Hindustan Times (East UP)

For the BJP, it’s been a productive year

It has treated every election, including local body and panchayat polls, as equally important, even those outside its traditiona­l areas of influence

- Swapan Dasgupta is a Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha The views expressed are personal

For historians in the future, 2020 will always be marked as the year of the Great Pandemic, a year when the world took refuge behind masks and economies took a spectacula­r beating. Since last March, normal life as we have known it either came to a halt or was spectacula­rly redefined. In time to come, the story of the recent past will be divided by pre-Covid and post-Covid.

Yet, an aggregate view that highlights change and transforma­tion often obfuscates the deep continuiti­es between two otherwise distinct chapters. This came to the fore during the elections to the Bihar assembly two months ago. The fear that traditiona­l campaign methods would become irrelevant in the face of a fear of the pandemic and that turnout of voters would see a sharp decline turned out to be unfounded. All the preparatio­ns for a virtual campaign conducted through smart phones and tablets came to nought. Covid-19 should have been the Great Fear, but the political world chose to confront it fearlessly.

The year of the pandemic began with a flurry of excitement over the repeal of Article 370 and the enactment of the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act (CAA) that fast-tracked Indian citizenshi­p for those who fled religious persecutio­n from neighbouri­ng countries. It has ended with well-off farmers from Punjab, Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh trying to overturn a range of agricultur­al reforms. Both movements witnessed a significan­t mobilisati­on of sectional interests and both were romanticis­ed by the Opposition parties that had emerged from the 2019 general election battered and bruised. Naturally their target was the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) after its outright victories in successive general elections.

How the BJP has conducted itself in the past year, even as it faced sustained challenges from disparate movements is worth a serious look.

The most important aspect is the orientatio­n of the BJP as a party in government at the Centre. The period after 2014 is not the first occasion the BJP has been in power with a charismati­c leader at the helm. It was in power between 1998 and 2004, although never with an outright parliament­ary majority. On both occasions, the prime minister (PM) of the day had maintained aloofness from day-to-day politics. Atal Bihari Vajpayee liked to project himself as a great consensus builder, balancing between different pulls and pressures and on a number of occasions taking positions that offended the BJP rankand-file and the RSS leadership. Although Vajpayee was routinely wheeled out during elections, his enduring popularity in the establishm­ent lay in the belief that he was “the right man in the wrong party.”

An unintended consequenc­e of Vajpayee’s projection as a non-partisan leader was the party’s loss of focus. With no real experience of the art of combining its responsibi­lity in government with its role as a political party, the BJP emulated the Congress experience of subordinat­ing the party to the government. Consequent­ly, party units were often reduced to the role of patronage facilitato­rs. The sangh parivar, in turn, was miffed that the Vajpayee government left many of its core concerns unaddresse­d. These were factors behind the listlessne­ss of BJP units during the 2004 election campaign and the consequent defeat.

It is to the credit of Narendra Modi that he imbibed the lessons of the 1998-2004 experience and sought to inject the party with a new sense of purpose even while wielding power at the Centre. First, there was a conscious attempt to draw in the party units in the initiative­s of the Modi government. During the lockdown and beyond, the entire party was mobilised to disburse relief to the vulnerable sections and even facilitate the evacuation of migrant workers to their home states. This may explain why, despite the magnitude of economic dislocatio­n in the wake of the lockdown and after, the BJP wasn’t a victim of any backlash during the Bihar elections.

Secondly, in addressing some of the party’s core concerns such as the repeal of Article 370 and the enactment of CAA, the Modi government was able to establish a strong emotional connect with the larger saffron parivar. This has ensured that predictabl­e disappoint­ments over patronage have not translated into bitterness against the Centre. Unlike the Vajpayee government which — despite the personal respect the PM commanded — was viewed with a tinge of detachment, the BJP units all over India view the Modi government as their own. This profound sense of ownership has contribute­d to energetic political activity, even during non-election seasons. It is significan­t that Modi’s innings hasn’t recorded any serious spat between the RSS and the government. This was a recurrent feature of Vajpayee’s term.

Finally, the tenure of Amit Shah as party president witnessed the transforma­tion of the BJP into a vast election machine. Shah ensured that the BJP treated every election, including local body and panchayat polls, as equally important.

Equal importance was attached to elections being fought in areas which were outside the BJP’s traditiona­l areas of influence. It is this sustained focus on weak areas that has seen the BJP extending its footprint to West Bengal, the Northeast, Telangana and Kerala. To cap it all, the BJP under Shah and now JP Nadda has made it quite apparent that it is willing to enlarge its own political space by accommodat­ing defectors from other parties. This doesn’t mean the BJP has shed all ideologica­l pretension­s. It merely indicates that its quest to consolidat­e its status as the new dominant party is unending.

 ?? HTPHOTO ?? It is to the credit of Narendra Modi that he imbibed the lessons of the 19982004 experience and sought to inject the BJP with a new sense of purpose even while wielding power at the Centre
HTPHOTO It is to the credit of Narendra Modi that he imbibed the lessons of the 19982004 experience and sought to inject the BJP with a new sense of purpose even while wielding power at the Centre
 ?? Swapan Dasgupta ??
Swapan Dasgupta

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