Saturday, June 27, 2026
ADVT 
India

Kiran Bedi Is Not The Only Reason BJP Lost

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Feb, 2015 12:23 PM
    It will be too tempting to solely blame it all on Kiran Bedi, the BJP's chief ministerial candidate, for the party's humiliating rout in Delhi. Nothing can be farther from the truth.
     
    The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) will be committing a blunder if it does not accept the larger ugly reality that the main culprit for the colossal loss is the party's leadership. Just how much of the blame should go to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and how much to BJP president Amit Shah is a matter of perception.
     
    Bedi was a rank outsider to the BJP and, until a few years ago, as part of the Anna Hazare movement, used to publicly attack it and the Congress. But the former police officer did not barge into the party. It were Modi and Shah who, in their wisdom, picked her to lead the BJP in Delhi assuming she will be the antidote to Arvind Kejriwal, her former friend.
     
    That decision was the first undeclared admission that the pre-Bedi BJP in Delhi was not equipped to take on the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP). This led to tremendous heartburn in the BJP whose local leaders were not consulted. This was also the reason why Satish Upadhyay, president of the BJP's Delhi unit, refused to contest the election. Veterans who had been with the BJP felt slighted.
     
    By her utterances and conduct, Bedi didn't help matters. Too quickly she rubbed senior BJP leaders the wrong way, ensuring their silent animosity, eventually leading to her own defeat.
     
    But going by the swing in favour of the AAP, the BJP would still not have won. In other words, Bedi or no Bedi, the BJP would have lost. The reason is that the BJP, which, including its earlier Jana Sangh incarnation, has existed in Delhi since the early 1950s, lost the plot months before the Delhi election.
     
    Some factors have been widely commented upon. There are others too.
     
    When Modi became the prime minister in May 2014, there were widespread expectations that there would be definitive changes in people's lives. This did not happen.
     
    In contrast, when Kejriwal was chief minister for 49 days in 2013-14, day-to-day bribery virtually disappeared in Delhi and both power as well as water bills were slashed. After Kejriwal resigned, day-to-day 'hafta' (payoffs to police and corporation officials to run small businesses, particularly street-vending) returned with a vengeance.
     
    As chief minister of Gujarat, Modi at one point reined in Hindutva extremists. When he ordered illegal religious shrines demolished, he did not spare Hindu temples. The Hindu rightwing was furious.
     
    But when BJP and Hindutva leaders spoke of 'Love Jehad' and 'Ghar Wapsi' and when churches in Delhi were attacked, Modi was silent. This alienated minorities for sure and also those liberals who had come to accept Modi.
     
    Modi is enforcing discipline among government staff. This is welcome. But many complain that the electronic machines meant to mark attendance are few in number or some do not work, leading to long queues. Some who queue up at 5 p.m. get to punch their way out only at 6! Will they vote for the BJP - even if they did that in the Lok Sabha election?
     
    The removal of Harsh Vardhan as health minister in the Modi cabinet triggered resentment in the medical community as most doctors saw him as one of their own. This was one reason why numerous doctors and nurses in Delhi voted for the AAP.
     
    It is a mystery why the BJP fielded Congress and AAP turncoats like M.S. Dhir, Binod Kumar Binny and Krishna Tirath in areas where BJP has plenty of dedicated activists. The BJP did that in May 2014 but dissidence then was curbed because of the 'Modi Wave'. That wave was absent in Delhi.
     
    Most important, people in general were put off by the kind of negative campaign the BJP and its leaders, Modi included, launched against Kejriwal. Few appreciated Modi's decision to flaunt an expensive suit when Barack Obama visited India. The "chai wala" they voted for appeared to have changed.
     
    Kejriwal and the AAP in turn came out as people who could be relied upon by the masses in Delhi, in particular the poor, low income families and the middle class. This perception destroyed the BJP.
     
    The Delhi rout is a divine wake up call for Modi. Making Kiran Bedi the scapegoat won't help - beyond a point.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    India to help 600 nationals return from Iraq this week

    India to help 600 nationals return from Iraq this week
    The government Monday said it will facilitate the return of over 600 Indians from non-conflict areas of Iraq this week, as efforts continued to secure the safe release of Indians in captivity in war-torn areas of the Gulf nation.

    India to help 600 nationals return from Iraq this week

    Harsh Vardhan clarifies on sex education, slams UPA's 'crudity'

    Harsh Vardhan clarifies on sex education, slams UPA's 'crudity'
    Seeking to end an "unseemly controversy" kicked up by his views on sex education, Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan Friday denied that he proposes a ban on sex education in schools, saying he supports "pedagogy that is scientific and culturally acceptable".

    Harsh Vardhan clarifies on sex education, slams UPA's 'crudity'

    Five killed in Bihar train derailment, sabotage ruled out

    Five killed in Bihar train derailment, sabotage ruled out
    At least five people were killed when the Delhi-Dibrugarh Rajdhani Express derailed in Bihar early Wednesday, police said. Bihar Chief Minister Jitan Ram Manjhi ruled out sabotage while his Assam counterpart Tarun Gogoi asked a top police officer to visit the spot and oversee relief work.

    Five killed in Bihar train derailment, sabotage ruled out

    Gaining education, 35 women plan to uplift their communities

    Gaining education, 35 women plan to uplift their communities
    How do you help your backward community living in remote, virtually inaccessible villages to progress if most of them are uneducated? Simple, finish your own studies, train as teachers and then use your knowledge to spread the cause in your home - as these nearly three dozen women are doing.

    Gaining education, 35 women plan to uplift their communities

    Railways announces relief in fares for suburban travel

    Railways announces relief in fares for suburban travel
    Amid concerns in the ruling NDA over the impact of rail fare hike on election-bound states, the railways Tuesday announced relief in monthly season tickets and second class suburban fares.

    Railways announces relief in fares for suburban travel

    Global Economy Prize for India's biotech queen

    Global Economy Prize for India's biotech queen
    India's biotechnology queen and Biocon chairperson Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw has been awarded the coveted Global Economy Prize for business by the Kiel Institute in Germany during its centenary celebrations.

    Global Economy Prize for India's biotech queen