In Bihar, the post-split model will resemble Orissa, where under an identical alliance with a Janata Dal faction, the BJP got seven Lok Sabha and 32 Assembly seats in 2004. The party had 17 per cent of the vote. Its partner the Biju Janata Dal got 27 per cent of the vote and won 11 seats. After the alliance was treacherously broken by the Janata Dal (in much the same way as in Bihar), the BJP got zero Lok Sabha seats in 2009, with 15 per cent of the vote, while the Janata Dal won 14 seats. The same condition for the BJP will obtain in Bihar.
Why is this? The BJP upper caste vote is spread out and small. It has needed the middle and lower caste votes of the Janata Dal to stay relevant. Another example of where this sort of alliance succeeds for the BJP is Punjab. Going through the list of BJP legislators in Punjab, the names are revealing. I’m going to list all 12 of them so that it is obvious: Dinesh Singh, Seema Kumari, AK Sharma, Anil Joshi, Navjot Kaur Sidhu, Som Parkash, Chuni Lal Bhagat, Manoranjan Kalia, KD Bhandari, Amarjit Singh, Madan Mohan Mittal, Surjit Kumar,
Other than Sidhu (wife of cricketer Navjot Singh) and Amarjit Singh, the other 10 are all Hindu in what is a Sikh majority state. The other striking thing is the domination of upper castes. Sharma, Joshi, Bhagat are Brahmin names. Mittal is a Baniya. The BJP’s alliance is with the Akali Dal, whose legislators are almost all Sikhs. This is why, the BJP-SAD (Shiromani Akali Dal) alliance makes such great sense. If the alliance did not exist, the BJP would be poorer for it, because the castes it brings to the table are small. The other thing is that voters move away from parties with no chance of winning. This is why a BJP in an alliance is a better prospect for its upper caste votaries than a BJP that stands alone.
I wrote in an earlier column that I did not think it likely that the Janata Dal would break with the BJP because the alliance together commanded just under 40 per cent of the vote in Bihar. This is the reason it dominates. Nitish Kumar sees it differently but I think he will pay heavily for breaking up with the BJP, no matter what the compulsion. For him, the Orissa model will not apply. In Bihar, unlike Orissa, there exists a party similar to Kumar’s, which is inclusive, focused on the backward castes and will benefit when the Janata Dal’s vote share diminishes. This is Lalu Prasad Yadav’s Rashtriya Janata Dal. The difference between these two parties on seats contested is only four per cent of the votes cast. This thin margin is as good as eroded now that the BJP is gone. In the next election, Kumar will miss the BJP’s support no matter what he feels now.
The BJP had only three allies in 1996, when they bid for power — the Shiv Sena, the Akali Dal and the Samata Party. It is back to exactly that place today, except that the Samata (the old name for the Janata Dal) is gone. On Karan Thapar’s show on CNN-IBN a few months ago, I was asked what Modi needed to do to keep Kumar with the BJP. I said that the riots were in the past, but for Modi’s image to change, he would have to do three things. Publicly disown a minister convicted for rioting (on whom he has made no statement so far), announce an end to the persecution of police officers like Rahul Sharma who acted vigorously and bravely against the rioters, and third, to officially keep away Amit Shah, another minister charged with conspiracy in a case where a man was killed in a false encounter and his wife was later murdered.
The BJP’s Chandan Mitra replied that this was liberal daydreaming, the actions were not needed and that Kumar would approach politics more practically. Unfortunately, he was wrong, and Modi’s stubbornness has led to the BJP disaster in Bihar.
Published in The Express Tribune, June 23rd, 2013.
Like Opinion & Editorial on Facebook, follow @ETOpEd on Twitter to receive all updates on all our daily pieces.
COMMENTS (26)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
All Modis, Rahuls & parties will perish. ONLY ARVIND KEJRIWAL SHALL WIN !!
Aakar Patel is wrongly expecting Modi to give up Amit Shah. Modi-Shah combo is being modeled on the lines of Vajpayee-Advani. Modi is trying to tone down his public image to be acceptable to the rest of the nation.
@observer:
I don't want to enter in a English language skills competition with you, simply because I am not here for this reason. I would rather spend more time on ensuring the accuracy of my arguments and finding credible online sources for backing them up than to spend it on making absolutely sure that all the language rules were followed, and there were no typos and spelling errors in my comment.
