BJP could be shrinking politically but is winning big time ideologically
National Interest

BJP could be shrinking politically but is winning big time ideologically

BJP is ruling fewer large, important states now but its big Hindutva ideas have won and face little opposition across the country.

   

Illustration by | Soham Sen

Like the proverbial ‘half-full or half-empty’ glass, you can look at the much-discussed India Today Group graphic showing the comparative swathes of saffron on the political map of India between 2017 and now. At first look, the graphic tells you that the BJP’s reign over Indian states has declined to 40 per cent from 71 per cent in these two years. Just when you thought the party had reached the peak of its popularity and unassailable domination under Narendra Modi.

This, however, is the ‘half-empty’ perspective. The ‘half-full’ view is: Draw a similar map with Lok Sabha results from last May. What it would show is the dominant political reality: That in all of the north, the Hindi heartland, most of the coastal west and large parts of the east/Northeast, the BJP reigns unchallenged. A fresh general election may not have an outcome very different from May 2019. So, what are Modi’s critics celebrating?

Political reality, however, is complex, multi-layered and comes in many shades of saffron. Let’s try lifting these layers:

• Narendra Modi, although a colossus in his own right, is no Indira Gandhi. Or, the other way of seeing it: The Indian voter has matured from the Indira era. She makes a clear distinction between voting choices for the Lok Sabha and the Vidhan Sabha.

Just like Indira Gandhi, therefore, Modi can still swing a ‘lamp-post’ election (where a leader can get people to vote for even a lamp-post on his ticket), but only for the Lok Sabha, when seeking votes for himself. Unlike Indira, he cannot repeat the same magic for state assemblies. Maharashtra is a slightly complicated case, and we will return to it. Think Haryana. Within five months of the Lok Sabha elections, the party’s vote fell by a neat 22 percentage points, to 36 per cent from 58, leaving it well short of a majority instead of the widely predicted near-clean sweep. This, in a state with a deep military and nationalist tradition, insignificant minority vote, and 11 weeks after the action on Article 370.

Now, check the data backwards. Even after the sweep of 2014, Modi wasn’t often able to sweep a state, Uttar Pradesh in 2017 and smaller states such as Haryana, Uttarakhand, Himachal and Assam being notable exceptions. But there also was the debacle of Delhi in 2015 first, and Punjab subsequently. Gujarat (2017), which he should have won en passant, became a near-thing and stretched him fully. In Karnataka, despite anti-incumbency against the Congress and the embarrassing compromises it made with the Ballari Brothers, the BJP finished well short. Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh were lost later.

Now, flip these numbers. In each one of the states (barring Punjab) that the BJP lost or failed to decisively win, it swept the Lok Sabha polls. Even in Delhi, Rajasthan, MP and Chhattisgarh, where it had just lost to the AAP and the Congress. Let’s see what follows.

• The most important takeaway is that, unlike in the Indira era, when one-party domination was accepted as a given, India has evolved into a much more federal nation. If the voter makes a clear distinction between choices made for the Lok Sabha and the Vidhan Sabha, it emboldens those who can hold their own, even if they aren’t too hostile to the BJP, like Naveen Patnaik, K. Chandrashekar Rao, Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy, and going ahead, probably the DMK.

It gives its adversaries, like Arvind Kejriwal and Mamata Banerjee, heart. Her three bye-election victories this week, including two by landslide margins six months after she struggled in the Lok Sabha elections, underline the same voter discretion.

The third type of regional leader who’d smile is the BJP’s own partner. On top of this list is Nitish Kumar — remember, Bihar goes to the polls next year. But even Prafulla Kumar Mahanta in Assam might revive his opposition to the Citizenship Amendment Bill, and Dushyant Chautala can aspire to punch at a level above his ‘weight’ category.


Also read: Ayodhya verdict made one thing clear. This is the problem with Indian secularism today


• Here is why even the count of 17 states currently under the BJP, as the graphic shows, is a half-truth. Some of these, notably Bihar and Haryana, are in partnership with allies who might have a radically different ideological view and vested interests. Some, like Meghalaya, Nagaland and Manipur, are essentially the political equivalent of leveraged buyouts. So, they aren’t particularly BJP states. Sikkim and Mizoram are part of the NDA, but not the BJP’s. The other, even less convenient unstated half of this truth is that today the BJP owns only three major states: Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat and Karnataka. The last one is fragile.

• Since the rise of the Modi-Shah paradigm, the BJP has followed a simple formula. Sweep the Hindi heartland, the two big western states, and you can rule India with a majority by just adding some little bits on the platter from here and there.

If this cannot be replicated in the states, you are stuck with federalism. It means having to negotiate with chief ministers, accepting some give-and-take, living with the reality that hostile states will control their own police, law and order, and may even (like Mamata), refuse to carry forward your grand plans, even good ones like Ayushman Bharat. They can no longer be ordered around. You have to treat them with respect and deference, sometimes as equals. This requires a radical change in method and style. Because the ‘cooperative federalism’ that the prime minister often talks about is no longer a mere mantra, but an imperative.

• Take a close look at Maharashtra. Why the NCP and Congress went with the Shiv Sena has a simpler explanation: They were fighting for survival, and power, if undeserved. But why did the Shiv Sena break away? It was because it saw in the relentless expansion of the BJP in its state a rapid erosion of its own ideological space. Its rebellion is a straightforward immune reaction to single-party domination, even if it is like-minded.


Also read: Shiv Sena was hated by Indian liberals as extremist Hindutva party. Now, it’s their darling


• The Centre-state equation is more likely to return closer to the 25-year epoch of 1989-2014 now. The noises from Maharashtra are disconcerting: Opposition to bullet train, silly threats on the metro. Andhra has already delivered a nasty blow to India’s FDI-friendly claims by peremptorily throwing out Amaravati and reputed foreign partners, from Singapore to the UAE’s LuLu Group. The prime minister will have to reach out and hug these chief ministers too, as he does his foreign counterparts.

• And the biggest issue of them all: The National Register of Citizens or NRC. Mamata Banerjee might have been the first to reject it formally, but it is unlikely that most of the non-BJP governments would now fall in line with an idea so divisive, so dangerous, and loaded against them.

The smaller Northeastern states have to deal with their own public opinion, which is hostile to the Citizenship Amendment Bill. In terms of implementability, the NRC is therefore dead on arrival. It may (and likely will) continue as a communally polarising concept for electoral reasons, a bit like the Ram temple might have been in the past three decades. But it won’t happen, definitely not as an NRC-CAB combo.

• And finally, in case you think I am only counting the downsides for the BJP, see that graphic again, with shrinking swathes of saffron. That is a limited electoral reality. Check out the ideological/philosophical picture. In all of India, you do not find one chief minister who, forget opposing, doesn’t instead welcome the blunting of Article 370 and the Supreme Court judgment on Ayodhya.

Over the past decades, these were the favourite BJP/RSS issues that polarised Indian politics. Now, a consensus similar to Kashmir and the Ram temple is building even on Uniform Civil Code. Even the Left Front government in Kerala wouldn’t dare implement the Supreme Court order on Sabarimala. Rahul Gandhi flaunts his janeu, temple visits and high Brahmin gotra.

Whatever the political shades on the map of India, it is now dyed-in-saffron as far as the key RSS/BJP ideas are concerned. The RSS, if not the BJP, could easily declare victory now. Hedgewar, Golwalkar and Savarkar will agree.


Also read: Public opinion in Kashmir has now been pushed away from India