Can Corporate Media Allied With Executive Oust
Popularly Elected CMs?
Saeed Naqvi
Every time AAP
walks into a carefully laid trap by the establishment and the media bays for
its blood, I suspect the effect on viewers is not what the channels expect. A
relentless anti AAP tirade has begun to give shape to an underdog syndrome.
Aggressive anchors obviously find it profitable otherwise why would they place
every AAP related figure in a Roman Arena. Mauling AAP to boost TRPs is
dependent largely on Sambit Patra’s lung power:
“Dekhein buland
kaun hai, aur pusst kaun hai,
Sambit Patra
se zabardast kaun hai?”
(Who will win
and who will flop,
Sambit Patra is
always on top.)
In attacking
AAP with such frequency, channels go well outside their established TRP
boosting formula: stick to the four Cs – cinema, crime, cricket and
communalism. The reason for this detour is simple: corporates who control the
channels would like to restrict the national game to the BJP and the Congress,
parties they have nurtured.
Opinion polls
by media houses in Congress-BJP states will never survey electoral prospects in
Delhi where AAP is the principal contender. That is why it required Anandabazar
Patrika, headquartered in Kolkata, to sponsor a survey of electoral preferences
in the Delhi Capital Region.
According to
the ABP-Nielsen survey published last week, AAP will, despite the exertions of
the channels, win 48 out of 70 seats. Polls indicate it will get 47 percent of
the vote share. The sample is limited –
5,101 voters spread over 28 assembly seats. Of these 35% said AAP performance
has been good; 15% said it has been “very good”.
If the AAP has
come down in its popularity from 67 seats in a house of 70, to 48 seats, in
which direction are the remaining seats shifting? In the direction of the BJP.
If elections were held in Delhi today, the BJP tally would increase from three
to 22 seats. The Congress remains where it is: a cipher.
The poll was
conducted by ABP, one of the country’s most powerful media houses but which
happens to be headquartered in Kolkata where it has been in conversation with
the Trinamool Congress supremo, Mamata Banerjee.
Obviously the
ABP has seen the writing on the wall. Time was when editor-in-chief Aveek
Sarkar was advising CPM’s Secretary General Sitaram Yechury and the Congress to
gang up against Mamata in the assembly elections. It was an absurd line because
in simultaneous elections in Kerala, the Left and the Congress were at each
other’s throat. Not only was the Yechury line trounced in West Bengal, but his
party colleague, Prakash Karat, subsequently prevailed on the party to reject
any arrangement with the Congress anywhere.
A common
strand running through AAP and Trinamool is their equidistance from the BJP and
the Congress. The core grouping Kejriwal and Mamata are in search of for the
2019 General Elections will be equally distant from the Congress and the BJP.
It was clearly with this in mind that Kejriwal undertook an exploratory journey
to Madurai to participate in the inauguration of actor Kamal Haasan’s new
political party, Makkal Needhi Maiam. Telugu Desam leader, Chandrababu Naidu
has also indicated enthusiasm for the new Tamil outfit at a time when he is changing
his options.
It is all very
early days but a great deal of bluster is already accompanying furtive, drawing
room parleys. In almost every private gathering there is that inevitable wag in
the corner, flailing the air with his hands: “this lot will not give up power
easily”. What, pray, will the Modi-Amit Shah duet do towards this end, that of
not giving up power? A great deal of waffling follows – electronic voting
machines will be fixed, mega communal riots will be orchestrated, the temple
issue will be set ablaze and, ofcourse, there is that frightful speculation
about action across the Pakistan border which will make surgical strikes look
like pinpricks.
Sensible folk
in the BJP are already beginning to contemplate life after Narendra Modi. It is
elementary that in UP, Rajasthan, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh etcetera where the
BJP scored exceptionally well to obtain an absolute majority with 31 percent of
the vote, it will be substantially diminished, requiring a coalition builder
which Modi is not.
What is
limiting the BJP’s electoral tactics is Rahul Gandhi’s relentless temple
hopping, ofcourse, but also keeping Muslim at a distance. This denies the BJP
the use of an instrument which has enabled it to come to power. It has become
that much more difficult to affect communal polarization. If polarization is
not the name of the game, what purpose does an exceptionally hard line on
Pakistan serve? What electoral game plan does the BJP have upto 2019 particularly
when development is not visible to the voter.
In this ever
expanding scenario, stretching upto 2019, why is everybody ganging up on AAP which
is confined to Delhi? Well, it is not confined to Delhi. In its very first
outing in the Punjab it is already the principal opposition. As major parties
face an uncertain future, the AAP has dug its feet in Delhi by doing
exceptional work for the poor in education, health, electricity and water
supply. In fact water pipelines in bustees are being laid on an emergency
basis.
Only if solid
work at grassroot can be defeated by propaganda and executive fiat should there
be any danger to Kejriwal. Equally in the line of fire is Chief Minister Manik
Sarkar in distant Tripura. He is as much an affront to the corporate driven
establishment in the North East as Kejriwal is in Delhi.
# # # #
Gulberg greens luxurious and standard living, ready farm houses plots of 4,5, and 10 kanal are designed in Gulberg Greens equipped with underground electricity, sui gas, water supply, sewage & drainage system.
ReplyDelete