A Google search for "a more simple way" will fetch you millions of results (when I checked there were more than 17.5 million only on the web, and who knows how many billion on paper) showing its varied usages. Moreover, in everyday casual commands you always use short/slang language instead of formal language. If all people were like you, English language could never have expanded beyond 200 odd root words, and life would have been much more simple, oops, simpler than it is. Hope this will be my last post on this subject.
@observer:
"There can be a SIMPLER way. But a ‘More Simple Way’ is a non-starter."
Check who is knocking the door, and bring the newspapers. Hurry.
@Author
The comparison with Odisha is not a valid comparison because the state has only three major contenders and BJP was in no position to go with the third one i.e. the Congress.
In Bihar the JD(U) had 22.6% of the votes and 115 (47%) of seats, BJP had 16.5% of votes and 91(36%) of seats, whereas RJD had 18.9% of votes and only 22( 9% ) of seats.
Now Congress tilt towards Nitish, may prompt RJD and BJP to reach a deal to teach a lesson to both the 'treacherous' partners. This also seems possible as Nitish and Laloo (of RJD) are contending for the same social strata, but BJP has a different social base.
16.5% and 18.5% coming together in a tactical voting pact, can wash Nitish down the drain.
As Kautilya (from Patliputra) said, The enemy of an enemy is a friend.
Watch this space.
@Lala Gee:
Next time I will try to write in a more simple way, though I am wondering how would that be possible.
Please don't.
There can be a SIMPLER way. But a 'More Simple Way' is a non-starter.
Another Gujarat. (Source: 'Plan panel deflates Gujarat growth model'- Hindustan Times, June 18, 2013
Guzarat All India rank / %
GDP growth 9.8% (11th plan) 5th
Sex ratio (0-6) 886girls/1000boys 18th
Literacy 79.90% 12th
Infant mortality rate 41 for1000 live births 15th
Maternal mortality 148 6th
Birth rate 21.3 19th
Death rate 6.7 11th
Gross enrollment ratio 36.90% 39.30% (GER) for class XI-XII GER for SCs 51.30% 54.90%
School drop-out ratio 57.90% 49.30% (class I to X) Drop-out ratio for SCs 64.50% 56.00%
Drop-out ratio for STs 77.60% 70.90%
@BlackJack:
"@Lala Gee: "I am unaware of the ground reality in India…" You could have ended there – the rest of your comment merely serves to prove this first sentence fragment."
Sorry, if you couldn't understand the rest of my comment. Next time I will try to write in a more simple way, though I am wondering how would that be possible.
@LALA Gee
you are paranoid about hindutva,it was so called hindutva parties that ruled india for 6 years . _ There was NO CHANGE in constitution A MUSLIM was made president Economy was kept on track jobs were generated
_ What else does india need ? secularism is a guarantee in india by law and can't be changed unlike some pure states which not only discriminate by law but also by nature of media,people and institutions. _ And thanks ,you will know after MODI becomes our PM
@Lala Gee: I am unaware of the ground reality in India... You could have ended there - the rest of your comment merely serves to prove this first sentence fragment.
The ultimate nirvana of India's democracy ,which is a caste-free polity and society, seems to be a far ,distant dream. Election calculations use vote-banks, upper castes, OBCs, BCs ad nauseam.
ET should dedicate a separate page to Modi. After "Home", "Pakistan", "Business" etc ET should have one "Modi" page as well
Those questioning the relevance of this article could consider this recent report about the power of social media in influencing around 160 seats. APCO has planned well, and started Modi's social network campaign 3 years ago. Congress and independent intelligentsia have woken up late, but hope to cover the last mile with more SIT revelations about persecution (no large scale riots, but constant persecution) of minorities in Gujarat. The government statistics thrown around by Modi's PR machinery has started getting questioned (Gujarat's growth is not exceptional under Modi, comparable to other states etc.) and Gujarati newspapers have slowly started pointing out that Modi takes credit for the entrepreneurship of Gujarati people. With Congress on the backfoot for corruption, it will highlight CAG reports on Gujarat government's INR 16,000,00,00,000 scams in the line of 2G. Modi has some advantage still, but that can be eroded if "Internet Seculars" plan to get their act together like "Internet Hindus". The country does not need another blood-tainted hand (like Rajiv Gandhi of 1984 fame) unfurl the tiranga.
Another Modi article. What a waste. Anyway. Nitish is a more able person for the top slot. Modi's chances are down to almost zero now.
