From
Gujarat Model To Fourth Term Of The Tripura CM
Saeed Naqvi
Narendra Modi has not just yearned for
India’s Prime Ministership, he has willed it. It has happened – well, almost.
Alas, the spectacular variety of India may obstruct his path. This has caused
deep consternation among those who keep a steady gaze on the world’s markets.
The rating agency, Moody’s has rung alarm bells.
Friends from the Left (the radical Left,
I mean) see the emergence of two forces: a national party (BJP plus Congress)
surrounded by a necklace of regional parties whose vote share increases with
every election. Trust them to highlight such a disruptive reality.
Mere conventional minds would see a more
straightforward pattern emerging: BJP as the largest single party, followed by
the Congress and regional parties, among whom they list the Left and AAP.
The Left of all shades is as irritated
with AAP as the Right is. Youth wings of the CPM and CPI have dispatched
volunteers to help Ajai Rai of the Congress defeat Narendra Modi in Varanasi.
Why would these volunteers not throw their lot behind Arvind Kejriwal who is a
more charismatic figure in the fray? The official reason is that Ajai Rai,
being a local Bhumihar, has a better chance of defeating Modi. But what happens
to the Left’s avowed opposition to the BJP and the Congress? That may be the
case but the Left’s real fear is AAP, which may upstage it as the growing anti
Congress-anti BJP force.
There is a political angle to the seemingly
negligible move. In case Modi or even the NDA fall substantially short of the
magic figure of 272, Congress as the second largest party would come into play.
The Left will then find some oxygen for the next round of maneuvers.
The radical Left, ofcourse, places the
conventional Left and AAP in the same category: players in the Parliamentary
arena who are, like others, marionettes in the hand of Corporate India. By
their reckoning, “booth capturing” was organized by big landlords and Kulaks in
earlier days. Now it is sought to be affected by a Corporate takeover of the
media. Note the cunning compact between the Kulaks and the Corporates.
This punishing appraisal
notwithstanding, AAP may well be poised for a promising future. For a first
time campaigner against all entrenched interests, including the two main
parties, AAP will deserve applause even if it ends up with half a dozen seats.
Should the election outcome not follow
the script delineated by the authors of the Modi candidature, will it be
curtains on the Gujarat model? BJP spokesman Ravi Shankar Prasad introduced
variety in the discourse at a public function by describing CPM’s Manik Sarkar
as a Chief Minister he admires. It was probably a casual, patronizing remark by
Prasad about a model he knew would not be taken seriously. Ironically, since
1957 populations ranging from 33 million in Kerala to 130 million if you
include West Bengal and Tripura, have been almost continuously under Marxist
governments democratically elected. The total population of UK and France are
130 million.
For variety, let us pursue Prasada’s
remark. Manik Sarkar, now in his fourth continuous term as Chief Minister, has
been the “cleanest, most efficient administrator” according to the testimony of
one of the most thinking police officers, B.L. Vohra, who was Tripura’s
Director General of Police for long years. Vohra has worked closely with
Sarkar.
Andrew Buncombe, Correspondent of the
Independent in New Delhi, who was in Agartala on polling day, describes Tripura
as “an orderly, neat, clean state with a no nonsense administration” and where
the Chief Minister “walks to office”. He was surprised that there had been no
serious examination of this extraordinary state recently in the Indian media.
Buncombe was equally struck by the “anachronistic”
photographs of Marx and Lenin and their mention in local political discourse.
One of the great puzzles of this
election will remain the singular absence of any Congress leader in the
campaign other than the Gandhi trio. It is common knowledge Sonia Gandhi is not
in the pink of health. Why then did she burden herself with so many public
meetings? Did she really believe that Rahul Gandhi was lighting up the party’s
electoral fortunes?
Technology has amplified the Priyanka
magic. Even though she has confined herself to Rae Bareli and Amethi, her campaigning
style, ability to connect, the overall attractiveness of her presence may give
the party some mileage in Eastern UP and Varanasi, even Gujarat and Madhya
Pradesh. She has brazened out the Vadra allegation, but it will return to
plague the family once the dust settles.
The mystery remains why Priyanka was not
given a bigger role in this bitterly fought election. Equally surprising is the
absence of any other Congress leader at any of the road shows. It is a sad
commentary on the party.
It is possible that Priyanka does not
have the stamina for extended electioneering, that she ìs good in short bursts.
Who knows, this may have contrasted favourably with the Modi campaign which has
gone on and on, aggressive but monotonous, eversince he flummoxed his own party
by zooming ahead despite senior leaders throwing a ginger fit at his elevation
in Goa last June. Why the senior leaders fell in line, is the stuff of mystery
novels.
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