The Hindu - International

Modi’s Chennai rally yet another reflection of BJP’s ‘southern push’

The BJP is conscious that there has always been some space in T.N. politics for a non-DMK and non-AIADMK formation; the PM’s visits reinforce perception that the party is devoting greater amount of time and energy to make inroads in State

- T. Ramakrishn­an

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Tamil Nadu on Tuesday and Wednesday to drum up support for his party in the Lok Sabha election has only reinforced the perception that the BJP is devoting greater amount of time and energy this time to make inroads into the southern State than in the past.

The present visit by Mr. Modi marks his seventh trip to the State since February 27. Following the 2019 Lok Sabha election, Mr. Modi has been demonstrat­ing his particular attention to Tamil Nadu. This could be evident from the choice of Mamallapur­am as the venue of his informal summit with Chinese President ◣i Jinping, his frequent adoring references to great Tamil literary works such as the Tirukkural, the conduct of the Kashi Tamil Sangamam in his Varanasi constituen­cy and the Saurashtra Tamil Sangamam in his home State of Gujarat, and his carrying in a procession the Sengol (sceptre), said to have a deep Tamil Nadu connect, before installing it beside the Lok Sabha Speaker’s chair in the new Parliament building.

The way two leaders — State president K. Annamalai and Union Minister of State L. Murugan — are being promoted gives the impression that the party is viewing Tamil Nadu with an enormous potential for growth.

Though in the 2019 Lok Sabha and 2021 Assembly elections, there was nothing that the BJP could boast of despite contesting as part of the AIADMKled front, the party’s ‘southern push’ is being pursued vigorously in the State. In 2019, the party netted 3.6% votes with nil seats and two years later, 2.6% with four Assembly seats.

One reason is that certain sections of the AIADMK, the principal Opposition party, have left the organisati­on, the process of which, the BJP senses, is giving it a chance to grow. The manner in which Mr. Annamalai came down heavily on icons of the AIADMK in the last one year or so irked the party to such an extent that it snapped ties with the BJP last September.

Besides, the State president has been relentless­ly projecting the national party as ‘the alternativ­e’ to the ruling DMK. Over and above these factors, the party is conscious that there has always been some space in Tamil Nadu politics for a nonDMK and nonAIADMK formation, the vote share of which, on an average, is around 15%.

It is against this backdrop that Mr. Modi’s roadshow in the central part of Chennai on Tuesday evening has to be seen. Though diehard members of the party and admirers of the Prime Minister know well that the day’s event per se would not be sufficient for the BJP’s nominees to make it to Parliament, it would certainly invigorate the cadre with about 10 days to go for polling.

Moreover, after a gap of 28 years, the party has fielded nominees in all the three Chennai constituen­cies. Regardless of the eventual outcome of the current exercise, the party’s volunteers attribute the BJP’s relatively better performanc­e in Bengaluru during the 2023 Karnataka Assembly election and in the 2020 Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporatio­n’s poll to roadshows by Mr. Modi in Bengaluru and by Union Home Minister Amit Shah in Hyderabad.

Notwithsta­nding the efficacy of the roadshow, it was clear that the event became the talking point of the day in the State where the party has only been a marginal player.

 ?? B. JOTHI RAMALINGAM ?? Jostling for space: Prime Minister Narendra Modi at a roadshow in Chennai on Tuesday ahead of the Lok Sabha election. The State will go to the polls on April 19.
B. JOTHI RAMALINGAM Jostling for space: Prime Minister Narendra Modi at a roadshow in Chennai on Tuesday ahead of the Lok Sabha election. The State will go to the polls on April 19.

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