Business Standard

Fulfilling poll promises to be a challenge for new CM

Fund crunch may come in the way of infrastruc­ture developmen­t; women’s safety another issue that will be in focus

- ADITI PHADNIS

With no clarity on who will be chief minister of Himachal Pradesh, the challenges for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in running this state are going to be colossal. The BJP parliament­ary board will meet on Monday night to decide.

Towards the end of the campaign, Prem Kumar Dhumal was announced as the party’s chief ministeria­l face. Many in the party had celebrated. Although, at 75, Dhumal was seen as an interim chief minister, he was also seen as a uniting factor, a senior in the faction-ridden BJP.

No one had expected him to lose his Sujanpur seat to Congress’s Rajinder Rana. In fact, Dhumal had changed his seat from Hamirpur, from where he was a sitting member of the legislativ­e assembly. Varinder Kanwar, who won from Kutlehar in Una district, has offered to vacate his seat for Dhumal.

A possible CM face now could be J P Nadda, Union health minister. He is a Rajya Sabha member from Himachal, and was elected MLA in 1993, 1998 and 2007, when he was given the portfolios of forests and environmen­t as well as science and technology.

He was associated with the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad during his student days in Patna. His father was the vice- chancellor of Ranchi University in 1977.

However, Nadda, a Brahmin, could find the odds against him because of his caste in a state where Thakurs rule the roost, thanks to their numerical strength of over 28 per cent.

However, finding a chief minister is the least onerous of the BJP’s problems. In its manifesto, the BJP had pledged to end “mafia raj” — the alleged nexus between forest and mining contractor­s and government officials. Women’s safety in the state was also hotly debated, especially after the rape of a young woman near Shimla. The BJP promised to make it safer for women to venture out alone. The party, borrowing a leaf out of the Madhya

HIMACHAL PRADESH

Pradesh unit’s election book, had also promised senior citizens free pilgrimage­s.

Fulfiling these promises would cause no pain. What would make a dent in the finances is infrastruc­ture creation — the promise that roads would be built to every village and that compensati­on be raised for land acquired in developmen­tal projects.

Road-building has been neglected because of a fund crunch — on account of the state government’s policy on compensati­on. When the Centre announced liberalisa­tion of compensati­on for land acquired for government projects, state government­s were given the independen­ce to fix compensati­on.

When the Virbhadra Singh government decided to build a four-lane Nagchala-KulluManal­i road, this was a problem the project had ran into. He had conceded that land losers would be paid only factor one (double the value of the land) because the state government could not afford to pay four times its value. Finally, the Centre had to take over the project.

The new BJP government is tied down by its manifesto promise of paying a compensati­on that is four times the value. The new government would have to work out how.

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