The Hindu (Hyderabad)

Sexism on the campaign trail

Leaders in Karnataka are in a dispute over the eect of schemes targeting women

- S. Bageshree bageshree.s@thehindu.co.in

Since last weekend, Karnataka has seen arrows ¦ying between the two top political leaders on the question of what the government’s ¦agship guarantee schemes have meant for women.

It all began with the Janata Dal (Secular) State president and former Chief Minister H.D. Kumaraswam­y’s interpreta­tion of how two of the €ve guarantee schemes targeted at women — free travel in non-luxury government buses and monthly €nancial support of ₹2,000 for women heads of families — have impacted them. “Today, because the government has announced the €ve guarantee schemes during the last elections, our mothers in villages have gone astray. They have to think about what happens to their lives. You should think about what happens to your family...” he said.

This drew widespread condemnati­on from the Congress leaders, with the Deputy Chief Minister and the president of the Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee D.K. Shivakumar leading from the front. Since then, the repartee between them has gone beyond just a debate on the schemes and got enmeshed in their ongoing bitter battle for Vokkaliga (the politicall­y powerful caste to which both belong) leadership, assuming the character of alpha males sparring for territoria­l control.

Mr. Kumaraswam­y’s statement, o© the cu© as it may sound on the face of it, actually draws from two notions that have been mainstream­ed ever since the women-centric schemes were implemente­d, that the money given to women comes from “pickpocket­ing” men — a reference to money that men might spend on liquor — and that with more mobility and cash in hand, women have “abandoned” their duties, such as cooking and caring for their families. This is among the several narratives built by the Opposition to undermine these schemes, one of the earlier ones being that Chief Minister Siddaramai­ah was “dividing families” with these schemes by creating €ssures between husband and wife or daughter-in-law and mother-in-law. These notions have been pushed aggressive­ly on social media platforms.

There can be debates on whether the schemes have been implemente­d well, whether Karnataka’s excise policy is skewed and whether these schemes can serve as tools for women’s empowermen­t in the long run. But the typically patriarcha­l and feudal reactions and narratives are in themselves testimony to the fact that the schemes have, in principle, achieved their purpose of giving some sense of autonomy to women.

A reluctant apology

Sensing the widespread condemnati­on and the potential damage it can cause from women voters, Mr. Kumaraswam­y apologised to “mothers and sisters if his statements had hurt them.” However, refusing to let go of the patronisin­g tone, he said that he only meant to warn them about how women’s “innocence was being misused” by the Congress administra­tion in the name of guarantee schemes.

He also pointed out, rightly, that the Congress leaders have not exactly covered themselves in glory when it comes to misogyny. He cited nonagenari­an MLA Shamanur Shivashank­arappa’s recent remark that the BJP candidate, from Davanagere, Gayathri Siddeshwar was only “€t to cook.” All India Congress Committee (AICC) general secretary Randeep Singh Surjewala’s comment on BJP MP Hema Malini has attracted the wrath of the Election Commission of India, he said. Mr. Shivakumar had himself told an interviewe­r some months ago that women are chanchale (€ckle-minded) by nature and need to be watched over.

Outright misogynist remarks are quite the norm in political discourse and tend to come thicker and faster in an election season. This again begs the larger question that has been posed ad-nauseum: could such talk have been so normalised if our Assemblies and the Parliament had more women with fair representa­tion to the cross-section of castes and classes?

This time, in Karnataka, eight women are in the fray for the Lok Sabha election from the Congress and the BJP-JD (S). The eight out of 56 €elded by the parties is nowhere near the “ideal” envisaged by the Women’s Reservatio­n Act, 2023. The only solace is that though many of the eight are from politicall­y powerful families, it is a big jump from the 2019 elections that saw the two parties €elding four women.

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