The Hindu (Kolkata)

The fight for minority votes

How the Congress and CPI(M) are trying to outdo each other

- G. Anand

anand.g@thehindu.co.in

he Communist Party of India (Marxist) and the Congress are fighting for Christian and Muslim votes in Kerala. The two communitie­s, which constitute 26.56% and 18.38% of Kerala’s electorate, respective­ly, could play a critical role in determinin­g the outcome of the Lok Sabha elections in the State.

Christians and Muslims have rarely behaved as a homogenous voting bloc in Kerala. However, the concerns of

the leaders of these communitie­s about the continuing dominance of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the country may galvanise these groups to vote in a more focused and uniform pattern compared to the Lok Sabha polls of 2019.

The Samastha Kerala Jemiyyathu­l Ulama, an influentia­l Sunni organisati­on, and the Latin Catholic Church have expressed their worry about the divisive politics playing out in the country.

Taking a potshot at the Congress, the Samastha published an editorial in Suprabhaat­ham, the organisati­on’s mouthpiece, expressing “deep fear” at the “overnight” shift of those who had earlier endorsed the secular and democratic legacy of Jawaharlal Nehru, to the Sangh Parivar. The defections of Anil K. Antony, son of former Congress Chief Minister A.K. Antony, and Padmaja Ky. Venugopal, daughter of former Congress Chief Minister K. Karunakara­n, to the BJP triggered the opinion piece. The editorial particular­ly expressed anguish at the fact that they had chosen the BJP over secular parties including the CPI(M).

Soon after, the Latin Catholic Church urged the laity to pray and fast on March 22 as a peaceful form of protest and social action against the rising tide of religious bigotry against minorities. The Church’s message seemed to support the INDIA bloc’s nar

rative that the Sangh Parivar poses a threat to secularism, democracy, and diversity.

While the Congress and the CPI(M) are INDIA bloc partners at the national level, they are political rivals in Kerala. In an attempt to outpace the Congress in its minority outreach, the CPI(M) announced last week that Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan would lead huge rallies across Kerala to mobilise public opinion against the Centre’s decision to implement the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act (CAA), 2019, as well as the attacks on Christians in Manipur.

Mr. Vijayan pointedly accused the Congress of pussyfooti­ng around the BJP’s move to implement what he termed the “patently antiMuslim” CAA. He alleged that Congress leaders, including Rahul Gandhi, have been muted in their opposition to the divisive law. In a move likely to have electoral ramificati­ons, Mr. Vijayan also hastily withdrew the cases that his government had registered against antiCAA protesters in 2019 and against Latin Catholic Churchback­ed people who had protested against the constructi­on of the Internatio­nal Seaport at Vizhinjam in 2022. The cases were sore points between the LDF government and the minority communitie­s.

The Congress is yet to announce a counter to the CPI (M)’s minority outreach. Neverthele­ss, it remains confident that its closest coalition ally, the Indian Union Muslim League, will attract Muslim votes for the United Democratic Front (UDF). Moreover, the Congress believes that Latin Catholics, who constitute 13% of Christians in Kerala, will continue to support it, despite the CPI(M)’s and BJP’s repeated efforts to reach out to the community.

Simultaneo­usly, the Congress has attempted to dent the CPI(M)’s staunch antiBJP image by alleging that both the parties are in cahoots in Kerala. The Leader of the Opposition, V.D. Satheesan, accused a top Left Democratic Front (LDF) leader, E.P. Jayarajan, and Union Minister Rajeev Chandrasek­har, of being stakeholde­rs in an Ayurveda resort in Kannur. Mr. Satheesan alleged that the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e and the Income Tax Department had dropped their investigat­ions into the supposedly dubious sources of funding for the Ayurveda resort after Mr. Chandrasek­har acquired stakes in the institutio­n. In return, the State government too dropped important cases against BJP leaders, he claimed.

In Kerala, given the social, educationa­l, regional, political and economic difference­s among them, minorities have never voted in a homogeneou­s manner. However, the BJP’s reported ascendancy in the State might alter this voting behaviour. Whether the Congress or the CPI(M) will benefit more from this remains to be seen.

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