strong enough to block its advance in their stronghold­s. Modi’s best hope now lies in the one-upmanship of the rival opposition leaders with overweenin­g ambitions which is queering the pitch ahead of the poll.

In the event of a hung Lok Sabha, as the incumbent Prime Minister, Modi will be in a beter position than either Rahul Gandhi or any of the other opposition leaders to cobble together a working majority.

If the Lok Sabha fails to throw up a government fresh elections will become necessary. Elections cost a lot of money, and no party, least of all the small ones, will want to go through them once again so soon.

Most of the small parties ranged against Modi were the BJP’S allies in the government led by AB Vajpayee during 1999-2004. Ideologica­l difference­s may not, therefore, prove difficult to surmount.

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