@Author: His other headache will be Karnataka, which surprisingly, sent the most BJP MPs, 19, to Delhi. There also, the recent assembly election defeat portends a washout in the Lok Sabha. . Karnataka is perhaps the only state where people are known to vote differently in the assembly and general elections, sometimes within months of each other. People here are able to differentiate between local and national issues. While the assembly elections are always contested on local issues, general elections are the only time when national issues are debated. Minorities and underprivileged in Karnataka did not face any undue hardship during the BJP government, so I do not expect any negative vote from them against the BJP in the center. On the other hand, the corruption and vacillation of the Congress is bound to make inroads at least in terms of vote share. . I expect the BJP to easily retain 19 out of 28 seats in the general elections in Karnataka. If they are fortunate, BJP may gain a seat or two but it would be a hard-won contest since the Congress and JD(S) MPs are well entrenched in their current constituencies and most of them are heavyweights of their respective parties. . Also there is a lesson for Nitish Kumar from Karnataka. After the hung assembly results in 2004, Kamaraswamy from JD (Secular) made a quid-pro-quo alliance with the BJP to become CM. At the pre-arranged date to end his tenure as CM, he dropped the BJP like a hot potato claiming that he would not allow the non-secular BJP come to power. Subsequently the BJP came to power on its own in 2008 and the JD(S) became a marginalized party unable to win from anywhere except its strongholds. It became a regional party within a region of the state. In the 2013 assembly elections, the JD(S) still remained marginalized as it is unable to deliver a coherent message why anyone should vote for them. It no longer touts any secular credentials, did not promote Kumaraswamy and in fact was nostalgically promoting Deve Gowda's term as CM and PM. So if this lesson has anything to go by, it is that Nitish Kumar allying with the BJP and then disowning it may result in a drop in vote-share that he may never get from anywhere else.
I am unaware of the ground reality in India - like most Pakistanis, I am least concerned what is going on in India on political front - however, if the percentage of Modi's following in this forum is any indicator, he should win 100% of the parliamentary seats in the coming elections. Lets see who wins, Hindutva or Secularism as guaranteed in the Indian Constitution - I wonder how Hindutva parties can even participate in Indian elections despite this guarantee, unless, of course, it is fake and a cover up. Both ideologies cannot exist at the same time being poles apart. In case if Hindutva wins, my advance congratulations on making India a true kin of Afghanistan.
Mr Patel just in case you missed this http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Narendra-Modi-lands-in-Uttarakhand-flies-out-with-15000-Gujaratis/articleshow/20721118.cms .
@Naveen: Can't handle reality?
I think Nitish did Modi a favor by leaving NDA. Now there's nobody in NDA to stop the BJP from declaring Modi as its PM candidate. Now that Nitish has gone for good, the BJP should stop procrastinating and declare Modi as its PM candidate. BJP's main focus should be to become the single largest party in the elections; once it happens, finding new allies won't be difficult.
And we should care, why? Does the author want us pakistanis to not to vote for modi? Good news! we won't be voting for narinder modi!
Another one of ET's almost daily articles on Modi. In the end, it will be the Indian voters who will decide and those elections are still months away. This endless parsing of events and daily score keeping doesn't matter now nor will it matter when that time comes.
Biased journalism
Mr Patel fails to mention that Mr Modi is himself from An OBC background.................This might be a small loss for BJP but Nitish is finished.............Modi's appeal trancends castes.........talking about castes Mr Patel's Congress played caste politics but never made a backward PM............Moreover when India is facing worst natural calamity some people choose to vent there personal vendetta......height of hypocricy
The comparison between Orissa and Bihar is weak, primarily because the BJP is (now) the principal opposition in Bihar, while it was always a weak No. 3 player in Orissa (much like Punjab). Second, 2009 was the BJPs worst performance in 15 years - for example, it has won more seats in Orissa before its alliance with the BJD than it won in 2009. Mr Patel is now jumping through hoops to defend his erroneous prognosis (and given the amount of space he has devoted to the BJP and Modi, this is likely to be a frequent activity in the future). The fact is that now Bihar has the anti-BJP vote split three-ways, and this is what they are banking on to deliver a larger number of seats. Whether this actually happens remains to be seen, but I think it is a gamble worth taking. Second, the JD (U) itself may not last too long, ironically (in light of their reasons for the recent split) due to the personality politics of Nitish Kumar and consequent marginalization of other leaders like Sharad Yadav.