UPA
Recedes, But NDA or Third Front Not Sure Either
Saeed Naqvi
At this time of the year, Delhites like to host Sunday lunches on their terraces and lawns where the fare ranges from indifferent kebabs to superb makke di roti and sarson da saag, with gur or jaggery and pure ghee. After the initial unpleasantries about pollution, (wheezing and coughing) they like to settle down, to politics, and, this year, to the coming elections.
Seldom have generally well informed
people been so short on hard information. So, they liven their conversation
with gossip which they pass on as information. There is no pundit around with a
sure enough touch. This state of affairs is almost surreal and for an obvious
reason.
Kafka’s Castle is inaccessible and the
coteries, themselves short on information, dissemble. Others, with the self
assurance of the informed, are closer to business and industry which, in turn,
is plugged into a coterie here, a coterie there.
Therefore, a hundred days from the
elections, what does one make of Narendra Modi, Rahul Gandhi, AAP and the
rising stock of the regional parties?
Narendra Modi became the BJP’s election
chief at the Party’s conclave in Goa last June.
In electoral politics, as in sports, a
formation or an individual must peak weeks before the finals. Why was Modi
boosted up into the stratosphere a full year before the elections? Would he
have the stamina to hold the nation’s attention for so long? Might he not trip
over the several cases plaguing him in Gujarat? He has walked around the
minefields so far, but Snoopgate continues to threaten. It is an incredible
narrative of surveillance systems in three states monitoring the movements of a
young woman on behalf of “Sahib”.
Why is the UPA dragging its feet on
Snoopgate? Is it true that a Judge is not available who can look into this
case? Or has there been a deal? Who in the establishment is so important that
protecting him supersede concerns about Modi?
Congress General Secretary, Janardhan
Dwivedi has more or less announced that his party would like to sit in the
opposition after the elections. What else does one make of his statement that
the Congress should have occupied the opposition benches after the 2009
elections. That year the party won 209 seats, its highest score since 1991.
Rahul Gandhi has made it quite explicit
in his TV interview that he has no fire in his belly for political power. But
the Congress party is splurging hundreds of crores of rupees on a publicity
blitz to boost his image. Is the party embarked on this media blitz despite the
party Vice President or is all of it happening under his supervision?
Why these confusing signals? Has the
party calculated that in India, renunciation is deified? Is this why they are sending
a prime ministerial candidate into electoral combat when he is demonstrably
disinterested. Or is it something more simple: heads I win, tails you lose. If
the party does well the story will be: the people were aching to bring their
reluctant crown prince to power. If the voters do not turn to him this time, he
can shrug his shoulders and say he never wanted it.
The media’s dream to set up a Modi
versus Rahul duel upto the elections should have ended in April 2013 when Rahul
told the Confederation of Indian industry that he was busy building grassroots
democracy in the party, to bring in more transparency.
He brought in distinguished election
Commissioner K.J. Rao to organize a system of primaries for election in Youth
Congress and National Students Union of India. Even as I write Rahul has
invited retired and respected Election Commissioners to wean out tainted Lok
Sabha candidates. Also he is busy selecting sixteen candidates to Parliament as
a pilot project. When will he be ready with his 543 Lok Sabha candidates and
thousands for Assemblies and Panchayats? In two, five or ten years? Or is he,
like Sisyphus, embarked on a longer project.
In the absence of information, rumours
are rife. The current political scene does not promise a stable government post
2014. Fresh elections, in other words, may take place in, say, 2016. By which
time, Rahul may be ready with his broad based system of candidate selection.
The seasoned leaders who have seen the writing on the wall are sprinting
towards the Upper House.
AAP’s entry has created another
uncertainty for the principal parties. On December 7, who knew what results
recent elections would throw up the next day? The Congress was trounced in four
states. The nation rubbed its eyes with disbelief as the AAP emerged in Delhi
as the new, historic political happening.
When AAP tossed a handful of seed in the
field of Delhi, who would have expected the spectacular harvest? Likewise, until
the 2014 results, AAP will remain an unquantifiable electoral phenomena. AAP’s
impact will be two fold. First, they have thrown a huge boulder in the political
pond. The reverberations will affect political fortunes for a long time. Secondly
what we must wait for, in nail biting suspense, is the prospect of its vertical
growth in places it proposes to contest the coming elections.
Folks keeping a steady gaze only on the
BJP, Congress and AAP, will miss out on the concert developing in the states.
In the situation – comedy scripted by Jayalalitha, CPI’s A.B. Bardhan and
Sudhakar Reddy had barely said good bye to her when Prakash Karat of the CPM
walked in with roses. After the elections, she can take her pick: either with
the secular front or with Modi or, whoever it is who leads the BJP into a
possible National Democratic Alliance. Poor Mamata Banerjee can neither go with
the Left nor the BJP. Will there be enough of a Congress left to need her with
any sense of purpose? Or, will the Left have to be off loaded, unless, of
course, they score enough to check Mamata. Even as these games progress, that
enigmatic smile stretches along Mayawati’s line of mouth.
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Sir I like your articles a lot. Its a privilege to be reading you.
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