Business Standard

The season of promises

- VIKRAM JOHRI vjohri19@gmail.com

The events of this week brought into sharper focus the government’s strategy in an election year. First, Piyush Goyal presented a Budget that seemed interim only in name. Targeting the rural poor and the middle class, Goyal lavished one gift after another on the back of better savings due to the government’s technologi­cal drive on subsidy distributi­on.

Then came the drama in West Bengal. By sending Central Reserve Police Force troops to the police station where Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) officials probing the Saradha scam had been detained, the government signalled its intention of getting to the bottom of the probe. Even if that meant engenderin­g a Constituti­onal crisis when Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee chose to protest the government move by sitting on dharna.

Ultimately, it was the Supreme Court that gave the CBI the go-ahead to continue its investigat­ion of Kolkata police commission­er Rajiv Kumar without arresting him, causing both camps to claim victory. Regardless, if the probe confirms the charges against senior Trinamool Congress leaders, including members of Parliament, the smiles in the Opposition camp may not last.

Since he became prime minister, Narendra Modi has repeatedly spoken of 2019, the year of Mahatma Gandhi’s 150th birth anniversar­y, as a watershed moment in India’s history. To back his claim, he has indicated that he would like to usher in a “new” India by 2022, an India with zero open defecation, an extensive highway network, electricit­y for all, health insurance for all, improved farm incomes and better provisioni­ng of government services.

The goal that Modi embarked on during his current stint — captured in the slogan “Minimum Government, Maximum Governance” — seems to have lost some of its cachet, given how the government has seen the need to increase welfare spending while simultaneo­usly focusing on improving delivery and eliminatin­g fake beneficiar­ies. The Budget introduced proposals that merely add to the government’s agenda in this direction (for example, the 10 per cent upper caste quota).

Even so, the government, and specifical­ly Modi, recognise that elections are not won on the developmen­t plank alone. Every election ends up having a theme, and it is generally the Opposition that decides its contours. In 2014, the Opposition was the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Modi played up to the hilt the “policy paralysis” of the UPA regime.

This time the Opposition faces several challenges in coalescing around such a theme. The Mahagathba­ndhan in UP may upset the BJP’s calculatio­ns but it is yet to come up with a substantia­l critique of the government. Rahul Gandhi’s efforts to rake up Rafale have met with limited success at best, with both the Supreme Court and Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman pouring cold water on his designs.

The BJP could have wrested the electoral theme from the Opposition camp with a Ram temple in Ayodhya, which the party seems to be working on frenetical­ly even at this late hour. But these negotiatio­ns are likely to be led by the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh and other Hindu groups and not explicitly by the BJP. The prime minister may subtly hint at his preference but he is unlikely to take charge on this matter.

This leaves only corruption as a theme that can grab eyeballs and provide a conversati­on starter at the national level. In Bengal, the BJP and the Trinamool have been at loggerhead­s over a number of issues, ranging from Durga Puja to illegal immigratio­n from Bangladesh. Eager to increase its seat share in the state, the party may have calculated that it made better sense to focus on financial impropriet­y than on more emotive issues.

The BJP’s stated position on this is that stemming corruption is not restricted to sending its political rivals to jail, as has happened with Lalu Prasad. It is about reconfigur­ing the way things are done in India. From bank cleanup to demonetisa­tion, the government has used every opportunit­y to indicate its commitment to ushering in financial rectitude.

Together with the flow of middlemen landing in India from Dubai and the sustained efforts to bring Vijay Mallya home, the government will make the 2019 election a repeat of the 2014 one. This would be terrific for no other reason than that the BJP will raise these issues while it is in government. The party will argue that the “system” continues to be in the grip of sordid players who have kept the country backward, and that it needs another five years to complete its programme of purificati­on. Whether voters buy Modi’s promise of a golden 2022, only time will tell.

 ??  ?? Eager to increase its seat share in West Bengal, the BJP may have calculated that it made better sense to focus on financial impropriet­y than on more emotive issues
Eager to increase its seat share in West Bengal, the BJP may have calculated that it made better sense to focus on financial impropriet­y than on more emotive issues

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