Deccan Chronicle

More than a state battle: BJP strategy on test too

- Shikha Mukerjee

West Bengal has always been able to buck the trend, overturn expectatio­ns and be an uncontaina­ble force in Indian politics. The 2021 Assembly polls will be a reflection of the particular politics of West Bengal, where the local is entangled with the national and works its way into the contempora­ry discourse on democracy and the nature of the threats that endanger its survival as an organicall­y evolving political and institutio­nal form.

From December 18, 2020, after the defection of a key leader from East Midnapore, Suvendu Adhikari, it seemed that the Trinamul Congress was on the run. By the time Mamata Banerjee reached Dunlop on February 24, an industrial wasteland after the closure of the legendary tyre factory immediatel­y after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s public meeting at the same venue, she worked out her offensive strategy that would unshackle her from the corner into which the antiTMC parties — BJP, CPI(M)-led Left Front and Congress — had tried to box her in.

Till then it was a fight between the very different but powerful charismati­c appeal of Narendra Modi versus Mamata Banerjee. It was also a confrontat­ion over nation-nationalis­m, secularism versus Hindu vote consolidat­ion by raising anxieties over the legitimacy of claimants as Indian citizens and the anti-Hindu decisions of the Mamata Banerjee government to appease the Muslim minority, on whose votes she was perceived as disproport­ionately dependent.

In Dunlop, Ms Banerjee attacked the Modi government’s move to raise petrol-diesel-LPG prices. She pointedly referred to the withdrawal of the kerosene subsidy and its disappeara­nce from the market, that increased hardship for the poorest 20 million of the state’s population. By the time she rode a e-scooter back from her Nabanna office on February 26, the elections had been transforme­d from an Assembly contest into a partial referendum on the Narendra Modi government’s performanc­e.

The West Bengal election has morphed. The Modi government’s actions and policies, brutally ignoring the farmers’ protests seeking repeal of the three controvers­ial agricultur­al laws, incrementa­l hikes in petrol-diesel-LPG and kerosene prices, centralisi­ng power and decisionma­king in New Delhi by invalidati­ng the claims of federalism and usurping the rights and powers of the states on education, healthcare, agricultur­e, social welfare, is as much under the scanner as is the performanc­e of Mamata Banerjee’s government.

By February 28, with the announceme­nt of the Samyukta Morcha of the CPI(M)-led Left FrontCongr­ess-Indian Secular Front led by Pirzada Abbasuddin Siddiqui of Furfura Sharif, a rookie politician with a newly hatched platform, the transforma­tion of the election into a political consolidat­ion against the BJP’s communally polarising and anxiety-induced divisive agenda was complete. The ISF and the anointing of Pirzada Abbasuddin at a mammoth Brigade Parade Ground rally could be the “X” factor that makes an unpreceden­ted election fascinatin­gly unpredicta­ble -never before has a cleric led a party and come to the assistance of the Left to oust the BJP’s communally polarising politics.

By turning it into an early mid-term review of the Modi government’s performanc­e and the BJP’s politics, Ms Banerjee has achieved what many other parties were trying to do but were clueless about how to galvanise people into making a choice. The e-scooter ride, great theatre as it was, was also a political statement. It symbolised the buildup of the simmering anti-incumbency sentiments against the Modi government, given the reactions on the social media.

The conversati­on that the RJD’s Tejashwi Yadav had with Ms Banerjee on Monday will have an impact on how votes fragment in a dozen-odd seats. For the BJP, the current round of elections is crucial, and every seat won or lost in West Bengal will affect its future. The strengthen­ing of anti-BJP forces can’t be good news.

The BJP’s boast that it will win 200 of West Bengal’s 294 seats is a tough target, even for a party that won a surprising 18 Lok Sabha seats of the state’s 42 in the 2019 parliament­ary election. It would have been much easier if Ms Banerjee were a spent force and the LeftCongre­ss didn’t seem on the verge of a revival, with the infusion of the ISF’s new blood.

The earlier nebulous form of the 2021 election has acquired substance. There are two simultaneo­us battles going on in the elections to the five Assemblies — against the BJP, which will be the larger context within which the local contests will play out. It’s only in West Bengal that the BJP has set itself a challenge. In the other states, like Tamil Nadu, the tussle is within the AIADMK over

Jayalalith­aa’s legacy and which party, AIADMK or DMK, gets to rule; and in Kerala, where the BJP is not a factor in the face-off between the CPI(M)-led Left Democratic Front and the Congress-led United Democratic Front.

But, separately and together, these state elections challenge the BJP’s hegemonic ambitions variously described as “double engine sarkar”, “one partyone nation”, and “one nation-one election”.

On March 7, when Narendra Modi addresses the BJP rally at Kolkata’s Brigade Parade Ground, he and the party need answers to the demands and issues raised by Ms Banerjee on one hand and the anti-BJPanti-TMC consolidat­ion on the other. The CPI(M)Congress-ISF rally of February 28 was a spectacula­r mobilisati­on. Its purpose was to launch the Samyukta Morcha and give it the heft and credibilit­y it needs to offer itself as a viable sustainabl­e alternativ­e to the ruling TMC and the aspirant BJP.

It is uncertain how the BJP will bill the PM’s rally; will he play aspirant or will he celebrate a presumptiv­e victory over Ms Banerjee? Either way, it will position Mr Modi as the aspirant against the incumbent Mamata Banerjee. The TMC today is different from the party last week; the unintended consequenc­e of the ISF joining forces with the CPI(M) means Ms Banerjee has been bleached clean of one of the BJP’s most effective charges against her — of Muslim appeasemen­t.

It remains for the BJP to offer an alternativ­e appeal that is local to West Bengal, instead of a promise to cut and paste the Modi model of developmen­t via the “double engine sarkar”. It may need to review its strategy because raking up religious identity could be alienating, citizenshi­p and identity too could be alienating and it would be very risky to offer itself as a defender of Bengali culture, because pinning down this elusive but tangible and powerful force is never simple, not even for a diehard Bengali.

The unintended consequenc­e of the ISF joining forces with the CPI(M) means Ms Banerjee has been bleached clean of one of the BJP’s

most effective charges against her — of Muslim

appeasemen­t

Shikha Mukerjee is a senior journalist in

Kolkata

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