Will
There Be A Surprise End To Modi’s Tale?
Saeed Naqvi
If this election campaign is to be
remembered like a suspense drama, it must have a surprise end.
What a roller coaster it has been since
June 2013 when all senior BJP leaders assembled in Goa to strategize for the
coming elections. Instead of discussing the roadmap with senior leaders,
Narendra Modi and his cohorts imposed on them a fait accompali: Modi will be
the head of the party’s election campaign.
There was much consternation and beating
of breasts until something was whispered in their ears. They fell in line – but
only to regroup in L.K. Advani’s Prithviraj Road bungalow in New Delhi. “We do
not agree, we do not agree” went the chant. Two days later RSS chief Mohan
Bhagwat arrived from Nagpur. He put his finger on his lips. A hush fell on the
congregation. They fell in line again.
This time they marched in step, only occasionally
remembering the seniority they had surrendered. On one such instance they asked
for their preferred constituencies. No, they were told. You go to Gandhinagar
and you to Kanpur and so on and so forth.
Surrounded by brilliant directors and
choreographers, Modi embraced the Method school of acting and became the Prime
Minister, parallel to the one in Race Course Road.
On august 15, Independence Day, while
Manmohan Singh looked pale, weak and quite out of place at the Red Fort, Modi
looked like an ad for vitality capsules as he stood in his designer kurta at
the Lalan College in Bhuj. It was a wondrous show. A split TV screen had two
Prime Ministers, Manmohan Singh and the presumptive Prime Minister.
That was in August. Modi has since been
offering performances at the rate of two every day without a break for the past
nine months. In the old days even a circus never stayed in town for more than a
month. To expect a nation to be riveted on a one-man show for months without a
break, belied scant understanding of the Indians’ sense of fun. This is a
country of fairs, nautankis (village theatre), folk songs, chutkulas (jokes),
kahavats (sayings). It is unbelievable that a year long campaign yielded not a
joke, a quip, a pun. Viewers had a surfeit of an aggressive, taunting, vicious,
menacing Modi. There was no humour, no gentle touch. This, in a nation of the
pastoral lyric. If the nation is not all cock-a-hoop with Modi, something must
have palled.
Yes, we love our Gods and Goddesses, but
not in our living spaces, mornings, noons and evenings. That would be tiresome.
Modi was in our living rooms all the time for a full year. The blame will have
to be placed somewhere here if the world’s most expensive election campaign
does not deliver him the Prime Ministership.
What was conceived by TV script writers
as a Modi versus Rahul Gandhi serial dialogue, lost considerable audience
appeal when Rahul refused to come on stage. Even until December, when Arnab
Goswami trapped Rahul for his solitary interview, there was hope that he would
be persuaded to duel Modi. Arnab asked him eighteen times in the course of the
interview to agree to a debate with Modi. But Rahul was fixated on one theme:
he was devoting himself to a system of primaries for selection of candidates. This
reporter had written years ago that Rahul’s eyes were set not on 2014 but more
on 2024 when he would be only 53 years old and possibly more willing.
After a disastrous UPA-II, the Congress
had reconciled itself to sitting in the opposition. But panic gripped the
family when reports trickled in of the party dipping to double digits. Hence,
the frenetic action by the Gandhi family in Rae Bareli and Amethi. The thinking
around Congress President Sonia Gandhi is that a tally of 110 plus will enable
the party to give outside support to a grouping and somehow keep Modi out.
But Rahul is singing a different tune.
He would like to sit in the opposition and reconstruct the party according to
his lights.
This would have been a sensible strategy
and in harmony with the party Vice President’s laid back style, if Modi were
zooming ahead, towards the magic figure of 272. He is not. The news from the
game changing states like Bihar and Andhra Pradesh is not good for the BJP.
Only Modi’s very reliable Amit Shah’s machinations are keeping the party in
serious contention in UP. The BJP’s hopes hinge on this state. So, Rahul wake
up. You may be required to be nimble.
The manner in which Modi, Arun Jaitley
and Amit Shah have pitched their tents in Varanasi against the administration
and the Election Commission, does not make them look like a victorious trio.
Have you ever seen a winning team abuse umpires?
With the Akalis fighting for their lives
in Punjab, there is little of the NDA left to induce confidence. And before the
party flaunts its Shiv Sena affiliations take a look at Saamna, the party’s mouthpiece.
Gujeratis, it says, are not trustworthy.
If numbers do not help him ascend the
Delhi throne, Modi would be loathe to have the “oldies” he sidelined in Goa be resurrected.
That would fritter away the good he has accumulated in the course of the
lengthy campaign. The Sangh Parivar is now in possession of new data on dalits,
how Valmikis, Lohars, Khatiks, Mallahs are willing to be Hindutva’s new
infantry, deserting caste parties. This is a huge advance on the work among
dalits done by RSS social workers like K.N. Govindacharya in the 90s.
If Modi were interested in an enlarged
NDA, he would not have burnt (or weakened) his bridges with Mamata Bannerjee,
Jayalalitha, Mayawati or Naveen Patnaik. But Murli Manohar Joshi has turned up
in Nagpur to advance the interests of the BJP, in the event of Modi’s electoral
eclipse. This signals a power struggle.
Just look at the awesome power of the
Indian people, as the world waits with bated breath for the May 16 election
results. Heaven knows what fate awaits all of us. And, as I asked at the
outset, what surprise twist awaits the Modi tale?
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Excellent report. Let us wait for May 16 to get the final Judgement of the people who voted for.
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