BJP Deploys Cavalry To Salvage Gujarat
BY R.K.MISRA
Probably
for the first time in the last two decades, the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party
is feeling the need to work overtime to assuage party loyalists and workers
ahead of an Assembly election in Gujarat.
Union Home Minister Amit Shah has been camping in the state for
the fire-fighting operations and Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is due to
return to the state on November 19 on a three-day visit, is due to address
eight poll rallies by Monday.
The BJP has announced that the PM will be returning to the state
towards the end of November and will move from door-to-door for two days,
distributing voters’ slips to the people and making a personalised appeal to
vote for the BJP, again another first for him.
In the last Assembly election in the state, PM Modi had addressed
34 election rallies and it remains to be seen if he surpasses the number this
time.
His departure from the state on Monday will incidentally, coincide
with Congress leader Rahul Gandhi’s rallies in the state. The Congress leader,
currently participating in the 'Bharat Jodo Yatra', is expected to address two
rallies in the state on November 21 and 22. Both PM Modi and Rahul Gandhi are
expected to be at Navsari on the same day.
The discomfiture of the BJP in the state has increased following
Gujarat High Court’s scathing criticism of the state government’s handling of
the Morbi bridge collapse, which officially took 135 lives on October 30.
Dissatisfied with the response of the state government, the HC
called for the entire record for the contract awarded to a private firm and
asked searching questions. This, coupled with both AAP and
Congress putting the BJP in the dock for not booking the company owner,
industrialist Jaisukh Patel, is also becoming a poll issue in some parts of the
state.
PM Modi and Amit Shah’s focus is especially on the Saurashtra
region, where BJP had fared badly in 2017. Four of the PM’s rallies are
expected to be held in this region.
This is also the first time that the BJP is facing so many rebel
candidates in the state. While Amit Shah has pressed Union ministers and party
MPs from Gujarat and almost all BJP chief ministers to campaign in the state
and speak to the rebels, the sparks threaten to singe the party in several
constituencies.
While senior party leaders like Vijay Rupani and Nitin Patel have
‘voluntarily’ stepped away from the election, their workers in several
constituencies are not said to be enthusiastic about campaigning for the
official party candidates, especially in those constituencies where new entrants
and ‘turncoats’ from the Congress have been given precedence over old
loyalists.
Pradipsinh Jadeja, home minister in the Vijay Rupani
cabinet, lost his job when the entire cabinet was sacked and replaced
last year. He has opted out from the contest this time and his personal
assistant Babusinh Jadhav has bagged the BJP ticket for the Vatwa seat in
Ahmedabad.
The BJP’s sitting legislator from Waghodia in Vadodara
district Madhu Shrivastava, denied a ticket, filed his nomination to
contest as an independent. He has reportedly spurned overtures from the party
to reconsider his decision to contest against the official candidate.
Rajendrasinh Jadeja, former BJP candidate from Mandvi in Kutch,
has also switched allegiance to the Congress.
Dhavalsinh Jhala, who defected from the Congress to the BJP, is
contesting as an independent from Bayad in north Gujarat. In Dhanera in
Banaskantha district, Mavji Desai, is contesting as an independent.
In Panchmahal, former BJP MP Prabhatsinh Chauhan quit the party
and is now the Congress candidate from Kalolas.
Lunawada constituency has two BJP rebels, S.M.Khant and J.P.
Patel, contesting as independents.
The first list of the BJP saw 38 legislators getting the axe.
State unit president C.R.Patil had then described it as a 'generational shift'
and explained that more young and aspiring party leaders had been fielded by
the party this time.
The second list of six candidates also saw two sitting MLAs, both
women, dropped; the third list of 12 candidates also had several defectors from
the Congress, including Alpesh Thakore, disappointing party supporters and
loyalists.
Protests erupted in at least 22 constituencies, where BJP party
offices were stormed. State level leaders including party chief Patil and home
minister Harsh Sanghvi, drafted to mollify the ones dropped from the list,
failed to get across to the rebels.
Subsequently, former chief minister Vijay Rupani, Union
ministers Purshottam Rupala, Mansukh Mandavia and Pradipsinh were drafted to
deal with the tense situation. Amit Shah himself rushed to Gujarat under
directions from the Prime Minister to take charge of the situation.
State home minister Harsh Sanghvi was rushed to Vadodara where a
sitting legislator and two former MLAs threatened to jump into the fray
as independents.
Besides Madhu Shrivastava, the sitting legislator from Waghodia,
Vadodara, Satish Patel and Dinesh Patel from Karjan and Padra were also
threatening to contest as independent candidates.
None of the three attended the meeting convened by Sanghvi.
Mahendra Kaswala, fielded from Savarkundla, is facing a revolt
after being tagged an ‘outsider’ and ‘anti-farmer’ as he hails from Ahmedabad.
The BJP candidate allotted the party ticket from Wadhawan in
Surendranagar district expressed her unwillingness to contest in the election.
There is also similar resentment against Patidar stir leaders
Hardik Patel and Alpesh Thakore who quit the Congress to join the BJP and have
been fielded from Viramgam and Gandhinagar respectively.
Supporters of Jhankhana Patel, BJP legislator from Choryasi in
Surat, who had won in 2017 with the second highest margin of over one lakh
votes in, were upset when she was dropped. They took to the streets to protest.
Kesrisinh Solanki, dropped this time from Matar, resigned and
joined the AAP but returned to the BJP after a call from Delhi.
There were reports of protests by BJP workers in Wankaner, Talala,
Botad, Mahuva, Kalawad in Saurashtra region as well as from Becharaji,
Visnagar, Deesa, Dhanera, Mehsana, Himmatnagar and Vijapur in North Gujarat.
“A party which disrespects and drops its own tested leaders
can no longer lay claim to value-based politics. It is nothing but crass
opportunism”, pointed out Dr Manish Doshi, Congress spokesperson. He possibly
was referring to Mohansinh Rathwa, a Congress veteran and ten-time party
MLA who quit the Congress to join BJP and was promptly obliged with a
party ticket for his son.
Similarly, Bhagwanbhai Barad, a Congress legislator
who had been sentenced to imprisonment in a case of illegal limestone
mining case and was disqualified by the Speaker in 2019, joined the BJP
last week after the Gujarat High Court stayed the conviction.
The then Speaker, Rajendra Trivedi, who had disqualified
Barad and subsequently became revenue minister in the Bhupendra Patel
government, has himself been dropped this time. But Barad has been quickly
rewarded with a BJP ticket from his old constituency.
As campaigning picks up, the next one week is going to be crucial
and will show if the BJP can successfully fight the fire raging in its own ranks
in Gujarat.
https://www.nationalheraldindia.com/opinion/bjp-deploys-cavalry-to-try-and-salvage-situation-in-gujarat-but-its-an-uphill-task
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