Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
India

Modi's success makes BJP a one-man party

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Oct, 2014 07:38 AM
    Even as the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is taking its time to select its chief minister for Maharashtra, Narendra Modi is leaving his distinctive mark on political and other fields.
     
    In politics, the prime minister has brushed aside the earlier by-poll setbacks by his successes in Maharashtra and Haryana. Although the BJP failed to get a majority in the western state, it made a few points which the party probably wanted to make for some time.
     
    One was to cut the Shiv Sena down to size apparently because the BJP, and more specifically Modi, felt that the regional outfit did not deserve the earlier No. 1 position in the state after Bal Thackeray's death.
     
    The calculation probably is that a spell out of power, or in a subservient position in the government, will fatally erode the Sena's base, enabling the BJP to win over the entire Hindutva vote. In the process, Modi again administered a snub to L.K. Advani, who favoured continuing the earlier ties with the Sena.
     
    But it isn't only the party's "senior citizen" who was rebuffed. Even Nitin Gadkari was at the receiving end of a mild reprimand because of the amateurish expressions of support for his claim to be chief minister by some of his followers.
     
    After that, it took the union transport minister less than 24 hours to say that he was not interested in moving to Mumbai, thereby enhancing the prospects of the front-runner, Devendra Fadnavis.
     
    These events point to Modi's penchant for disciplined conduct which is at variance with the lackadaisical way in which Indian political parties tend to function. Modi has also shown that he does not care much for the standard caste- and community-based norms while selecting chief ministers.
     
    This deviation from set patterns was evident from the nomination of Manohar Lal Khattar as Haryana chief minister although he is not a Jat, a dominant community which gave the state its last two chief ministers, Om Prakash Chautala of the Indian National Lok Dal (INLD) and Bhupinder Singh Hooda of the Congress.
     
    Modi is able to adopt such a non-conventional approach because of his awareness that the voters have chosen him for his development agenda and not because of what is known as "identity" politics based on caste and community.
     
    In Maharashtra, for instance, he has been able to negate the Sena's Marathi sub-nationalism to a considerable extent by promising economic growth. It is the same in Haryana, a largely agricultural state which is eager to shed its backward image.
     
    What these developments emphasize is that Modi has become the sole dominant figure in the BJP. Not since Indira Gandhi's unquestioned primacy over the Congress between 1971 and 1977 has there been such a domineering personality in a party at the national level.
     
    As a result, the BJP now depends almost entirely on Modi to win elections with the party president, Amit Shah, being no more than a ground-level organizer. There is little doubt that Modi will again hit the campaign trail when elections are held in Jharkhand and Jammu and Kashmir.
     
    Modi has been helped, of course, by the virtual decimation of his opponents at the national level. The empty political field has given him enough confidence to be in no hurry to come to power in Maharashtra, or even run a minority government in the state if need be, for he is aware that his adversaries are too demoralized by defeat and charges of corruption to pose any threat in the near future.
     
    The confidence has also enabled Modi not to summarily reject the Nationalist Congress Party's (NCP) offer of outside support in Maharashtra although the prime minister had referred to the Congress's former ally as a Naturally Corrupt Party.
     
    It may not amount to overstating the case, therefore, to say that Modi will now begin to eye Tamil Nadu and West Bengal as areas where the BJP can extend its influence with much greater ease than what seemed possible at the time of the general election when the regional parties held their own in the two states.
     
    While Jayalalitha's legal problems and the DMK's declining fortunes under an aging leader and his two squabbling sons cannot but increase the BJP's appeal in Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, too, may look like a low-hanging fruit in view of the scary revelations about the inroads being made by jehadi outfits like the Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen of Bangladesh, with the state government being rather casual about surveillance.
     
    It has to be remembered, however, that the basis of Modi's success is the expectation of economic revival. The hopes are high because the old socialistic disdain for the private sector is dying down as is clear from West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee's proposed river cruises for industrialists.
     
    It goes without saying that if there is indeed an economic resurgence, then Modi's one-man show will go from strength to strength. As a result, Mumbai's transformation into a Shanghai, as suggested by the Manmohan Singh government before it lost the plot, may well come true.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    From tea-stalls to drawing rooms, politics reigns supreme

    From tea-stalls to drawing rooms, politics reigns supreme
    Be it a Metro train or a tea stall, drawing rooms to restaurants, market gossip to office banter, politics has undoubtedly become the main topic of social conversation in a politically conscious India

    From tea-stalls to drawing rooms, politics reigns supreme

    'Tainted' Pawan Bansal, Nagma in Congress' second list

    'Tainted' Pawan Bansal, Nagma in Congress' second list
    The Congress Thursday renominated former railway minister Pawan Kumar Bansal from Chandigarh dismissing allegations of "taint" against him by the opposition as it released a second list of 71 names including actor Nagma from Meerut.

    'Tainted' Pawan Bansal, Nagma in Congress' second list

    The Blood & Tears of 1947

    The Blood & Tears of 1947
    The summer of 1947 was unlike any across the sun-baked plains of northern India. Mass communal violence had engulfed cities, and villages had gone up in flames and in some places entire populations were decimated. Millions upon millions were uprooted from their ancestral homes as an unprecedented population exchange took place. 

    The Blood & Tears of 1947

    The 2014 Indian elections: Clash of the Titans

    The 2014 Indian elections: Clash of the Titans
    Three prominent political leaders in India's history – Rahul Gandhi: heir to the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty; Narendra Modi: the controversial, yet popular Hindu nationalist; and Arvind Kejriwal: leader of an anti-graft group that claimed a surprise victory in state elections in India’s capital – will battle on the elections grounds in the upcoming 2014 national elections.

    The 2014 Indian elections: Clash of the Titans

    US indictment against Devyani Khobragade dropped

    US indictment against Devyani Khobragade dropped
    A US federal court has dismissed charges of visa fraud and making false statements against Indian diplomat Devyani Khobragade, whose arrest and subsequent strip-search in New York escalated into a full diplomatic row last year. 

    US indictment against Devyani Khobragade dropped

    December 16 Gang rape: All Four Convicts To Hang

    December 16 Gang rape: All Four Convicts To Hang
    The victim's teary-eyed parents said they are "happy" but will feel justice is done after the four are hanged, while a defence lawyer termed the verdict "political".

    December 16 Gang rape: All Four Convicts To Hang