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Politics and Public Policy in India

Samajwadi Party sweeps Uttar Pradesh – 3 Yadavs shine

Predicting electoral outcomes in the treacherous swamps of heartland politics in India can be dangerous.

That the Samajwadi Party was on the rebound has been the news since Ashok Malik’s initial observations.

That there was a wave of anti-incumbency against Mayawati was less than obvious as noise from Delhi filled the air and extraneous issues took center stage from land acquisition to a Muslim sub-quota.

That the BJP’s Mahasangram, Jan Chetana had bombed was amply clear from the manner in which the election campaign in Uttar Pradesh became a below the radar, backroom affair with a belated Uma Bharti entry.

That the Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Vadra factor was good TV in as much as Anna Hazare was good for TRPs also became amply clear as multiple rounds of lowering of expectations began as well as the Congress foolishly persisted with its desperation over the Muslim vote.

But who would have thought that the voter in Uttar Pradesh would hand such a decisive verdict to the SP ?

In this victory for Akhilesh Yadav and Mulayam Singh Yadav it is odd that a 3rd Yadav should partake of some limelight. Yogendra Yadav stuck his neck out to go where no pollster has gone before in recent memory. Guess he may have overcompensated for some of that SP performance to err on the higher side.

Back in September of 2011 when the miasma of asinine cliches that passes for news and opinion in Delhi’s studios was focused on Sonia Gandhi’s health, Anna Hazare’s fast, the Social Spectator – an obscure online magazine carried a prolific piece of prose by Frank Huzur writing from Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh. The piece was titled “Chariot of Hope – Cycle of Change“. and it opened with these lines:

He may not be Harrison Ford. But he is surely James Dean. The rebel with a cause for socialist celebre!

In all of 2011, Google News Archives show at least 5000 odd stories on “Rahul Gandhi”. No, Frank Huzur was not talking of “Rahul Gandhi”, he was writing on Akhilesh Yadav who according to Google News Archives in 2011 managed a paltry 21 news stories. From that obscurity in 2011, Akhilesh Yadav has clearly come a long way to script his father’s comeback in Uttar Pradesh.

While the results will be analyzed threadbare in the next few hours, days and weeks there is a sobering lesson for those of us who have been conditioned to view politics in India from a Delhi lens.

No it is not on the Rahul Gandhi hype, which we were always sceptical about.

There is a deeper lesson on our conditioning that forces to think of Uttar Pradesh in purely casteist terms. This blogger had been immensely critical of a campaign strategy that focused purely on the calculus of caste while failing to project a pan-Uttar Pradesh agenda. There in lies a lesson for both analysis that held out some hope for Mayawati’s BSP as well as for a campaign strategy that viewed the BJP as a dark horse in Uttar Pradesh.

Rahul Gandhi has bombed before, and this outcome in UP is more confirmation of his limitations as a future leader for the Congress. The Nehru Gandhi brand may disproportionately sway the national discourse but it continues to underwhelm in state elections.

What is however stunning is how deeply the BJP leadership in Uttar Pradesh had its head buried in the sand. Instead of blaming amateur psephologists for decisions that ought to have been the Leadership’s gambles, the BJP needs to wake up to the reality that its status quoist strategies of incremental linear growth have run their course. There is no new ground left to break and there is little hope of reclaiming old ground.

The BJP has indeed emerged as a dark horse albeit on its way to nowhere. That the BJP needs a radical overhaul is an understatement !

Postscript:

- The BJP’s resounding win in Goa results and its partner SAD doing extremely well in Punjab to make history do little to hide the fact that it has been squeezed out of the largest state.

Tailpiece:

- The Presidential election later this year is now in flux unless the Congress manages to drive a hard bargain with the Samajwadi Party

Filed under: Advani Yatra against Corruption, Anna Hazare, Assembly elections 2011, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, उत्तर प्रदेश २०१२, Baba Ramdev, betrayal of aam admi, Indira Gandhi, Internet Hindus, Left Liberalism, Manmohan Confidence Vote, Mayawati, Narendra Modi, Nitin Gadkari, Offstumped, OpEds on Uttar Pradesh Polls 2012, Two Indias, UPA-II Critical Appraisal, Uttar Pradesh Polls 2012, Varun Gandhi

Federalism, India’s G-5 and the political scenario post Uttar Pradesh polls 2012

Originally published in The Pioneer

The election to the Uttar Pradesh State Assembly has now reached the half-way mark. It is a reflection on how much of a lame duck the UPA Government in Delhi has become that almost all analysis and speculation is now centered on the outcome in Uttar Pradesh. It would be an understatement to say the post-Uttar Pradesh poll political scenario is pregnant with possibilities. Three dynamics are clearly visible. The first has to do with what the outcome in Uttar Pradesh means to Rahul Gandhi’s future and by extension how that will shape what remains of Manmohan Singh’s second term in office.

