Gulf News

7 reasons why BJP lost |

ECONOMIC PLIGHT AND IGNORING FARMERS TAKE THEIR TOLL ON INDIA’S RULING BJP

- BY SUHASINI RAJ AND JEFFREY GETTLEMAN

Is India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi in trouble? With his white beard and booming speeches, Modi swept into power four years ago by promoting a populist brand of politics that mixed brawny Hindu nationalis­t views with lofty economic promises. But on Tuesday, his party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), got walloped according to elections results released from races held across five states. The BJP suffered its worst defeat in recent years, losing more than 100 legislativ­e seats — a result that shook the political establishm­ent and left many wondering if Modi is in danger of losing next year’s national election.

1 BJP losing its grip on crucial states

Pundits described the elections, held in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Mizoram, Chhattisga­rh and Telangana, as the “semifinals” of Indian politics. In just a few months, India is set to hold national elections. It appears that Modi, who seemed so invincible not long ago, may be vulnerable as his brand loses its lustre. At the same time, the leading opposition party, the Indian National Congress, once considered comatose, has suddenly woken up. The results are a “major embarrassm­ent for the government”, said Satish Misra, a senior fellow at the Observer Research Foundation. It sends “a dangerous signal” to the BJP that it is losing its grip on states that were crucial to its victory in 2014.

2 Barbs on Rahul Gandhi backfire

The results will boost the fortunes of the Congress party, which has sought to present itself as a credible rival to the BJP and a potential leader of a broad antiModi alliance. The Congress is led by Rahul Gandhi, whose father, grandmothe­r and great-grandfathe­r all served as prime ministers of India. During the election campaign, Modi and other members of the BJP ridiculed Rahul, 48, as the callow scion of a political dynasty. But Rahul can take credit for engineerin­g what appears to be the most significan­t defeat for Modi since he came to power in 2014.

3 Ignoring farmers’ plight and jobs

“The competitio­n is neck to neck,” said Narendra Kumar, a political scientist at Jawaharlal Nehru University. Indian voters are famous for passionate­ly embracing a party in one election and then enthusiast­ically voting them out in the next. Among the complaints against Modi: He has ignored farmers. He cannot deliver on his party’s promises, including creating one million jobs a month, which economists said was impossible. Cost of living has sharply increased. Millions of farmers are on the brink of crisis, facing rising fertilizer and electricit­y costs and lower prices for their produce. Experts say their distress is driven by too much competitio­n, strict export rules and inadequate government purchases.

4 Not addressing economic worries

And something even bigger may be happening. Across India, economic worries are becoming a pressing issue that

Modi will have trouble sweeping away. He raised high expectatio­ns, promising to attract huge China-style export factories and create millions of high-paying jobs. India’s annual growth rate has been over 7 per cent, but Modi has not turned India into the next China. The amount of red tape in India remains stultifyin­g and many parts of the country’s manufactur­ing sector, such as textiles, have suffered widespread layoffs.

5 Impact of GST and demonetisa­tion

Other sources of discontent are a new tax system put in place under Modi and his decision in 2016 to suddenly replace most of the country’s currency — which was supposed to crack down on money laundering, but led to severe cash shortages instead. The results in India’s agrarian, Hindi-speaking ‘cow belt’, where the BJP has dominated for 15 years, is even more deflating to Modi and his team. Even Modi’s usually superconfi­dent allies admitted to being concerned. “This has been a very intriguing election,” said Seshadri Chari, a member of the BJP’s national executive committee. “Modi is going to be personally worried.”

6 Deployment of Yogi Adityanath

In the run-up to the polls, the BJP deployed one of its most controvers­ial leaders, Yogi Adityanath, a radical Hindu monk who serves as the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, India’s largest state. Adityanath addressed dozens of rallies — far more than Modi — where he attacked the Congress party as soft on terrorism and too attentive to Muslim voters. But the BJP sought to play down the significan­ce of the results and Yogi’s role. Sambit Patra, a BJP spokesman, rejected the idea that the polls were a harbinger of things to come. “To say that this is going to affect the national scenario is absolutely bunkum,” he said.

7 No action against mob lynchings across India

The BJP has been criticised as too soft on violent Hindu extremists, including mobs that have lynched people for slaughteri­ng cows. “The common man does not support mob lynchings,” said Anil Verma, head of the Associatio­n for Democratic Reforms, a nonpartisa­n organisati­on. Analysts say more Indians are growing upset with BJP not cracking down on the mobs, who often twist Hindu nationalis­t messages espoused by BJP leaders and use them to justify violence. Vigilantes have killed dozens of people, most of them Muslims or lower caste Hindus, in the name of protecting cows. “Indians by and large are not happy with the killing of their fellow men,” Kumar said.

 ?? PTI ?? Rahul can take credit for engineerin­g what appears to be the most significan­t defeat for Modi since the latter came to power in 2014.
PTI Rahul can take credit for engineerin­g what appears to be the most significan­t defeat for Modi since the latter came to power in 2014.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates