Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

A public battle for Hyderabad with a private eye on Delhi

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

HYDERABAD: When Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed a mammoth rally in Hyderabad on Monday evening, he claimed there were five main forces in Telangana: Telangana Rashtra Samithi, All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen, Congress, Telugu Desam Party and Bharatiya Janata Party. While the battle is now primarily framed as one between TRS and the Maha Kootami, each of these five actors has a distinct public narrative about what it stands for and its own private motivation­s. Conversati­ons with political players and informed observers indicate that while this election is a battle for Hyderabad publicly, for each party, the aim is to strengthen its hand in the battle for Delhi.

TRS

TRS chief and caretaker chief minister K Chandrasek­har Rao has said he called for early polls because he wants to get over with state polls and focus on creating a non-Congress, non-BJP federal front nationally. This may be true. But what is also true is that the TRS’s primary rival in the state is the Congress. And because Congress’s primary rival nationally is BJP, which is a minor player in Telangana, KCR has a shared political interest with BJP. This perhaps explains why his party has repeatedly supported the central government. KCR’s space is now even more limited because his arch rival, Andhra Pradesh chief minister N Chandrabab­u Naidu, has placed himself as one of the anchors of the anti-BJP pact nationally.

CONGRESS

Congress’s main claim is that while the TRS government has been marked by family rule and corruption, its own alliance will offer a new template of clean and progressiv­e governance.

Privately, four factors are driving the Congress. One, it has felt that despite taking a major political gamble in creating Telangana and destroying its interests in Andhra Pradesh, it was never rewarded. This election is about winning that prize and putting itself in a better position to win the 17 Lok Sabha seats in the state in 2019. Two, it is motivated by a recognitio­n that if the TRS wins, the BJP can count on it as an ally nationally. Three, Congress is in power on its own in two states (Punjab and Puducherry) and in an alliance in a third state (Karnataka); its prospects in the fourth state where it was in government, Mizoram, is uncertain. If it wins Telangana, it will mark a degree of political revival and it opens up possibilit­ies of greater resource collection. And finally, Maha Kootami is also a test of whether the arithmetic of a united opposition can take on an entrenched leader. If it succeeds, expect a similar alliance in the Andhra Pradesh assembly polls next year and more in 2019.

TELUGU DESAM PARTY

For Chandrabab­u Naidu, whose party is contesting only 13 seats, Telangana poll brings both local and national strands together. The first motivation is political revenge. Naidu has never forgiven his one time protege KCR for going on his own, and eventually carving out the state which came at great cost to Andhra Pradesh. A strong KCR in the neighbouri­ng state is anathema to Naidu. Instead, if he can have a friendly government of which the TDP is a part, Naidu will feel a sense of vindicatio­n that he still has a say in how Hyderabad is governed. Nationally, a win will catapult Naidu — an architect of the Maha Kootami — as a central player in the anti-BJP front.

AIMIM

Asaduddin Owaisi has thrown his lot with the TRS: and this gives KCR an advantage because his AIMIM is expected to win around half-a-dozen seats in Hyderabad. If TRS falls short of a majority, it can then reliably turn to Owaisi’s legislator­s. While his rhetoric is sharply directed at BJP, his main political competitio­n is with Congress — for local Muslim support in Hyderabad and Telangana, and also nationally since he wants to emerge as a Muslim leader across states.

BJP

For BJP, Telangana poll is important because locally, it offers the party an opportunit­y to expand, build a pool of leaders, and eventually become an important force. But as of now, it remains a minor player. Its main objective is to prevent the victory of its arch rivals in Maha Kootami. Having TRS in power means that even if BJP does not run Telangana, it does not have a hostile force in power. It will also give energy to the opposition nationally and those who wish to have a grand alliance. BJP is well aware that in its core areas of north, west and central India, there will be a dip in 2019 polls. It will make gains in east. In south, it will rely on postpoll allies. TRS is one such ally. And having it perform well now, and in 2019, at the cost of Maha Kootami, is the best bet in a situation where BJP itself cannot win.

 ?? AP ?? Congress president Rahul Gandhi listens to Andhra Pradesh chief minister N Chandrabab­u Naidu at a press meet in Hyderabad.
AP Congress president Rahul Gandhi listens to Andhra Pradesh chief minister N Chandrabab­u Naidu at a press meet in Hyderabad.

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