The second has to do with events both in Uttar Pradesh and Gujarat and how they shape the leadership question in BJP in the run up to the next election, whenever it is held. The last has to do with the emergence of a second front based on ‘federalism’ that extends from Gujarat on the west coast all the way to Bengal on the east coast.

Much speculation and anxiety has developed over the outcome in Uttar Pradesh. There is a clear and significant spike in voter turnout in Uttar Pradesh, making that outcome all the more uncertain. The significance of a higher turnout perhaps will be most pronounced in the third phase even though in absolute terms it saw a lower turnout relative to the first two phases. If one looks at the historical turnout data from the seats that went to polls in the third phase, it would become apparent that these are seats that have seen low turnouts in past election cycles.

Much more recently in the 2009 Lok Sabha election, one would also notice that many of the seats that went to the polls in the third phase saw close contests where the outcome was settled by a difference of a few thousand votes. The increase in the turnout in these seats thus puts the issue of who has exactly benefitted from it, in uncertain territory.

There can be two theories on what the spike in turnout means. The first theory posits that this may be a ‘wave election’ while the second one could mean it is really a case of ‘turning out the base’. On the face of it a ‘wave election’ should benefit the Congress or the Samajwadi Party, since both of them played the youth card in a big way hoping to build momentum on the appeal of Mr Gandhi and Akhilesh Yadav respectively. A ‘turnout the base’ election on the other hand should benefit the BSP or the BJP.

The BSP is perhaps the only party going into this election with a committed voter base to bank on while the BJP has made it amply clear that its low key strategy was premised mainly on micro-targetting and booth level voter mobilisation. In recent weeks there has been talk of a “BJP surge” by seasoned observers of UP politics. One has also seen Twitter scoops of BJP’s internal surveys from Delhi-based journalists suggesting such a “surge”. Whether this optimism holds true on March 6 when results will be out or not, one thing is clear: Any outcome for the BJP that is less than a second place finish is not just inconsequential in the UP scheme of things but is also bound to pose tough questions in the Delhi scheme of things.

It is now clear that irrespective of whether the Congress finishes third or fourth, the spin will be on how Mr Gandhi has improved its prospects relative to the 2007 election, while conveniently forgetting the 2009 election. A third or fourth place finish by the BJP on the other hand will bring in to sharp focus the below the surface debate on the leadership issue. One can already see an increasing noise level over the Gujarat 2002 riots within the Delhi based media and the Congress’s extended NGO eco-system of Left-liberal activists.

With Gujarat set for polls later this year, it is inevitable that the media will increasingly focus on the Narendra Modi versus Rahul Gandhi contrast. One already saw glimpses of it in the Uttar Pradesh campaign in the election speeches of Mr Gandhi’s OBC poster boy, Beni Prasad Verma. Irrespective of how the BJP in Delhi feels post-State poll, it will have to deal with the inevitability of this contrast being the dominant political theme for the next many months.

A first or second place finish by the Congress in Uttar Pradesh may have the unintended effect of hastening the process of a realignment of coalitions. A stronger or resurgent Congress is hardly in the interest of a Sharad Pawar or a Mamata Banerjee. One has already started to see a coalescing of interests from West Bengal to Gujarat and Bihar to Tamil Nadu over the anti-federal impulses of the Congress. In the past, grand anti-Congress coalitions while rooted in federal sentiments were mostly incoherent on issues and policies.

These experiments ultimately came apart on account of irreconcilable personality differences. This time around there is more coherence on issues and the stance of the various players against the anti-federal policies of the Congress than there is chemistry between the various personalities. This paradox perhaps may be a blessing in disguise to perhaps result in a far more durable second front against the Congress with the levers of political power shifting to the states.

A first test of how durable such a second front could be will come during the Presidential elections due in a few months. The shift in political leverage to the States is real with even the American Strategic Community waking up to this shift to recognise what the Brookings Institute calls India’s G-7. It matters little how Priyanka Vadra dresses her hair or if Robert Vadra’s aspirations have embarrassed Mr Gandhi. The political shots are now being called by the G-5 non-Congress Chief Ministers within India’s G-7 — Mr Naveen Patnaik, Mr Nitish Kumar, Ms J Jayalalithaa, Ms Mamata Banerjee and Mr Narendra Modi.

