Narendra Modi, chief minister of Gujarat,
chose Independence Day, August 15, to launch his campaign to become
prime minister. He is not formally the BJP’s official candidate, but
makes no bones about his ambition. Even as Manmohan Singh made one more
tepid Independence Day speech from the Red Fort, Modi lambasted him in a
rival speech that had his cohorts cheering wildly.
Modi
declared contemptuously that Singh was so busy acting as a servant to
the Gandhi family that he had forgotten about serving 1.2 billion
Indians. He attacked Singh for being soft on Pakistan, for the crash of
the rupee, for inflation and unemployment and misgovernance. He
challenged Singh to a one-on-one debate on how to run the country. Given
his oratorical skills and Singh’s lack of them, it would be a one-sided
contest.
The BJP party cadres love Modi, and are delighted with
his offensive. The media are agog with Modi’s speech. Many are
analysing the next election as a Modi versus Rahul Gandhi affair.
Sorry,
but such talk is idle rubbish. Prime ministers in India are not chosen
after a gladiatorial contest between two armed combatants. They are not
chosen directly by the people at all, as in the US. Rather, Indian
voters choose only a single Member of Parliament from each constituency.
Once in a while a national wave can drown local issues (as after Indira
Gandhi’s death), but typically elections in each constituency focus
intensely on local issues and the abilities of individual local
candidates. National politics can look very remote at the grassroots
level. To see every local contest as a Modiversus-Rahul battle is pure
fantasy.
These decentralised battles decide who gets elected to
Parliament. Whether Modi beats Rahul Gandhi in opinion polls, or defeats
Manmohan Singh in debates, is irrelevant. What matters is how many
seats the NDA can get in the election, and how many additional allies it
can garner after the elections produce a hung Parliament.
The
answer has already come in several opinion polls. All show that a
Modi-led BJP has no chance of heading the next government. One typical
poll, co-sponsored by Times Now, showed the UPA getting 136 seats, the
NDA getting 156 seats, and other parties getting the balance of 251
seats. Voters may be totally disillusioned with Manomhan Singh, but they
are not enthused by a Modi-led BJP either.
Is there any way an
NDA with 156 seats can get additional post-election allies holding
another 117 seats, enough for a bare majority? Almost impossible. It
might be remotely possible if the NDA is led by somebody with wide
appeal, who can charm and win friends rather than raise hackles. Atal
Behari Vajpayee was such a person. Narendra Modi emphatically is not.
He
is unquestionably a strong and efficient administrator. Gujarat has
prospered under him, and given him three successive terms of office. But
he is known as a man who tolerates no opposition, cuts all colleagues
to size, and rules with an iron fist. Such a person will fail miserably
as prime minister of a disparate coalition that can be brought down by
any of several minor partners.
Under Vajpayee, the BJP was able
to attract regional leaders like Nitish Kumar, Naveen Patnaik and Mamata
Banerjee. Vajpayee assured them that the BJP would not pursue any of
its traditional communal policies while in office. He had the
flexibility and credibility to deliver.
Modi has neither the
same flexibility nor credibility. He prides himself on Hindutva. He
can’t even bear to wear the traditional Muslim cap or scarf offered by
Muslim well wishers. Indian Muslims hate him for complicity in the
killing of over 1,000 Muslims in the 2002 Gujarat riots. They do not
believe the leopard will change its sports as Prime Minister.
So,
regional leaders like Nitish Kumar, Mamata Banerjee, Naveen Patnaik and
Chandrababu Naidu treat Modi as poison. They did business with
Vajpayee. They refuse to do business with Modi.
Let nobody think
that these regional leaders have high moral principles. No, they are
cynical opportunists. But as opportunists, they have made a simple
calculation: will extra Hindu votes brought in by Modi compensate for
the loss of Muslim votes? The answer is an overwhelming “no”. And that’s
that.
Modi may grab the headlines with his driving ambition and
rousing speeches. He may greatly enthuse his RSS cadres. But for all
his ambition and energy, the hard political reality is that he cannot
become prime minister. As Katrina Kaif said in a different context, in
her item number Sheela ki jawani…
“I know you wanna get it
But you’re never gonna get it,
Tere haath kabhi na aani.”
Source: http://tinyurl.com/mg8a655
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