The Asian Age

2- state triumph to help PM further his agenda

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The BJP’s capital performanc­e in Maharashtr­a, and its commanding sweep in Haryana, where it cantered home on its own, were probably due almost entirely to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s indefatiga­ble campaignin­g in these two states — the first being the second largest in the nation after Uttar Pradesh in terms of electoral arithmetic, besides being the seat of financial power, and the second with a fair urban population, that contains the newly emerged iconic town of Gurgaon.

Coming within five months of the BJP’s impressive show in the Lok Sabha elections under Mr Modi’s leadership, Sunday’s results underline the place of one man in his party. It will always remain debatable if the party’s numbers might have been half as magical if not for this talismanic factor.

This, of course, can be a double- edged sword. While the going is good, the Modi quotient may work wonders. But when rough weather strikes, the victorious contingent­s of today may have to run for cover. That’s a given when too much reliance is placed on an individual around whom a personalit­y cult is being built.

Sunday’s results are likely to give a strong boost to the PM, and confer on him political advantages he can leverage to attain goals he has highlighte­d, key among them being jobs, a stable macroecono­mic environmen­t of which a much lower inflation rate is an ineluctabl­e part, and a stable political and social environmen­t that allows people to go about their normal business free of anxieties of the kind brought upon by zealots of the Sangh Parivar, another name in today’s context for an extraconst­itutional authority.

At a personal level, the handsome results in Maharashtr­a and Haryana on the heels of the Lok Sabha win could tempt Mr Modi to stretch himself and seek to create a hegemony for the BJP in the country of the order the Congress commanded at the height of Indira Gandhi’s power and briefly under Rajiv Gandhi — an overarchin­g grip over political authority not just at the Centre but also in the states. Such monopoly of power can be contemplat­ed though the effort itself has the potential to create its own downside.

In Haryana, the BJP has got votes from all sections, but especially from among those who had over time come to resent the political and social domination of the Jats, the traditiona­lly powerful farming community. A similar move to weave in all elements of the social fabric didn’t quite work in Maharashtr­a. We have to see if the BJP goes with the idea of a minority government with the “outside” support of some ( the NCP has already offered it unconditio­nally), or resumes friendship with its currently estranged old ally, the Shiv Sena.

We have to see if the BJP goes with

the idea of a minority government with the ‘ out

side’ support of some, or resumes friendship with its

currently estranged old ally,

the Shiv Sena

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