Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Entry of old Cong loyalist, Brahmin face good optics for BJP in run up to UP polls

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

Saubhadra Chatterji and Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an

New Delhi: Former Union minister Jitin Prasada’s induction into the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) came in the backdrop of caste realignmen­ts in Uttar Pradesh, which goes to the polls early next year and where Brahmins form an influentia­l vote bloc.

Though Prasada’s influence within the community may be limited, his entry gives an opportunit­y to the BJP to showcase a Brahmin face in a state where reports of dissidence have surfaced in recent weeks amid allegation­s that the administra­tion was biased towards Thakurs.

The Congress, however, said Prasada’s exit was a minor loss because the 47-year-old had no electoral heft and had ceased to be a mass leader.

For BJP, it is also a chance to underline that Congress loyalists --- Prasada was considered close to former party chief Rahul Gandhi -were abandoning the party.

“They say Modi ji is intolerant. Then why so many senior Congress leaders are abandoning the “tolerant” Gandhi family and wanting to work with Modiji?,” tweeted Assam chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma, who left Congress to join BJP in 2015.

But the Congress pointed out that Prasada lost from his home seat of Dhaurara in the last two Lok Sabha elections. “Make no mistake. He is no Jyotiradit­ya Scindia or Himanta Biswa Sarma who have mass support and had followers in the organisati­on,” said a senior Congress strategist. Scindia and his followers quit Congress in 2020, causing the party’s government in Madhya Pradesh to fall.

Prasada’s entry into BJP comes before elections in Uttar Pradesh, which BJP won in a landslide in 2017 by forming a rainbow coalition of upper castes, non-yadav Other Backward Classes and nonjatav Scheduled Caste communitie­s. Before that election too, BJP had inducted key Brahmin leaders -- Brajesh Pathak from Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) and Rita Bahuguna Joshi from Congress.

A senior BJP leader said it was the bulk of the Brahmin vote that helped BJP secure massive wins in the last two national elections and 2017 UP elections. The ruling dispensati­on is also counting on Prasada to counter the perception that

Brahmins, who form roughly 13% the state’s population but have wider social influence, moved away from BJP after chief minister Yogi Adityanath, who is from the Thakur community, was made CM in 2017. In a tweet, Adityanath welcomed Prasada. “His entry will definitely strengthen the party in UP,” the CM said.

Last year, Prasada tried to consolidat­e his position among Brahmins by holding a Brahmin Chetna Samvaad. He claimed his community was facing persecutio­n and being ignored by state government. But his efforts were somewhat overshadow­ed by the Samajwadi Party (SP) and BSP after the regional outfits promised to build statues of Parashuram.

“The impact of statements by Prasada, [BSP chief] Mayawati and

SP insinuatin­g that there is a Thakur vs Brahmin sentiment in the state, which has been lent support by the CM’S preference, cannot be denied. Various Brahmin social groups have conveyed their concerns to the party leadership,” said a second senior BJP leader.

In the 2007 elections, BSP won a simple majority by crafting a coalition of extremes between Dalits and Brahmins. To woo the upper caste community, Mayawati even changed her party’s slogan from Tilak, Tarazu aur Talwar, Inko Maaro Joote Chaar’ to ‘Haathi Nahi, Ganesh Hai; Brahama, Vishnu, Mahesh Hai’

“The Brahmin vote has always played a decisive role in the past. The dip in the popularity of the Congress, which at one time had popular Brahmin leaders, was exacerbate­d when the community shifted to BJP after the Ramjanmabh­oomi movement. In between there were times when the community even supported the BSP,” a third senior BJP leader said.

Two of Prasada’s aides claimed he was increasing­ly getting marginalis­ed in the Congress, and had even told them how in his home turf of Shahjahanp­ur, SP turncoats were getting more importance than his loyalists. Once an integral part of ‘Team Rahul’, he was among the so-called G23 leaders who demanded sweeping changes in the party organisati­on last year.

The aides also claimed that despite being named poll incharge for West Bengal, Prasada had little say in strategy, alliance and communicat­ion plan. “I knew him as a good person. He was a prominent Brahmin face for our party. He must have joined the BJP for greener pastures,” said leader of Congress in Lok Sabha, Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury, who worked with Prasada during Bengal polls.

“The BJP does not believe in caste politics. Under the leadership of PM Narendra Modi, we believe in sabka saath sabka vikas. The coming of Congress leaders such as Rita Bahuguna Joshi and now Prasada is also a seal of approval on the administra­tion of Modiyogi double-engine government,” said Chandramoh­an, a BJP spokespers­on in UP. Asked if Prasada’s inability to win the previous two Lok Sabha elections is a cause for concern, Chandramoh­an said the Prasada family has heft in the state’s politics. “Both the party and he will benefit from coming together,” he said.

 ??  ?? Jitin Prasada
Jitin Prasada

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