



The wheels that make a political juggernaut roll
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories.Last week, Prime Minister Narendra Modi participated in the oath ceremony in two states. These weren’t meant to declare Samrat Chaudhary and Suvendu Adhikari chief ministers of their states. They were a declaration of an electoral Ashwamedh yagya by the saffron outfit, inspired by its success in recent years.In May 2014, when Modi took the reins at the Centre, the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) with all its allies was in power in just seven states.
Today, it rules 22 states. So, how did it achieve this? Some call it a victory of communalism. But is the explanation really that simple?In 1988, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) lent Modi to the BJP that gave him with the charge of Gujarat.
His first test was its municipal polls a year later. The BJP won the Ahmedabad mayoral post for the first time, marking the start of its victory march.At that time, there was a big bootlegger in Gujarat, Abdul Latif, who contested independently on five councillor seats, and his supporters called him a ‘caged tiger’. Modi made the Latif issue a poll plank, and the BJP won.
Those who saw this from communal prism missed the point: Latif wasn’t a war hero like Abdul Hamid or a scientist like Abdul Kalam. He was a history-sheeter. How can his victory or defeat be a win or loss for secularism?It’s here that Modi established a new political template: targeting election issues, profiling the political rivals and delivering on the manifesto the moment you get the power.Today, this is the reason why states—from Uttarakhand to Odisha and from Garo hills to Gujarat—have turned saffron.
Read on livemint.com