http://scroll.in/article/736925/after-a-year-of-silence-frustrated-bjp-officials-begin-to-snipe-at-modi-and-his-team

GATHERING STORM

After a year of silence, frustrated BJP officials begin to snipe at
Modi and his team

The Lalit Modi controversy has proved to the proverbial last straw.
Suddenly, the party's MPs have lost their fear of expressing their
dissatisfaction at the state of affairs.
Anita Katyal  · Yesterday · 05:30 pm

After a year of silence, frustrated BJP officials begin to snipe at
Modi and his team
Photo Credit: via Twitter

When the Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic Alliance
government came to power last May, its spin doctors ensured that Prime
Minister Narendra Modi was perceived as a no-nonsense leader. He was
said to be a strict disciplinarian who kept a sharp eye on his
ministers and MPs, who were expected work silently and avoid
publicity.

There were  numerous stories in the initial months about how Modi had
pulled up a minister for not dressing appropriately while travelling
abroad and conveyed his disapproval about a minister’s dinner meeting
with an industrialist at a five-star hotel.

Delhi was also abuzz with rumours that the Prime Minister had ticked
off Home Minister Rajnath Singh’s son for financial impropriety. In
this case, the Prime Minister’s Office was forced to put out a formal
retraction after Singh threatened to quit over these reports.

Code of conduct

At one of the early parliamentary party meetings, Modi had issued a
series of dos and don’ts to the first-time MPs about how they were
expected to conduct themselves.  They were issued directions to avoid
power brokers, stay away from the media, spend their free time in the
library instead of in the Central Hall and to keep away from Delhi
once the Parliament session was over.

Needless to say, the Modi’s carefully-crafted image and the aura built
around him had the desired effect of silencing his ministers and party
leaders. Except for a few senior ministers, the others virtually went
underground as there was a constant nagging fear that they were under
watch.

But a year after the formation of the government, the fear factor
appears to be on the wane. The recent revelations about external
affairs minister Sushma Swaraj and Rajasthan chief minister Vasundhara
Raje Scindia helping sacked Indian Premier League chief Lalit Modi has
set tongues wagging in the BJP and the government. Modi’s silence on
this issue has not helped as the continuing disclosures and the
Congress offensive is chipping away at the government’s credibility.

The simmering anger in the party first came to light last month when
agitated Lok Sabha MP Bharat Singh, known to be close to the Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh, criticised the  government’s functioning at a
parliamentary party meeting in the presence of the Prime Minister. He
complained that ministers had become inaccessible and that no visible
development was taking place on the ground even a year after the
government came to power. Several MPs from Uttar Pradesh had greeted
Singh’s remarks with thumping of desks , a clear reflection of  the
prevailing mood in the party.

While Bharat Singh’s outburst was dismissed by the BJP as a flash in
the pan, recent developments indicate that the rumblings in the party
are getting louder and people are no longer afraid to speak  up.

Hissy fit

BJP MP and former cricketer Kirti Azad was the first off the block
after the Sushma Swaraj expose came to light when he tweeted “asteen
ka saanp”, suggesting that this was the handiwork of an insider. His
barb was clearly directed against Finance Minister Arun Jaitley  with
whom he has had a longstanding feud.

An unapologetic Azad followed this up with a  brazen interview in
which  he said that other members who headed the Board for Control of
Cricket in India, including Jaitley, Sharad Pawar, Rajeev Shukla and N
Srinivasan  should also be probed for foreign exchange violations
during the second Indian Premier League season. Azad also warned that
he would not hesitate to join the opposition protest in parliament if
the members of the BCCI’s governing council and national executive
were not investigated.  Azad went a step further when he approached
the Delhi police to file a complaint against Jaitley  for violation of
rules at the Delhi and District Cricket Association which was headed
by the finance minister for 13 years.

The dust was still to settle on Lalitgate when former home secretary
and BJP MP RK Singh  embarrassed the party with his candid remarks on
this controversy just as  the BJP was trying to brush it under the
carpet. Mincing no words, Singh said that nobody should help an
absconder.

“Lalit Modi is an absconder and no one should help him," Singh told a
television channel. "The government should file a case to revoke his
passport. It is wrong on the part of others to help him. He should
immediately be brought back, he's an offender. He should be ready to
face law." The statement was promptly dismissed by the BJP as his
personal remarks.

Earlier this week, it was the turn of former finance minister
Yashwant Sinha to take potshots at the party. Referring to Modi’s
decision to exclude leaders above the age of 75 years from the
Cabinet, Sinha remarked, “ All those who are above the age of 75 were
declared brain dead on May 26, 2014."

"I am among those brain dead," he added.

Kicked upstairs

Eight two-year-old Sinha, who is obviously unhappy at being retired,
also raised  questions about the Modi government’s claims that the
economy has recovered after it came to power. Sinha maintained that
growth had risen  "only statistically"  while fundamental issues  were
still to be tackled. Ironically, his son Jayant Sinha is minister of
state for finance.

Sinha, veteran BJP leader L.K.Advani and former minister Murli Manohar
Joshi were kept out of the government on account of their advancing
years and later axed from key party posts. They were appointed
“margdarshakhs” or mentors in a newly created   panel which has no
role in the party decision-making process.

Frustration among the seniors has been building up. In a recent
interview to the Indian Express, Advani had said that he did not rule
the possibility of an emergency being imposed again as the forces that
could crush democracy are still stronge. This was seen as a direct
attack on Modi though Advani  subsequently clarified that his
statement was not aimed at any individual.

Earlier this month, Murli Manohar Joshi  publicly criticised  his own
government’s " Namami Gange" programme, saying  the way this project
was being implemented, Ganga would not  be cleaned for the next 50
years. Not only is this is Modi’s pet project but Joshi made these
remarks in the Prime Minister’s constituency Varanasi.

All these voices point to a gathering storm in the BJP, suggesting
that  Modi’s grip over the party and the government is slackening.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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