Kuwait Times

Modi’s maharani fights key Indian state election

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JODHPUR: An Indian princess allied to Prime Minister Narendra Modi faced a tough battle for re-election on Friday as the hard-fought desert state of Rajasthan went to the polls.

Defeat for Vasundhara Raje, Rajasthan’s chief minister, in the western state of 47 million people would be a blow for Modi’s image as a surefire vote-winner ahead of general elections in 2019. That the charismati­c but fiery Raje is a maharani, or princess, is nothing unusual in Rajasthan, a state famous for its forts and grand palaces with peacock-filled lawns. It is one of India’s few regions where the local royal families going back centuries-and outlasting British rule-have flourished in democratic politics since independen­ce in 1947.

Raje, 65, is the daughter of a former maharaja and married an erstwhile ruler of another dynasty. Her main challenger in her constituen­cy is Manvendra Singh, another blue blood from western Rajasthan.

Another is Siddhi Kumari, also a princess and a two-time state lawmaker who lives in a wing of her ancestral palace in Bikaner around 340 kilometers (210 miles) from the state capital Jaipur. The rest, its walls decorated with family portraits of resplenden­t kings, queens and princes of yore and mounted heads of hunted beasts, has been converted into a hotel. “I do my work and go. No one needs to know (me) apart from my work,” said Kumari, 45, perched on a sofa next to a stuffed leopard.

“I don’t take the people’s trust in me or the family I come from lightly. But the trust that is there has to be earned every day. I take it very seriously and work every day,” she said.

Ayodhya Prasad Gaur, author of a book on one of the state’s leading royal families, said the nobility’s popularity had to do with their “permanence” compared to ordinary politician­s who just “come and go”. “The erstwhile rulers of Jodhpur still receive a wedding invite-just like kings of earlier times-from hundreds if not thousands of people in the region each year. And they maintain that relationsh­ip by sending a token amount as a gift for every invite they receive,” Gaur told AFP.

“Family name only works in the first election,” cautioned Vishvendra Singh however, a Congress lawmaker running in the state election from the erstwhile royal family of Bharatpur, around 190 kilometres from Jaipur. “I have been in politics for three decades and have been elected multiple times as parliament­arian and a state lawmaker. I am in constant touch with the people, meet everyone and that is what works in politics,” he told AFP.

Raj Singh, a voter in Bikaner, said he voted for Kumari in the last two elections. “Unlike ordinary politician­s, (royals) won’t indulge in local schemes to make money or shield criminals as that could tarnish the family name,” he told AFP.

State premier Raje, representi­ng Modi’s ruling Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), swept to power in a landslide in 2013, much like Modi did nationally a year later. But her personal popularity has waned, with critics calling her aloof and autocratic and out of touch with the interests of ordinary people. Like Modi, she never holds press conference­s.

 ?? — AFP ?? This picture taken on December 4, 2018 shows supporters of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) greeting Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje (right) during an election rally in support of BJP candidates in Kotri village in Rajasthan state’s Bhilwara district.
— AFP This picture taken on December 4, 2018 shows supporters of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) greeting Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje (right) during an election rally in support of BJP candidates in Kotri village in Rajasthan state’s Bhilwara district.

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