One Disruptor And Two Old Foes Perk-up Gujarat Polls
BY R.K.MISRA
The Gujarat
assembly election dates are out. The state faces a triangular fight. The ruling BJP and traditional opponent Congress lock horns while Arvind Kejriwal’s
Aam Aadmi Party(AAP),the third factor this time, remains a riddle wrapped in a
mystery inside an enigma, as the saying goes. The most often asked question in
Gujarat, who will AAP gore?
The dates were announced after Prime Minister Narendra Modi concluded his present three day visit ,his fourth in
just over a month. The stage is set for a tussle that will directly impact the 2024 national polls.
If, he sweeps
Gujarat, Modi strides the national arena for a third stint with the confidence
of a winner, if just over the threshold, the lame duck victory will turn into a
handicap. “You cannot defeat the BJP in Gujarat with Modi at the helm,” say BJP
leaders confidently adding” he has the gift of the gab in turning any situation
to his advantage”. Both the Congress and the AAP disagree vehemently. The BJP
in Gujarat is vulnerable like never before, is their common refrain though
voiced separately.
Be that as it
may, the electoral waters in Gujarat have been muddied by the presence of AAP
which has been aggressively foraying into the state aiming to carve a place for
itself through its high profile campaigning. ”We are playing to win, have
little to lose and much to gain, whatever the outcome”, point out their state
leaders.
On the other
hand, The Congress, has adopted an uncharacteristic low profile concentrating
on door- to - door campaigning, building on its strength in the rural areas and
voter groups which have been worst affected by the economic downturn including
farmers, jobless youth and the small scale entrepreneur. ”We are targeting 125
winnable ones of the total 182 seats though we shall contest many more”,
says the chief party spokesperson.
BJP has ruled
Gujarat for almost 25 years and Modi for
more than half of it. He is the longest serving chief minister in the
state’s history but still short of former
Congress Chief Minister Madhavsinh Solanki’s unbeaten record of winning 149 seats out of the total 182 in 1985. Modi’s
high point was 127 seats to the Congress’ 51 in the 2002 elections, held under
the shadow of the Godhra train carnage and
the statewide communal riots that left a thousand dead. After that, it
has been a steady downhill journey to117
in 2007,115 in 2012 and 99 in 2017.
The
Congress has made small, sure-footed
gains from 51 seats in 2002 to 59 in 2007, 61 in 2012 and 77 seats in
2017. Dr Manish Doshi, party
spokesperson candidly admits that 2002
was the lowest point for his party due to the resort to blatant communal polarisation
but we still managed 51 seats and there has been no looking back thereafter.
“wait for some surprises this time”, he adds.
Doshi relies on
Gujarat’s electoral history to bolster his claim that the ensuing election will
be a straight contest between the two traditional rivals. Influential political
leaders of their time had floated
regional parties in Gujarat which failed to garner electoral approval.
These
included Chimanbhai Patel, who quit the Congress
following his ouster in the face of the Navnirman students agitation and formed
the Kisan Mazdoor Lok Paksha, Shankersinh Vaghela who walked out of the BJP to
form the Rashtriya Janata Party and veteran BJP leader Keshubhai Patel who
formed the Gujarat Parivartan Party. All came a cropper.
AAP’s entry into
Gujarat was initially music to BJP’s ears as it saw a split of opposition votes
affecting the Congress and working to their advantage. Kejriwal’s set up was
also more keyed into Himachal Pradesh after it’s Punjab victory and planned to use the ensuing elections in
Gujarat as an opportunity for organization building and no more. With Delhi and
Punjab in the bag, Himachal would be a natural priority to enable it to go for
Haryana in 2024 thus making for a
contiguous land mass political domain.
However the
Punjab victory also brought AAP into the crosshairs of the BJP, which came
alive to its plans and its Himachal in-charge Satyendar Jain ended up behind
bars after Enforcement Directorate
scrutiny. In a change of strategy, AAP, which was hitherto targeting only the
Congress held rural strongholds in Gujarat then decided to beard the BJP in its
den with an all- out assault. In June this year AAP revamped it state unit, appointed 850 office-bearers ,
enrolled 30,000 members and publicly announced its intent to take on the ruling
BJP with Kejriwal leading from the front.
AAP’s proven success so far has been only in
the urban areas, considered the BJP’s citadel. In the Surat Municipal Corporation
elections last year the BJP won 93 and AAP 27 seats in a 120- member house
while the Congress was wiped out. In the subsequent Gandhinagar Municipal Corporation
elections, the BJP bagged 41 of the total 44 seats with the Congress down to 2
seats and AAP taking the remaining solitary seat. However, the combined votes
of Congress and AAP were higher than the BJP’s. All the eight municipal
corporations of Gujarat- Ahmedabad, Vadodara, Surat Rajkot, Junagadh, Jamnagar,
Bhavnagar and Gandhinagar are BJP- controlled. Though Modi sought to tackle
anti-incumbency by replacing chief
minister Vijay Rupani and his entire cabinet which was under fire for laxity in
dealing with Covid, there are indications that this group guillotine has not
worked. In fact, the recent Morbi bridge collapse with over 150 fatalities, including
many children has brought the focus back on inept governance and
corruption adding to the ruling party’s
woes.
If AAP is now intently
targeting the urban bastions of the BJP with a high-profile campaign , the
Congress is skimming the ground and its focus is more in the rural and tribal
areas. In the 2017 Vidhan Sabha elections of the 55 urban constituencies in
Ahmedabad, Vadodara Rajkot and Surat the BJP bagged 44 and the Congress 11
while of the 127 rural and semi-urban
constituencies the Congress and allies
won 68 and the BJP 55.It was no wonder that the Prime Minister, in one of his
public rallies, warned party cadres that the surface sloth of the Congress hid
an active rural, grassroot contact
programme. He also said that for this election, the Congress had outsourced the work of heaping calumny to
the AAP, thereby seeking to equate the two as working in tandem. Are they, even
if informally?
https://www.newindianexpress.com/opinions/2022/nov/04/one-disruptor-and-two-old-foes-perk-up-gujarat-polls-2514794.html
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