Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Mayawati can galvanise a comatose Opposition

Both she and the BJP realise the centrality of the Dalit vote. We have a Dalit President, why not a Dalit PM?

- PANKAJ BUTALIA Pankaj Butalia is a Delhibased filmmaker The views expressed are personal

Nitish Kumar’s desertion of the sinking ship suggests 2019 is done and dusted. There is no one to take up the mantle an Opposition needs so desperatel­y. The Congress hasn’ t had an original idea since 1991, Mulayam Singh and son can see the writing on the wall, Mamta Banerjee has her hands full. Am mai snot in the picture. About the Left the less said the better.

So where do we go from here? Five more years of the Mo di brigade with the RS S firmly setting the agenda for education and moral science? The prospect seems worrying. But there is one dark horse who seems to have sensed the ‘do or die’ scenario and that is the BSP supremo, Mayawati. By resigning a meaning less seat in the Raj ya S ab ha, she is the one Opposition politician who has shown a desire to seize the initiative. She may have the potential to galvanise a comatose opposition.

These are tough times to be a Muslim or a Dal it. This means about 30% of the population is being targeted in one way or the other by the upper cast es. Unfortunat­ely in her time Mayaw at id id little to address this. The hubris she has lived in has allowed her to imagine that it was only a matter of time before UP landed back in her lap. She had obviously not reck- oned with Narendra Modi and Amit Shah.

So how does she go about it? The first thing would be to reach out to a hurting Dalit electorate and reassure it of her intention to fight on its behalf. This would involve pacifying the B him Se na and asking it to tone down its rhetoric for at least a few years. And then reaching out to then on-J at a vs actively for their lot has not really improved under the B JP—nor had it under the BSP.

The BJP realises the centrality of the Dalit vote toits survival— hence a Dalit President. But May aw a tic anne gate this by asking why not a Dalit Prime Minister? Sure after more than 70 years of independen­ce the time has come forth eD al its to make demands which go beyond symbolic statues. It may seem outrageous but this has the potential of taking the steam out of the BJP’s Dalit campaign. This can also provide there st of the Opposition reason to congregate around her.

The four cow belt states facing long term anti-incumbency could become vulnerable to a coordinate­d attack by a focused Opposition. The glue to all this would have to be Mayawati’s Dalit-centred appeal. Muslims would converge to it if they sensed a chance of it defeating the BJP. This alliance was able to muster 40% of the 2014 vote. With enthused cadres, there is a chance of exceeding this come 2019. It seems far-fetched but with potential growing disenchant­ment with NDA, the electorate needs reason to vote for an alternativ­e– and at this moment May aw a ti seems the only one who can provide that.

 ??  ?? When BSP leader Mayawati thought it was a matter of time before Uttar Pradesh landed back in her lap, she had obviously not reckoned with Modi and Shah HT PHOTO
When BSP leader Mayawati thought it was a matter of time before Uttar Pradesh landed back in her lap, she had obviously not reckoned with Modi and Shah HT PHOTO
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