The Sunday Guardian

Modi stuns Opposition with poll-eve measures

Despite calling it a jumla, Congress and others voted for upper caste reservatio­ns.

- VIRENDRA KAPOOR Rajesh Malhotra Via web Write to us at

Only a couple of months separate the Prime Minister from a fresh mandate. Soon after taking office in May 2014, Narendra Modi had appealed to the Opposition to allow the government to function for four years and to “play politics in the last year before election”. And now he has begun playing politics in right earnest— though the Opposition, which did not heed him, started creating all manner of obstructio­ns from day one, even as he engaged in fixing the broken plumbing of the governing system. Small wonder, then, it is now scurrying for cover.

The 10% quota in government jobs and educationa­l institutio­ns for the economical­ly weaker in the general category showed how he had obliged a reluctant Opposition to fall in line. Despite insisting that the proposal was “yet another jumla”, they still found it hard to oppose it, the extraordin­ary vote in the Lok Sabha with 323 ayes and three no-es testifying to their helplessne­ss, nay, hopelessne­ss. They feared the Constituti­onal amendment could yield electoral gains for the ruling party, yet they lacked the courage to oppose it.

Now, we are told, the government is set to come up with many such “masterstro­kes” in the few remaining months before the model election code is enforced. The much talked about universal basic income scheme could be a real game-changer. Recall how the then Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav feared the unveiling of such a sop on the eve of the 2017 UP Assembly election. It is different that the BJP pulverised him and his newfound “bua” Mayawati even without the UBI, deflating the pompous Yadav to such an extent he did not recover his public voice for a long time.

Imagine if the same UBI, which Yadav had feared could be his nemesis ahead of the last Assembly poll, is actually unveiled on the eve of the upcoming parliament­ary poll. The poor and the disadvanta­ged voters getting an assured monthly “dole” of, say, Rs 2,000, every month in their Aadhaarlin­ked bank accounts could do the trick for Modi, especially on top of all the goodies which he has delivered in the last four-plus years, including cooking gas, household electricit­y, millions of subsidised homes, toilets, village roads, etc.

The real problem with the city-centric commentari­at, especially the media, is that its gaze is confined only to major urban centres. And since it rarely, if at all, stirs out deep into the interior, it has no way of knowing how the lives of rural women have changed thanks to the provision of Lpg-fuelled chulhas and easy loans for their men, who are largely self-employed vendors or craftsmen providing small but essential services to the people. Let us leave the farmers’ plight for a moment, because it is a longrunnin­g saga of misdirecte­d freebies and an intrinsica­lly skewed agricultur­e policy.

Due to the focus of the government on improving the lot of the poor, especially in small towns and villages, the urban-based middle class, which had all along constitute­d the Jana Sangh-bjp’s core base, did feel neglected by its first party of choice. Demonetisa­tion and GST too hurt this segment of the electorate. But the troubles caused by the twin shocks are well and truly behind it.

India. India has been fighting Islam within its own borders since inception and giving up every advantage, whether strategic, tactical or operationa­l. Indeed, the government has begun to address its grievances. The 10% reservatio­n is the first of many steps in a conscious effort to win back its trust. The easing of the GST norms and raising its threshold for small and mid-level businesses too is meant to bring round the sullen trading community. Indeed, the 10% reservatio­ns assuage the fears of the people who felt that a major chunk of the cake was earmarked for the reserved categories. Now that it too is getting its own protective net, it will have less reason to complain.

Admittedly, quite aside from good governance, winning elections also entails managing popular perception­s. Here again, despite manufactur­ed scams and scripted rhetoric expressed through the ubiquitous social media handles for Rahul Gandhi, the Congress dynast has offered little evidence for him to be taken seriously. Learning the basic tenets of Hinduism from the likes of Shashi Tharoor, he of the sweat equity fame, cannot establish embellish his self-proclaimed credential­s as a janeudhari Shiv Bhakt. He continues to muddle through various challenges presented daily in a nationwide polity. For instance, his party unit in Kerala openly defies the Supreme Court in the Sabarimala case, while at Parliament MPS from the state are barred from sporting black bands to protest the surreptiti­ous smuggling of two women in the dead of

by Bill and Nandan (6 January), demonetisa­tion had a positive effect on the Indian economy. If you talk to the poor people, you will find that they are in support of demonetisa­tion. night by the Marxist government into the temple complex.

Whether the Shyam Pitroda-monitored internet groups, which unleash a daily volley of canards against Modi, without in any way denting his image for absolute probity, can transform the image of Pappu to an adult politician capable of offering mature leadership remains to be seen, though post-assembly poll the joy of the “kept” Delhi media to celebrate the arrival of their messiah did not surprise anyone. However, Modi seems to be acting according to a game-plan which is being implemente­d in stages in order to mesmerise the country, to convince it that a second five-year term is in everyone’s own interest.

A SELF-DENYING LAMENT

There was a minor storm in the media’s teacup the other day over an editorial in a Kolkata daily which, as is its wont, excoriated the Modi government for its alleged clamps on the freedom of the press. Ironically, the newspaper itself is proof that such fears are grossly exaggerate­d. For, its lay readers realise how twisted it has become in its news coverage, distorting any and everything to hit out at the Modi Sarkar, while turning a blind eye to the doings of the Mamata Banerjee government. Having become a virtual extension of the AICC, sensationa­lising mistakes of the Centre, real or imaginary—mostly imaginary—it has ceded a lot of ground to its rivals. Nonetheles­s, it was rich for it of all the media outlets to lament the so-called fetters being put on the free press.

BUSINESS TRUMPS YOGA

Yoga guru-turned-entreprene­ur, the bearded and saffron-robed Ramdev, says he is no longer sure whether Modi will come back after the next general election. Whether he was talking as an astrologer or as a yoga guru is hard to tell, but he was certainly talking as an entreprene­ur whose business has grown from a few hundred crores of rupees annually to nearly Rs 10,000 crores in the last four years.

Since a businessma­n is prone to hedge his bets, fearing trouble should the wrong party come to power, Ramdev casting doubt on Modi’s return makes sense. He is keen to protect his business interests, especially the grant of hundreds of acres of land by the BJP government­s in Assam, Maharashtr­a, UP, Uttarakhan­d, etc., just in case a non-bjp government came to power.

However, if Ramdev is not fearful of his business interests, the question he should answer is: Will he or will he not campaign for the BJP as aggressive­ly as he had in the last election? Otherwise, we may conclude that his primary business interests have come to overshadow his yoga persona.

brokers. Such action was long overdue and the authoritie­s should not stop short of taking necessary tough action even in cases where political connection­s to the high and mighty are clearly evident.

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