Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

To win over voters, Gehlot leaves no stone unturned

- Sachin Saini and Suresh Vyas

JAIPUR: No one in Rajasthan has the heart to tell Rajasthan chief minister Ashok Gehlot that foundation stones, by definition, come at the beginning and not the end.

With the elections likely to be announced anytime now, Gehlot has been crisscross­ing the state, either attending foundation laying ceremonies of projects or inaugurati­ng them one after another — more than 100 in the last 20 days — apart from making the fortnightl­y trip to his constituen­cy, Sardarpura.

He even made an exception and inaugurate­d some projects during the ongoing shradh period, considered inauspicio­us by Hindus, but took care to save some of the big-ticket projects like the Jaipur Metro trial run and the Barmer oil refinery for the last.

A senior bureaucrat, who did not want to be named, says the first three years of Gehlot’s tenure were spent in trying to consolidat­e his position. “He was more focused on visits to Delhi and meeting the high command, so he was able to devote little time and attention to administra­tion.”

However, in the last 18 months, after the high command made it clear that they would go to polls with Gehlot as their chief ministeria­l candidate, he has tried to speed up developmen­t. REAL VIKAS PURUSH?

In recent months, Gehlot has tried to cover every community in Sardarpura — Malis, Rajputs, Jats and Muslims — under his various welfare programmes and even spent ₹3 crore on the developmen­t of each ward.

“He is a real vikas purush (man of developmen­t) and his return to power is a must so that the developmen­t drive in the state continues,” says Jodhpur Developmen­t Authority chairman Rajendra Solanki. But now that Gehlot has exhausted all three chances — they voted for him in the last three assembly elections — will they indulge him again?

The bad roads, the slew of new colonies awaiting developmen­t, more than 40 slums lying unattended, stretch ahead like a bad omen. And then of course, there is the drinking water issue.

Over the years, the CM has added an IIT and NIFT to Sardarapur­a and built new office buildings for the high court and the municipal corporatio­n, but forgotten to look into the water supply lines, the leaky pipes, the daily struggle of the people for drinking water.

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