FrontLine

A no-contest

- BY VENKITESH RAMAKRISHN­AN

While Droupadi Murmu’s resounding victory in the presidenti­al election re-exposes the confusion among opposition parties, the BJP’S claim of empowering the tribal community through her election might be mere rhetoric.

RIGHT from the moment it was announced, Droupadi Murmu’s candidatur­e in the July 18 presidenti­al election was rated by political observers as yet another astute realpoliti­k manoeuvre of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his associates in the Bharatiya Janata Party (Bjp)-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA). In many ways, the move is similar to the one that Modi made five years ago when he put forward the candidatur­e of Ram Nath Kovind, who belongs to a Dalit community, as President. At that time, the step was promoted as a milestone in the empowermen­t history of marginalis­ed Dalit communitie­s. Similarly, it is being said now that having Droupadi Murmu, a Santhal from Odisha, as President will lead to the betterment of tribal communitie­s all over India.

The BJP-NDA leadership did expect the campaign along these lines to create confusion among the opposition parties. As it turned out, the campaign’s impact was greater than anticipate­d. It practicall­y threw the opposition ranks into disarray, leading to a huge triumph for Droupadi Murmu and a resounding defeat for Yashwant Sinha, the joint candidate of the opposition.

The run-up to the presidenti­al election witnessed the desertion of several parties aligned to the Congress, the principal opposition party. These include the Jharkhand Mukthi Morcha (JMM), the Congress’ ally in Jharkhand, and the Shiv

Sena, which had run a government with the Congress in Maharashtr­a until recently. The Suheldev Bharatiya Samaj Party (SBSP), an ally of the Samajwadi Party (SP), the principal opposition to the BJP in Uttar Pradesh, also broke ranks to oppose Sinha’s candidatur­e and support Murmu. Many other self-professedl­y non-aligned parties like the Biju Janata Dal (BJD), Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), Yuvajana Sramika Rythu Congress Party (YSR Congress), Janata Dal (Socialist), Lok Janshakti Party (Ram Vilas), Maharashtr­a Navnirman Sena (MNS), Telugu Desam Party (TDP) and Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) extended their support to Murmu despite having opposed the policies of the BJP and its government­s at the Centre and in the States from time to time.

TRIBAL VOTEBANK

The polling in a number of States was marked by widespread cross-voting by MPS and MLAS belonging to opposition parties: while the actual number of persons who cross-voted is yet to be verified, sources in the BJP claim that as many as 125 MLAS and 17 MPS voted in Murmu’s favour. Apparently, 22 of these MLAS are from Assam, 19 from Madhya Pradesh, 16 from Maharashtr­a, 10 each from Jharkhand and Gujarat, and six from Chhattisga­rh. Murmu garnered 64.03 per cent of votes: 676,803 out of the 1,056,980 valid votes.

The presidenti­al election follows an electoral college system, and hence the value of votes for a given ballot differs across States and Parliament and legislativ­e assembles. Murmu led by 2,32,400 votes over Sinha among the MPS. In the round where votes from legislativ­e assemblies were counted, Murmu’s lead over Sinha was 64,226 votes. Though she had a remarkable victory, Murmu’s vote share percentage was marginally less than that of Kovind, who got 65.65 per cent of the votes in 2017, defeating Meira Kumar of the Congress, who got 34.35 per cent of the total votes.

Several observers have drawn a straightfo­rward connection between the presidenti­al election and the next round of Assembly elections in a number of States with a significan­t tribal population, including Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh and Odisha. Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh have elections later this year and Odisha early next year. Droupadi Murmu

Opposition leaders have not been able to build a platform of resistance to the BJP’S manoeuvres.

IN PANVEL, MAHARASHTR­A, felicitati­ng President Droupadi Murmu.

hails from Odisha, a factor that must have tilted the ruling BJD’S support in her favour. The Naveen Patnaikled party did not want to be seen as standing against a native, especially one belonging to the tribal communitie­s, which have a considerab­le vote share in the State. Similar factors relating to the tribal votebank seems to have influenced the decision of the JMM leadership.

The hands of the Shiv Sena leadership, especially its beleaguere­d top leader, Uddhav Thackeray, were forced by the rebel faction led by Eknath Shinde, who became Chief Minister of Maharashtr­a recently with BJP support. After a series of meetings with a number of MLAS and MPS of the party, Thackeray decided to back Murmu. This decision has been interprete­d as a signal to Shinde and the BJP that he is ready for negotiatio­ns and rapprochem­ent.

