Deccan Chronicle

Akhilesh: A centrist Modi in the making?

- Nilanjan Mukhopadhy­ay

More than a year ago, labourers began digging the flanks of the widest, but pot-holed road in my colony. Inquiries on its purpose provided little help. Within days, midsized concrete blocks were piled up in heaps along the length of the road. These were affixed in two lines almost three feet apart creating lanes on both sides. Negotiatin­g the road became more torturous and as it got constricte­d, choking traffic flow. Within weeks, the lanes became stretches of garbage dumps and we had no answer to why `90 lakhs — as per the local mill — were spent on the exercise. Everyone presumed that officials colluded with contractor­s and dished out twophased contracts — first to fix these concrete blocks and later take these out. Anyone familiar with how public works are executed in the PPP mode would be familiar with this.

A year later, people know why lanes were separated from the road. Roads are being dug up in several areas to demarcate lanes. These will be reserved for cyclists. In poll-bound Uttar Pradesh, where I live, the project is being executed with gusto to demonstrat­e the government’s success with “developmen­t”, the only problem being that they are woefully short of time now. If this was not enough, there are spectacles every other day when fleets of police patrol cars crawl past the thoroughfa­re with piercing sirens and blazing flashlight­s. These new black-coloured Innovas and other older-generation cars have Dial 100 emblazoned on them. The crawl through markets and beyond appears similar to Colonel Hathi and his brood’s march in Jungle Book. Clearly, something is being flaunted — in this case the police presence and its new look.

I live in one of the first UP colonies as one drives out of Delhi into Ghaziabad and people here have never seen so many police vehicles at one go. Urban alteration currently underway in UP mirrors the makeover of chief minister Akhilesh Yadav’s public image. Over the past months just as the state government has gone on overdrive to publicise its “accomplish­ments”, a concerted bid has been in progress to revive the promise that Akhilesh had been when he stepped into the state’s electoral arena in 2011. He took charge of the Samajwadi Party’s fledgling campaign and given it a badly-needed modernist impetus. It worked in harmony with Mulayam Singh Yadav’s old-style politics and played a significan­t role in the SP winning the highest number of seats any party bagged on its own since the Congress sweep of 1984.

Though he was chief minister, for the first three years and more in power, Akhilesh played along with old-style Yadav politicos led by his father and uncles. The general perception was he was chief minister only in name and actual power was with his father and his proxies. Akhilesh’s objective, as it unfolded in the past year, was to separate himself from all negatives of the SP. On the face of it, he has succeeded in his objective regardless of the way the current conflict within the party is settled. Before Akhilesh embarked to reinvent and reposition himself, Mayawati was the undisputed frontrunne­r, there was talk that the SP would be relegated to being an alsoran in the two-horsed race featuring the Bahujan Samaj Party and the Bharatiya Janata Party. By putting the onus for misses of his regime on Messrs Shivpal Yadav and Amar Singh, Akhilesh has emerged with a fresh face. The reinventio­n is aimed at attracting transient urban supporters of the BJP, looking for an alternativ­e for reasons ranging from absence of local leadership to thumbs down to demonetisa­tion. In the rural core constituen­cy of the party, Akhilesh hopes to convince them that his is the “real” SP in the case of a split.

In the last year and half, speculatio­n has mounted over potential rivals to Prime Minister Narendra Modi in 2019. Prior to Akhilesh’s rebranding, various names were evaluated — Nitish Kumar, Mamata Banerjee, the deceased Jayalalith­aa and even Mulayam Singh Yadav, considered then as undisputed chief of the SP. But over the past several weeks, Akhilesh has succeeded in being viewed as potential alternativ­e to Mr Modi by a section of the intelligen­tsia, including the media. By taking his father almost head-on, Akhilesh has acquired an independen­t identity, distinct from the elder’s. Regardless of the way the dispute within the SP is settled, Mulayam Singh Yadav will be little but the proverbial marg darshak, with Akhilesh or without.

Akhilesh’s projected modernism, “clean” politics, glib talk and governance ideas which Mr Modi made his hallmark are primary reasons why he is seen as an alternativ­e to Mr Modi. Samajwadi Pension Yojana, Mukhyamant­ri & Samajwadi Swastha Bima Yojana Health Card, Vivah Hetu Anudan Yojana, Samajwadi Namak Yojana, Samajwadi Smartphone Yojana, Samajwadi Kisan & Sarvhit Bima Yojana are among the schemes publicised by Akhilesh’s faction. These are similar sounding to Mr Modi’s programmes — just substitute Samajwadi with Rashtriya or Bharatiya and Mukhya Mantri with Pradhan Mantri. Why, just as the Modi regime made Vidya Balan brand ambassador of Swachh Bharat, Akhilesh made her the face of his pension scheme.

Akhilesh has secured the position where he stands a chance to be the first chief minister to secure a consecutiv­e mandate in the state after decades by effective marketing and by not harshly criticisin­g Mr Modi over surgical strikes and demonetisa­tion. His “developmen­t” strategy is similar to Mr Modi’s. Barring the Agra-Lucknow Expressway and state highways, Lucknow Metro and elevated corridors, there is no major achievemen­t that one can recall. Growth remains sluggish and law and order a matter of concern. Yet, the idea that “he has done a lot” has caught on. The verdict will determine if the era of Modi-Akhilesh variety of branded politics is here to stay and Mulayam-Mayawati style of politics is passé. Arun Shourie famously described the Modi government as Congress plus cow. If Akhilesh manages to pull it off, he could well acquire the moniker of a centrist Modi. The writer is the author of Narendra Modi: The Man, the Times and Sikhs: The Untold Agony of 1984

Akhilesh’s projected modernism, ‘clean’ politics, glib talk and governance ideas which Mr Modi made his hallmark are primary reasons why he is seen as an alternativ­e to Mr Modi

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