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Saturday, 11 March 2017

How to defeat Modi in elections

'Modi is larger-than-life, but not invincible. Yet,' says Saisuresh Sivaswamy.
Illustration: Dominic Xavier/WikiRumor.com




The 5-state election results ar a collection for the Opposition. province went faithful kind, standing firmly by Prime Minister Narendra Modi WHO it backed irresistibly in 2014, as did Uttarakhand that ejected the Congress for the BJP.

Punjab sprang a surprise in giving a transparent majority to the Congress, despite the previous freshman Aam Aadmi Party's presence within the fray.

Goa appears like a detailed battle, as will province.

It is the electoral outcome in provincethat gave a simple fraction majority for the BJP, that ought to come back as an enormous cause for worry for the non-Bharatiya Janata Party Opposition.

Nay-sayers had their own theories on however the BJP would perform, but no one, it appeared -- neither journalists nor psephologists, or maybe the 'experts' -- may see however well the BJP would neutralise the state.

All the crowing within the saffron camp, and also the pall of gloom that has descended over the Opposition ranks canrecommend that each one is lost, that there's no stopping Modi the nominee.

The robust and clear finding from Maharashtra's native elections last month, further as from Odisha, solely reinforces the read that Modi is unbeatable.

Definitely, the prime minister's aggressive campaign vogueand his high energy that belies his sixty six years, has left the Opposition scrambling to avoid wasting their seats.

But the plan of action to prevent the Modi juggernaut lies within the very little clues that dot this terribly electoral outcome, and also the Opposition has to listen to that to remain within the game.

Either that, or be reduced to the ridiculous spectacle of Mayawati weeping on live TV that the electronic option machines are tampered with.

So what ought to the Opposition do to deflect the Modi threat and to stay relevant?

One.

Junk noncurrent rhetoric like 'secular forces versus communal forces', it is as anachronistic as 'garibi hatao.'

The voter has changed, the voter's concerns have changed, and Modi has been quick to grasp it.

So why does he still resort to using phrases like 'qabristan/shamshanghat/SCAM' or his major domo Amit Shah talk of 'KASAB,' you wonder? Because that is the trap the duo is laying for the Opposition, to keep them trapped in the same old lingo while they themselves move on.

For Modi and Shah, these are strictly one-use catchphrases which remain stuck with the Opposition far longer.

Two.

Go all guns blazing. For the BJP under Shah-Modi, it does not matter whether it is a parliamentary election it is fighting or the zilla parishad poll, the amount of hard focus and mobilisation it puts into each battle, treating it as if it is the last one, is worthy of emulation.

The party organisation is thus a veritable wermacht, with absolutely no respite. There can also be no better way than this to prevent complacency setting in, or the cadres getting restive at the inactivity and lack of seriousness in purpose, thatafflict several political parties.

Three.

Modi isn't your target, therefore do not flip him into one.

You may not have noticed it, however since 2002, once Modi became Gujarat chief minister, he has invariably round-faced tremendous criticism, non-stop verbal attacks, even abuse.

Even currently social media is jam-packed with attack Indians showering epithets on him, and political leaders too eateach currently and so with their own gems.

Again, you'll not have noticed it, however since 2002 Modi has not round-faced one electoral reversal.

You would assume all this ganging up against him would result in a consolidation of votes against him, however on the contrary he solely appears to own gone from strength to strength.

The more durable you hit, the stronger he grows. therefore avoid creating him your target.

Four.

Govern. Motivate. Mobilise.

Akhilesh Yadav definitely tried to produce a much better administration than his father did, or what he himself was allowed to do in the first part of his government.

Can good governance assure re-election? Not by itself, no.

With BJP 2.0 in place, there is need for a combination of factors to win elections, and good governance is only one element.

After all, what do you crow about when your administration is crap?

Not only do you have to craft a message, you also have to motivate the electorate into buying into it.

Political parties are still stuck in votebanks and captive votes, when Shah-Modi have shown that all these constructs can be smashed to smithereens, so it is a game anyone can play.

Even the Opposition.

Five.

Bihar's Nitish Kumar first saw the Modi threat looming, and realised that the ground under his feet had shifted.

So he did the next smart thing, and went over to political adversary Lalu Yadav to convince him to join hands to take on a common enemy.

Good for him that the latter, being an astute politician despite coming across as a jester, saw the threat too and went along, and that's how Shah-Modi blitzkrieg was halted in Bihar.

To be fair to him, young Akhilesh Yadav too saw the same threat in UP, and also realised that like in Bihar only a common front can prevent the BJP from rolling into his state.

Unfortunately for him, the party he chose to link up with, and give away 100+ seats to, was a spent force.

The electoral outcome in UP would have been vastly different had the SP, Bahujan Samaj Party, Rashtriya Lok Dal and Congress tied up and put up common candidates.

A one-on-one, Nitish and Lalu had shown, has the potential to halt the BJP chariot in its tracks.

Consider these figures. In the 2014 elections the BJP won 42.63% of the vote in UP; it saw no major slide in 2017, its current voteshare being 39.6.

The BSP may have done demoralisingly bad in 2017, but its voteshare is still the second highest, at 22.2%, up from 19.77% in the 2014 elections.

The Samajwadi Party got 22.35% of the votes in 2014, which dipped to 21.9% in 2017.

Given these figures, what if the SP, BSP, Congress and RLD had formed an alliance in UP, given their 52.2% voteshare on paper?

Even making allowances that alliances don't mean vote transfer, the combination itself would have been formidable, and unnerved the BJP.

So, to the question 'Can Modi be halted?' the answer is, yes, he can be stopped.

But will it happen?

No. For, given that our political parties usually put ego before survival, it is highly unlikely, and Shah-Modi can still have a merry run.

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