Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
India

BJP Elders May Frown, But Narendra Modi Still Has The Upper Hand

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 Nov, 2015 02:34 PM
    By promising, in response to a query in London, that the law will not spare those disturbing social harmony in the land of the Buddha and Gandhi, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has taken much of the sting out of the complaints of those protesting against the supposedly prevailing "intolerance".
     
    The heightened prospects of economic cooperation with Britain are also likely to dispel some of the doom and gloom enveloping the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) after the Bihar debacle.
     
    On both these counts, which have been worrying a section of the intelligentsia as well as Modi's pro-development supporters inside and outside the saffron camp, the prime minister and his party can be said to have retrieved some of the lost ground after Bihar.
     
    But whether these latest developments will take the wind out of the sails of the party elders who have suddenly raised the banner of revolt is unclear since there is some substance in their accusation that the party is run by a Gang of Two, comprising Modi and his Man Friday, Amit Shah, the BJP president.
     
    The veterans, or the old fogeys, as they might be called behind their backs, are also unlikely to give up their quest for seeking accountability for the Bihar defeat, which is another way to nail the Gang of Two for treating the party as their personal fiefdom.
     
    It is too early to say, therefore, that Modi's troubles are over if only because the BJP's present-day leaders at the helm cannot afford to dismiss the grouses of the party's senior citizens as a "manufactured" rebellion, as Finance Minister Arun Jaitley described the decision of a section of the writers, historians, scientists, film-makers and others to return their awards in protest against the climate of "intolerance".
     
    The voluble disdain which the party felt for the "Nehruvian" and "Leftist" intellectuals , to quote the finance minister again, was accompanied by silent disapproval of the "brain dead" golden oldies, as Yashwant Sinha said was the Modi-Shah duo's attitude towards those in the 70-plus age group.
     
    Following a brief promise to listen to the complaints of the elders, the duo took a step backwards and deputed union minister Nitin Gadkari to tell the critics that they are embarrassing the party.
     
     
    The battle, therefore, has been joined between those below and above 70. Which side will emerge victorious will depend, first, on whether Modi and Co. can win a major election, say, in Uttar Pradesh in 2017 - next year's elections in Assam, Kerala, Puduchery, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal are in states where the BJP doesn't have much influence - and, secondly, on whether there is a perceptive improvement in the economic situation.
     
    It is with the latter objective in mind that the government has gone in for what can be called small bang reforms on foreign investment. But these take time to bear fruit.
     
    Of greater urgency for the government is to keep the prime minister's London promise to crack down on the wild-eyed saffron militants who have been killing rationalists and beef-eaters.
     
    The result has been that regional leaders promising to eradicate corruption and pursuing their own model of growth in an atmosphere of communal harmony have won two assembly elections in a row.
     
    The reason why Jaitley earlier and Gadkari later have been erecting a protective ring around the Nos.1 and 2 in the BJP is easy to see. As in any other party, interwoven links of patronage and privilege tie the denizens of the corridors of power with those just outside.
     
    To be fair, the BJP is not the only party which tends to be impervious to criticism. The Congress, for instance, enacted the farce of its Nos.1 and 2 offering to resign after the party was humbled in the 2014 parliamentary polls and were urged to stay on by their loyal courtiers.
     
    That there is an element of jealousy in the revolt of the sidelined elders is undeniable. While L.K. Advani had resolutely opposed Modi's elevation till he realized that he was fighting a losing battle, others like Murli Manohar Joshi and Yashwant Sinha were disappointed at not being accommodated in the cabinet. There is little doubt that they were waiting for an opportunity to strike back.
     
    It is not clear, however, whether the veterans are as distressed by the antics of the Hindu Right as, say, the secular camp. After all, as home minister, Advani had casually brushed aside any suggestions about the Bajrang Dal being involved in the arson attack on the Christian missionary, Graham Staines, and his two sons in an Odisha village in 1999 while the then human resource development minister Joshi, and defence minister George Fernandes, described the grisly deaths as the result of an "international conspiracy". The views of Arun Shourie, now a regular critic of the government, were similar.
     
    Joshi's other claim to fame is that he was Smriti Irani's predecessor in the task of saffronizing education and in proclaiming that foreign investment was tantamount to "looting".
     
     
    Since personal pique rather than any ideological difference is behind the stirrings among the mothballed elders, who do not seem to have anything substantial in the way of policies to offer, Modi still holds the upper hand. He now needs a few victories to maintain his lead.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Violence As Truck Attack Victim Dies; Kashmir Bandh Called

    Violence As Truck Attack Victim Dies; Kashmir Bandh Called
    As news of the death in Delhi spread on Sunday, mobs took to the streets in the southern district of Anantnag in the Kashmir Valley and blocked the Jammu-Srinagar highway by burning tyres.

    Violence As Truck Attack Victim Dies; Kashmir Bandh Called

    Why Kerala Is The Best Place To Die In India

    Why Kerala Is The Best Place To Die In India
    Kerala's efforts received a feather in its cap when Singapore-based Lien Foundation praised the state's provision of palliative care for patients with serious illnesses, in its 40-country Quality of Death study recently.

    Why Kerala Is The Best Place To Die In India

    Sikhs Continue Protests In Punjab's Malwa Over Desecration Of Guru Granth Sahib

    Sikhs Continue Protests In Punjab's Malwa Over Desecration Of Guru Granth Sahib
    The protestors blocked roads in Moga and Bathinda districts and demanded action against those involved in the desecration of the Sikh holy book.

    Sikhs Continue Protests In Punjab's Malwa Over Desecration Of Guru Granth Sahib

    5-Year-Old And 2-Year-Old Gang-Raped In Delhi, Kejriwal Questions PM Modi, LG Najeeb Jung

    5-Year-Old And 2-Year-Old Gang-Raped In Delhi, Kejriwal Questions PM Modi, LG Najeeb Jung
    The two-and-a-half-year-old, who was raped by two men in west Delhi's Nangloi area, continued to be in a critical condition on Saturday while the five-year-old was raped by three men in east Delhi's Anand Vihar.

    5-Year-Old And 2-Year-Old Gang-Raped In Delhi, Kejriwal Questions PM Modi, LG Najeeb Jung

    Acid Attack Victims Walk The Ramp In Agra

    Acid Attack Victims Walk The Ramp In Agra
    The unique fashion show was organised by Max, leading international value fashion brand, to celebrate the spirit of 'Sheroes' by launching its festival collection.

    Acid Attack Victims Walk The Ramp In Agra

    Cornered, Haryana CM Khattar Offers 'Regrets' On Beef Remarks

    Cornered, Haryana CM Khattar Offers 'Regrets' On Beef Remarks
    Khattar was quoted by an English daily on Friday as saying that "Muslims can continue to live in this country, but they will have to give up eating beef as the cow is an article of faith here".

    Cornered, Haryana CM Khattar Offers 'Regrets' On Beef Remarks