Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Personal charisma paved way for BJP’s electoral successes

Payingtrib­ute

- Kumar Uttam letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: His leadership, foresight, maturity and eloquence put him in a league of his own. Atalji, the gentle giant, will be missed by one and all.

Veteran politician LK Advani once told a group of journalist­s it took a lot of effort to convince Atal Bihari Vajpayee of the need for a new political party – the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

India’s current ruling party was founded on 6 April 1980 – it was Easter Sunday that year – after an executive meeting of the erstwhile Janata Party decided on 4 April that year to expel all members of the former Jan Sangh over dual membership.

A membership of Janata Party mandated affiliatio­n to no other outfit – not even the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS).

“There was some conspiracy to throw us out,” Advani said in the interactio­n some years ago. Advani and Sundar Singh Bhandari, a fellow pracharak of the RSS, returned to Vajpayee after travelling across the country between February and March 1980.

There was deep resentment among Jan Sangh activists at being treated as “second class citizen” and Advani insisted Vajpayee should lead the new party.

“He had some doubts,” Advani said. “Is there scope for another party in India?”

Some persuasion from Advani and fellow party men, and Vajpayee gave in. The BJP was born at an executive meeting called at Delhi’s Ferozeshah Kotla grounds with Vajpayee as its first president and LK Advani, Sikander Bakht and Suraj Bhan as its general secretarie­s.

The BJP suffered a humiliatio­n in the 1984 parliament­ary election, winning just two seats. Vajpayee lost to Madhavrao Scindia in Gwalior. A tough phase started for him.

Advani took over from Vajpayee as the BJP president in 1986, and steadily grew into India’s first Hindu Hriday Samrat (king of Hindu hearts) with his Ram Rath Yatra. Vajpayee had taken a back seat of sorts, spending a lot of time on something he loved – cinema, reading, meeting, travelling, gossiping, cooking and, of course, eating.

The 1989 election injected a huge dose of euphoria into the BJP. It won 85 Lok Sabha seats in 1989; and 120 in 1991.

The limitation of BJP’s image as a hard-line Hindu party was exposed. The demolition was Babri mosque at Ayodhya in December 1992 made it a political “untouchabl­e”.

This was when the need for Vajpayee was more acutely felt. And Advani himself declared, at a party national executive in Mumbai in 1995, that Vajpayee would be the party’s prime ministeria­l candidate. In general election the next year, the party’s tally touched 161.

If Advani took the BJP up from 2 seats in 1984 to 120 in 1991, it was Vajpayee’s magic and personal charisma that helped the BJP achieve 161 seats in 1996 and 182 in 1998 and 1999. And this helped the party grab power. Vajpayee’s contributi­on was two-fold.

One, he appealed to a large swathe of voters beyond the BJP’s core. And second, his presence made many leaders such as George Fernandes, Farooq Abdullah, Chandrabab­u Naidu, Naveen Patnaik, Mamata Banerjee, and even Karunanidh­i shed their misgivings about the BJP and support the party’s bid for power. This was the reason he became the first non-Congress PM to complete a full term in office.

The BJP today has grown into India’s most powerful political force. It would not have arrived here but for the contributi­on of Vajpayee – from the days of being a grassroots organiser and a backbenche­r MP to eventually becoming India’s most popular leader and widely loved Prime Minister.

 ?? HT ARCHIVE ?? Atal Bihari Vajpayee was one of India’s greatest statesmen who was admired by leaders across party lines.
HT ARCHIVE Atal Bihari Vajpayee was one of India’s greatest statesmen who was admired by leaders across party lines.
 ?? HT ARCHIVE ?? (From left) Jaswant Singh, George Fernandes with former PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee at a press conference in 1997.
HT ARCHIVE (From left) Jaswant Singh, George Fernandes with former PM Atal Bihari Vajpayee at a press conference in 1997.

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