The Sunday Guardian

BJP focuses on reserved seats in its Telangana mission

- MAYANK KUMAR NEW DELHI

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) unit in Telangana has started preparing for the Assembly polls in the state and is especially focusing on the 31 reserved Assembly constituen­cies of Telangana in its mission to emerge as an alternativ­e to the ruling Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS) in 2023. The saffron party had appointed former parliament­arian and senior party leader, A.P. Jithender Reddy, in-charge of 19 Scheduled caste constituen­cies, while former parliament­arian Garikapati Mohan Rao, is looking after the scheduled tribe seats. In the run-up to the polls, the BJP had also planned to hold statewide padayatras in five phases to exploit the anti-incumbency sentiments against the ruling dispensati­on of the state. After the second Covid wave, the state unit organized the first phase named Praja Sangrama Padayatra from the Bhagyalaks­hmi temple in Hyderabad led by state president Bandi Sanjay. Many drew parallels of this with late Rajshekhar Reddy’s padayatra during the 2000s which changed the politics of the state. Top BJP leaders, including Home minister Amit Shah, and party president J.P. Nadda are going to participat­e in the padayatra.

The party leadership aims to touch more than 3,000 villages of the state during the five phases.

Talking to The Sunday Guardian,

M. Raghunatha­n Rao, a senior leader of Telangana BJP, said, “Previously, we were not in serious contest as TRS used to evoke the issue of regionalis­m in the elections, and we were not able to counter the propaganda. But, since the 2019 election, the party has been working hard on the ground. You saw the outcome: we won a good number of seats in the 2019 parliament­ary polls. Our performanc­e in the reserved seats was quite good. Hence, we are now doing specific outreach in those areas. We have strengthen­ed our party structure in all the 119 assembly segments in the last one year. The success in the recent Huzurabad Assembly bypoll had energized the cadre. The party had divided responsibi­lity among the senior leaders.”

In the Huzurabad Assembly bypoll, the BJP’S candidate Etela Rajender won by a margin of more than 20,000 votes. In the 2019 parliament­ary elections, the BJP won four seats in Telangana, its highest ever in the state and got roughly 20% vote share.

Political analysts and experts feel that the saffron party is taking the 2023 Assembly polls very seriously and is hoping to emerge as one important pillar in the electoral landscape of Telangana. “Before the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, the BJP was not in the picture in this southern state. In 2014, under united Andhra Pradesh, the BJP fought on just 58 seats out of 294 Assembly segments. But, now it is a force to reckon with. It had made inroads within the different communitie­s of the state. Moreover, it is also banking upon the antiincumb­ency faced by KCR government, as the TRS has been ruling since the last eight years. The saffron party had also got resources to mobilize the cadres who make a favourable political atmosphere on the ground. We have been told by the state leadership that the party is seriously focusing on 70 Assembly constituen­cies for the upcoming state assembly elections,” said Laxmi K. Reddy, a political analyst based in Hyderabad.

In the last Telangana Assembly polls held in 2018, the Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS) won 88 Assembly seats, while the Indian National Congress (INC) won 19 seats and All India Majlis-e-ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) had won seven seats. The BJP had won only one seat, but its vote share was the third highest in the state after the Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS) and the Congress.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India