AAP
Sets The Cat Among The Pigeons
Saeed Naqvi
“Maen akela hi chala tha
Jaanibe
manzil magar
Log saath aatey gaye aur
Karavan
banta gaya”
(I was alone when I set out towards
that
destination,
But people kept joining in and it
became
a bustling caravan)
Majrooh Sultanpuri
Thanks to AAP, there is a new kind of
thrill in the air. The pool of drivers leaning against their awkwardly parked
cars in my lane, sharing one newspaper, are suddenly looking smarter in their
winter wear. There is a certain bounce in their tread as they open the doors of
cars, and slam them carefully and drive their employers away.
Raj who looks stately on the wheels of
my modest jalopy, has recently not been very communicative. My inquiries about
his voting preference drew a blank. This stoked my lately acquired communal
reflexes: when people don’t share with me their political inclinations, I
assume that they have decided to vote BJP and that they feel they should not
share this detail with me. But the problem is inside my head because contrary
to my suspicions, all the drivers, indeed scores of others who work in the
neighbourhood, have gone and voted AAP. Why then were they secretive with me?
It turns out that in their minds it was a “class” thing. ‘They’ as a class had
voted AAP. And they saw us, notches above them in lifestyle, as affiliates of
the corrupt system AAP sought to upturn.
The refreshing thing about this Delhi
election is that those being driven by Raj and his cohorts have, in many
instances, also voted AAP. Just as Mir Taqi Mir felt ‘hemmed’ in by the walls
of the city, so too were a section of the ruling class suffocated by the two stale
ruling parties. This split in the ruling class has to be watched.
The electorate had handed to AAP the
best possible result: crowded opposition benches to menace any ruling party. The
BJP’s performance in the state would remain in critical focus. The momentum AAP
had built up would have enabled it meanwhile to stitch together organizations
in other states, harness the phenomenal energy it has unleashed, connect with
likeminded souls ploughing some lonely furrow elsewhere. AAP volunteer groups
are mushrooming in unexpected enclaves. These groups are even working on
devices to keep donations kosher. In my forty years of covering elections, I
have never seen anything quite like this. Unfortunately, AAP will have to
refashion its gameplan in the event of a re poll in Delhi. It will then have to
prepare for power in Delhi, not the best prospect for an inexperienced team.
The outcome of these elections have not been
bad for the BJP but there is enough in these results to question the promised Modi
magic.
The Congress is too large to become a
cipher but the party has been on its knees atleast since 1996 when P.V.
Narasimha Rao’s perceived inaction on the fall of the Babari Masjid brought it
down to 140 seats in a House of 543.
The 1991 elections were peculiar. Had
Rajiv Gandhi not been assassinated half way through the elections, he would
have had to sit in the opposition. Even with the sympathy wave after his
assassination, the Congress could only muster 244 seats, leaving it to
Narasimha Rao’s wiles to manage a majority. The winning mark is 272 seats.
One of the great puzzles of recent
Indian politics is the equation between what Congressmen insist is Congress
President Sonia Gandhi’s charisma and the party’s electoral fortunes.
Sonia Gandhi took over the party from
Sitaram Kesri who was party President in 1998. Kesri could claim his party won
141 seats which is one more than what Narasimha Rao could claim in 1996.
When Sonia Gandhi was at the helm in
1999, the party slid to its lowest ever: 114 seats. However, it did pick up to
145 in 2004 when Manmohan Singh was nominated Prime Minister. The quantum jump
to 206 in 2009 was attributed to the youth surge, minorities boosting the
Congress in UP and, ofcourse, Andhra Pradesh.
On Andhra Pradesh, the party is
attempting the impossible: to pull the rug from under its own feet.
Why Muslims will circumvent the Congress
is a subject for a separate article. Nothing has annoyed the minorities more
than Congress smugness, communicated by word and gesture, that with Narendra
Modi looming so large, “they have no option but to come to us”. And now emerges
a third option in the form of AAP gifted with a winning formula: people are
fighting this election. If AAP can keep away from sectarian vote banks and the
clergy as vote getters, they will have rediscovered the dictum: the whole is stronger
than the sum of its parts.
The youth soufflé has gone flat because
Rahul probably doesn’t want power right now. Remember what he told the
Confederation of Indian Industries in April.
“As opposed to the Parliament and State
Legislatures there were 2.4 hundred thousand village Panchayats. It were these
that had to be “empowered” as the nodal points most in contact with the people.
Legislators and policy makers, have to develop institutional mechanisms to
liaise with the Pradhans who implement policy at the village level.”
A project of such extensive architecture
sprouting from the mind of Rahul Gandhi may take a decade before the crown prince
readies himself for governance. After all, he has plenty of time ahead of him. I had written in April: “He will be only 48
during the 2019 elections and 53 for the 2024 election. By that time all other
parties will have exposed themselves as rotten or so he reckons. Only the
structures Rahul will have built will deliver unto him the absolute majority
without which Prime Ministership is a crown of thorns.” It is quite another matter
that by that time there may be no Congress left to restructure.
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