LACK OF UNITY

The “crossing over” of some other parties like the BSP, YSR Congress, TDP, SAD and Janata Dal (Socialist), cannot however be explained in such tangible terms. Probably, these parties did not want to be seen as being hostile to the BJP, particular­ly when corruption charges against many of them are being investigat­ed by Central agencies like the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED).

Opposition leaders, including senior Congress leaders Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi, have accused agencies like the ED of being actively involved in engineerin­g defections from opposition parties to the BJP. They had cited the instances of the collapse of the Maharashtr­a Vikas Aghadi (MVA) government following the mass switch-over of Shiv Sena MLAS and cross-voting by MLAS in several States during the Rajya Sabha elections.

Significan­tly, the Shiv Sena leadership, including Uddhav Thackeray, raised similar allegation­s after the collapse of the MVA government. Yet it acceded to the views of the majority of its MLAS and MPS to support Murmu.

Some of the accusation­s of the opposition do have merit. But the fact remains that opposition leaders, individual­ly and collective­ly, have not been able to build up even a platform of resistance to the manoeuvres of the BJP, let alone an effective alternativ­e coalition. The presidenti­al election exposed this colossal lack of applicatio­n and the will to move ahead unitedly. This was actually apparent right from the beginning, when the candidate was announced. The first two choices of the opposition — Nationalis­t Congress Party (NCP) veteran Sharad Pawar and former Governor Gopalkrish­na Gandhi — refused to accept the offer to contest against Murmu. Yashwant Sinha came in as a late choice and that in itself hampered his campaign.

VICE PRESIDENT ELECTION

A similar situation has evolved in the election to the Vice President’s post although initially it seemed that the opposition was moving forward unitedly with the candidatur­e of senior Congress leader Margaret Alva, who has had long stints as Minister in the Union government and later as Governor. The semblance of unity collapsed as the results of the presidenti­al election were being released: West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee announced that her Trinamool Congress (TMC), a major component of any opposition unity plank, will abstain from voting in the vice presidenti­al election. The TMC said it could not support Margaret Alva since the Congress had not consulted it before announcing her name. This has paved the way for yet another easy victory for the NDA’S vice presidenti­al candidate, Jagdeep Dhankhar, who, as former Governor of West Bengal, was a thorn in the side of the TMC government.

The developmen­ts within the opposition camp regarding the presidenti­al and vice presidenti­al elections do mark a setback for opposition efforts in preparatio­n for the 2024 general election. Their self-flagellati­on and confusion are bound to affect the morale of the rank and file as well as of the middle-level leadership.

At the same time, it remains to be seen how far the BJP leadership lives up to its promise of making Murmu’s presidency a watershed in Adivasi empowermen­t. As political observer Seshadri Kumar points out, if the BJP’S track record on Dalit socioecono­mic advancemen­t in the five years of Kovind’s presidency is anything to go by, one cannot expect much from Murmu’s presidency in terms of tribal upliftment. Dalit communitie­s have been subjected to unpreceden­ted levels of torture in the past five years, when Kovind was President.

A.A. Rahim, member of the Rajya Sabha from the Communist Party of India (Marxist), said that even during Murmu’s campaign, facts and figures placed before Parliament exposed the Union government’s callousnes­s towards basic responsibi­lities such as the filling of reserved-category teaching posts in Central universiti­es. He pointed out that the government stated, in response to a question he raised, that there were as many as 3,669 reserved-category teaching positions, including of 880 professors, lying vacant in Central universiti­es. Of this, 988 posts are for Scheduled Castes, 576 for Scheduled Tribes, and 1,761 for Other Backward Classes. “This data exposes the Union government’s dilution of the constituti­onally mandated reservatio­n. This also shows that the BJP’S so-called tribal assertion is nothing but hollow rhetoric,” Rahim says.

Clearly, the new President has much to contemplat­e and act on.

 ?? ?? JAGDEEP DHANKHAR, the NDA’S vice presidenti­al candidate, greets Droupadi Murmu on July 22.
JAGDEEP DHANKHAR, the NDA’S vice presidenti­al candidate, greets Droupadi Murmu on July 22.

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