Filed under: उत्तर प्रदेश २०१२, Narendra Modi, Nitin Gadkari, OpEds on Uttar Pradesh Polls 2012, Uttar Pradesh Polls 2007 Archive

Salman Rushdie to Batla House – Column in Rediff

Originally published by Rediff.com

As of the writing of this column, uncertainty loomed over writer Salman Rushdie’s [ Images ] participation at the Jaipur [ Images ] Literary Festival.

The political logic over the objection to Rushdie’s participation has a very simple basis. The Congress party in Uttar Pradesh [ Images ] is in a desperate dogfight for the Muslim vote. The Congress government in Rajasthan [ Images ] is in a desperate mood to shift the focus away from the worst sex cum murder scandals to have tainted it in many decades.

The Islamist establishment in India [ Images ] is facing both an existential and generational challenge.

Salman Rushdie is a convenient target of opportunity for both the Congress and the Islamist establishment.

It is no secret that the Islamic seminary of Deoband faces both a generational and existential challenge. The manner in which a reformist Maulana Vastanvi was ousted as its rector spoke volumes of the reformist undercurrents that Deoband is facing.

Outside of the Deobandi school of thought, one also saw in recent months a very bold move by the larger Barelvi organisation in India rejecting the import of hardline Islamist ideas from Saudi Arabia.

In fact, one has also seen a rare move towards bridging the communal faultline when back in October prominent Sunni Sufi leaders expressed a sentiment of reconciliation towards Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi [ Images ].

At a time when even Godhra has turned the corner on overcoming the scars of 2002 and Muslim victimhood, it is jarring and bizarre that there should be opposition to the Rushdie visit from even the BJP’s minority cell in Rajasthan.

At a time when the Delhi [ Images ] high court cites the example of China on Internet restrictions and Dr Subramanian Swamy has to turn up at a police station to explain an opinion column, the brouhaha over Rushdie may appear to be just another strike against Free Speech.

While protection to freedom of speech in India has at best been opportunistic, I would however hazard against drawing phony parallels with the unfortunate circumstances leading up to the self-imposed exile by the late M F Hussain. There is something deeper at work here.

Let us be clear: Rushdie is asserting his Indian identity as a Person of Indian Origin and consequently his right granted by law to be able to visit India at any time. The irony of expressing inability to guarantee security to Rushdie just the week after Jaipur hosted the Pravasi Bhartiya Divas is perhaps lost on the UPA government in Delhi and the Ashok Gehlot [ Images ] government in Jaipur.

The Congress party is hurtling this country down an all too familiar path.

Twenty-three years after the Congress government lead by his father Rajiv Gandhi [ Images ] succumbed to Islamic fundamentalist pressure to ban Rushdie’s book, Rahul Gandhi [ Images ] had an opportunity to stand up and show leadership on this issue.

With his silence and his party’s ambivalence in Delhi, Rahul Gandhi has failed a critical test as far as providing leadership to this country in bridging the deep communal faultline.

Political leadership to bridge that communal divide will have to come from elsewhere. Politics and politicians, however, can only take us so far down that path.

Ultimately, this has to be about the enlightened self-interest of the Indian Muslim. There is a short distance between denial that arises from victimhood and societal schizophrenia. There cannot be a better example than Pakistan on how the false bogey of Muslim victimhood eventually gives way to mass Islamist schizophrenia to justify Muslim killing fellow Muslim.

Islamist Schizophrenia is today so deep in Pakistan that truth has become the casualty even in matters concerning the deaths of that nation’s very own from Benazir Bhutto [ Images ] to Syed Saleem Shahzad.

When Truth dies along with it dies the ‘Fabric of Trust’ that holds nations and societies together.

From raising dishonest questions over the Batla House encounter to raising false bogeys over the Rushdie visit, the Congress party and its leadership Sonia and Rahul Gandhi stand guilty of causing irreversible damage to that fabric of trust.

Related tweets

Filed under: Anna Hazare, उत्तर प्रदेश २०१२, Baba Ramdev, betrayal of aam admi, OpEds on Uttar Pradesh Polls 2012, Uttar Pradesh Polls 2012

Destiny’s Daughters face off – from Uttar Pradesh Polls to a Southern Second Front

Uma Bharti despite her flaws from the past brings an important dimension to the UP election. In a field littered with non-playing captains she is leading from the front alongside other BJP hopefuls for a leadership role. In stark contrast the Congress and SP charge is being lead by Members of Parliament while Mayawati plays safe through the MLC route.

