The Free Press Journal

Don’t make 2019 polls a fight between Modi and single alternativ­e candidate: TMC’s Derek O’Brien

- AGENCIES

Trinamool Congress leader Derek O’Brien believes the BJP and Narendra Modi can be stopped in 2019 and offers a three-step approach that includes not making the elections a contest between Modi and “a single alternativ­e candidate”.

He also says that the “false rhetoric built around a 10- letter word – corruption – is increasing­ly being questioned” and it is for the opposition parties to set the frame right by building an alternativ­e narrative around another 10letter word: competence.

“And on this the BJP can’t win,” he asserts, reports PTI.

To stop Modi, the Opposition needs to make a realistic assessment of national alternativ­es to the BJP, as well as regional opportunit­ies and challenges for that party, and then strategise.

“In the run-up to 2019, I offer a three-step approach,” the Rajya Sabha member suggests.

“First, don’t make this a national contest between Narendra Modi and a single alternativ­e candidate. This plays into the BJP’s hands. Rather, make this a national election that is sum of state elections.

Make Modi and the BJP fight 29 different regional elections in the idiom and language and with the issues and themes of the individual states,” he says.

“Don’t let the BJP make it a contest around polarising issues – beef, pseudo-nationalis­m or some such primetime, made-for-TV-and-Twitter agenda,” he adds.

O’Brien makes these observatio­ns in his book ‘Inside Parliament: Views from the Front Row’, which is a collection of his political essays.

His second suggestion is: consider where the BJP juggernaut was stopped in 2014 and chalk out a plan accordingl­y in those states.

“Wherever the Congress can provide strong and rooted state leaders, willing to work hard, it will lead the battle and be relevant. Otherwise, parties that are strong in individual states will shoulder responsibi­lity. It’s a joint effort,” O’Brien writes in the introducti­on of the book, published by HarperColl­ins India.

The third approach, according to him, is urging people to judge the government’s performanc­e based on its policies.

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