The Sunday Guardian

PARTY REBELS POSE A THREAT TO CONGRESS IN KARNATAKA

The dissidents include 14 sitting MLAs and 35 party nominees, who had contested the Assembly elections of 2013 and yet were denied tickets by the high command.

- PANKAJ VOHRA NEW DELHI

The Congress prospects in Karnataka have received a serious setback, with 49 party rebels who have entered the fray, threatenin­g to affect the chances of the official nominees, in the Assembly elections slated for 12 May. Attempts to pacify them ahead of the last date of withdrawal of nomination­s did not succeed, and the party’s primary concern was that they would definitely prove detrimenta­l to the chances of the selected candidates—many of whom previously pledged allegiance to the Janata Dal (Secular) and moved to the Congress on account of Chief Minister Siddaramai­ah.

The dissidents include 14 sitting MLAs and 35 party nominees, who had contested the Assembly elections of 2013 and yet were denied tickets by the high command. The principal grouse of the rebels is that they were sidelined so as to accommodat­e the Chief Minister’s loyalists despite the fact that they had built the party, in their respective constituen­cies, from the grassroots. The political significan­ce of this revolt is that in the last election there were 17 seats where the victory margins were less than 1,000 votes. This time around, there would be many more seats where the confrontat­ions would be too close for comfort and thus consequent­ly every vote would be relevant.

In sharp contrast, the Bharatiya Janata Party, which in 2013 had fought the polls as a divided entity, with B.S. Yeddyurapp­a and B. Sriramulu fielding their own candidates, is contesting the current elections unitedly. In addition, the party is hoping that once Prime Minister Narendra Modi commences his campaign, there would be a shift in the mood and a saffron wave would sweep Karnataka, putting to an end the challenge offered by the Congress.

However, the superstiti­ous amongst politician­s are confused on the possible fallout of a BJP victory in Karnataka. There is a strong belief in political circles that since 1983, any party that has won the polls in the state has subsequent­ly not been able to form the government at the Centre. It is obvious that core BJP and RSS supporters would want Narendra Modi to overturn this trend and lead the party to a dramatic victory, with or without the help of Janata Dal (Secular), which could play the role of a kingmaker. Politics is not guided by irrational thinking, though politician­s often are swayed by unfounded apprehensi­ons and therefore the BJP would indeed not wish to lose an opportunit­y to wrest the state, given a divided Opposition would be in no position to overturn the 2014 mandate for the Centre next year.

Interestin­gly, former Prime Minister H.D. Deve Gowda is still a force to reckon with in Karnataka, and members of his own Vokkaliga community in particular are working overtime to ensure that the JDS rakes in a sufficient number of seats to ascertain the future political course of the state. As yet there is no indication whether the JDS would align with the BJP or the Congress in the post poll scenario, since its top leadership continues to maintain that the party could upset the calculatio­ns of both the national players.

The problems within the Congress are enormous. Siddaramai­ah has completely dominated the political discourse in Karnataka and at times, while taking decisions, has defied the high com-

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