The Uma Bharti versus Mayawati face off will also draw an earthy contrast against the cheer-leading campaign style of the privileged Nehru-Gandhis.

The other dimension to Uma Bharti’s second coming, after practically self-destructing her career as recently as 2008, is  her entry to the club of four other Destiny’s daughters and one son.

More on that from Column in Rediff

India is poised at a critical juncture as its destiny is now closely intertwined with the political fate of destiny’s four daughters and one son. All five of them are grassroots achievers. What is more, all of five of them have a chosen a lonely political path with no dynasty to bequeath their political legacy to.

Mayawati [ Images ] and Uma Bharti stand between the cynical politics of competitive communalism in Uttar Pradesh between the Congress and the Samajwadi Party. Mamata Banerjee [ Images ] stands in between the Congress’ anti-federal impulses and the next election. Coming from a state with radically altered demographics, thanks to a soft border policy for decades, it is Mamata Banerjee who will face some early tests in bridging this divide.

No less will be the burden on Narendra Modi in bridging this communal fault-line as he continues down a path that few in the BJP have undertaken.

But the all important inoculation against an Islamist veto on the affairs in Delhi will likely have to come from down South. Noted political satirist and the match-maker of many a political alliance, Cho Ramaswamy, mooted a southern second front against the Congress over the past weekend with a key role for Jayalalithaa [ Images ].

Federalism is the credo that binds all of them together as was evident in their collective opposition to the divisive Communal Violence Bill pushed by the Congress. It is in that shared value of federalism that we must look for a new coalition that not just stands up to the cynical vote bank politics of the Congress, but is also able to pave a political path towards permanently burying this communal faultline.

The issue of Federalism assumes immense political significance as Governor’s assert themselves in an extra-constitutional fashion with the shameful approval of a flawed Judiciary as was manifest in the Gujarat Lok Ayukta case.

It will be interesting to see if a southern second front emerges in the months to come as a bulwark against the Congress’ anti-federal excesses.

More on that Cho Ramaswamy speech at the Tughlak annual event from last week translated from Tamil into English by blogger NR.

Jaya wishes to bring a government like Modis/Gujarat govt in TN. She aspires to take TN to a position better than Modis administartaion of Gujarat. She suffers though from lack of continous run as everytime is time is wasted on repairing the DMK unleashed disarray. She will compete with Modi if she gets continuous run of 10 years

BJP’s decision is in the hands of Advani, but we people have Modi in our minds, we see him as PM candidate. If he comes nation will be electrified, as Modi will become the issue, no other issues needed for BJP, with it they can win  the elections easily.

If for some reason, if those who speak secularism and associated issues combine and say bjp govt cannot come but a bjp supported govt can come, then I would say BJP should support Jaya as pm.

Her patriotism,determination, hardwork, charisma, grasping power, her ability to swim against tideknowing many languages are qualities which will be highly useful for a country.

Even otherwise, I think ADMk will play a crucial role in the formation of next government and they will need to do their bit for a BJP govt.

Be it uniting the party post being hounded out after MGR death, developing the party, or making the phoenix comeback and finally achieving a stupendous electoral achievement not even achieved by MGR, she has done it single handedly, and depended on her own and was her lone campaigner.

I admire leaders like jaya and Modi who get no central support and achieve despite the hurdles of hostile media and centre.

Interesting days ahead, Offstumped will be on a break for a few weeks, look forward to the much promised Uttar Pradesh election special podcast to be released soon   ….

Filed under: उत्तर प्रदेश २०१२, Baba Ramdev, betrayal of aam admi, OpEds on Uttar Pradesh Polls 2012, Two Indias, Uttar Pradesh Polls 2012

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  • On Third Front day dreams and Uttar Pradesh nightmares – Wrap up Podcast March 14, 2012
    A podcast conversation with  @dubash (http://phalaka.com) where we wrap up the Uttar Pradesh polls discussion with a look at the final numbers and analysis of vote shares. We also look ahead on all the buzz around Akhilesh Yadav, the rise of the Samajwadi Party and all of the day-dreaming over a possible Third Front Government [...]
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Opinions expressed on this site using the alias Offstumped are the blogger's personal opinions and do not in any way reflect the views of the blogger's Employers.