Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

BJP plans manifesto for each constituen­cy

- Kumar Uttam kumar.uttam@hindustant­imes.com ▪

BENGALURU: A poster hangs on the wall of a room in the bungalow at Sadashiva Nagar, a posh Bangalore neighbourh­ood. It displays the names of each of the 224 assembly seats of Karnataka, and has three columns against each to show if data has been collected, received and tabulated from the constituen­cy. All the columns are filled.

The data will go into the manifesto the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) plans to prepare for each of the assembly constituen­cies ahead of the May 12 state election in which it is aspiring to return to power in the only southern state it has governed in the past. The BJP has crowd-sourced the manifestos, getting data separately from each of the 224 assembly constituen­cies. BJP general secretary, Muralidhar Rao, the party’s in-charge for Karnataka, has overseen the exercise handled by more than two dozen young profession­als operating out of a data centre from the Sadashiva Nagar bungalow.

“It took about four months for the team to collect data from each constituen­cy on issues that concern citizens of that area. The job is done and we will soon release the constituen­cy manifestos,” Rao said.

Another BJP leader said the manifestos could be released on April 30.

The process started around December with the BJP identifyin­g 500 influencer­s in each constituen­cy of Karnataka. These influencer­s were people from varied social, economic and profession­al background­s.

These were salaried people, government employees, those having links with trade-specific associatio­ns (such as the fishermen’s associatio­n), businessme­n associated with bodies such as chamber of commerce, and more. A data base of about 150,000 people was created before the exercise of collecting data from them was launched.

Each of these 500 influencer­s in every constituen­cy was approached with a questionna­ire about issues confrontin­g the constituen­cy that they considered important, and would want the next government to address.

The response of each influencer was noted and then shared with the central data team based in Bangalore.

Video footage and sound bites from several of these influencer­s were taken and a personal interview was conducted by BJP volunteers on the ground.

A one-on-one interactio­n was conducted between some of the influencer­s and senior BJP office bearers.

Young BJP leaders then went through each input received from the ground, watched and heard each video and audio feedback that was received, scanned each questionna­ire filled by the influencer­s and accounted for every response they received from party units in each constituen­cy.

Most of the respondent­s had flagged issues related to developmen­t. The data was then fed o a specially designed computer programme to weed out duplicatio­n, scoop out the most relevant topics that were common to all responses and ensure nothing was missed.

After election dates were announced on March 27, the focus shifted to giving the constituen­cy-wise manifestos the final touches.

“All this was done with a twin objective,” said the BJP leader cited above said. First, to ensure that the BJP has its ear to the ground and a direct connect with important people in each constituen­cy. Second, the promises the party makes to the voters of Karnataka should have a local flavour,which resonates with the electorate in each constituen­cy.

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