http://scroll.in/article/801985/taking-stock-a-string-of-big-poll-setbacks-has-the-bjp-scratching-its-head-for-solutions

POLITICAL CHURN
Taking stock: A string of big poll setbacks has the BJP scratching its
head for solutions

The Congress has emerged as the chief beneficiary, but has yet to get
its house in order.

Anita Katyal  · Today · 09:15 am

A string of defeats in state, civic and local body elections over the
past year – the latest one coming in this month's Maharashtra
panchayat polls – has set alarm bells ringing in the Bharatiya Janata
Party.

Apart from its humiliating losses in the Delhi and Bihar assembly
elections, the party has also had to contend with reverses in
municipal and panchayat elections in Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh,
Maharashtra and Gujarat. The BJP is the ruling party in all these
states.

The Congress has been the chief beneficiary, leading to an upbeat mood
in its ranks, despite tasting defeat in local body elections in
Kerala.

The ruling party in the states is usually expected to emerge
victorious in local body elections because of its control over the
state apparatus. However, the BJP bucked the trend with only the
ruling Samajwadi Party managing to record impressive gains in the
local body elections in Uttar Pradesh in late 2015.

Worrying trend

In public, those on the receiving end are playing down the results,
arguing that they do no reflect the overall mood because these
elections are fought purely on local issues. Unofficially, however,
they admit that the recent verdicts are indicators of the prevailing
sentiment on the ground.

Particularly worrying for the BJP is that it has taken a beating in
rural areas, showing that Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi’s
description of the Modi government as a “suit-boot ki sarkar” and
“anti-farmer and pro-industry” has found sufficient takers in the
hinterland.

“It is true that these elections do not cover a large population and
are restricted to a small geographical area, but the results do
reflect the mood of the people, “ said a senior Congress leader from
Kerala.

After its defeat in Kerala’s local body elections, the ruling Congress
has reason to worry given that assembly elections in the southern
state are barely two months away.

But the BJP has bigger concerns to address.

Its defeats are not just a referendum on the functioning of the state
government, but also show there is also growing disillusionment with
the Modi government at the Centre.

In BJP-ruled Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh, where chief ministers
Shivraj Singh Chouhan and Raman Singh are into their third terms,
anti-incumbency has set in. But people are also disenchanted with the
ruling alliance in Delhi for its failure to deliver on promises to
improve the economy, create jobs and contain inflation.

In Maharashtra, the Devendra Fadnavis government is a little over a
year old. Yet, it got a rude shock when it was pushed to the fourth
spot in the Nagar Panchayat polls earlier this month, while the
Congress took top spot. Voters rejected the BJP-ruled government for
its failure to manage the agrarian crisis in the state.

The election reverses in Gujarat are particularly galling for Prime
Minister Narendra Modi, who prided himself on having a tight grip on
his home state during his tenure as chief minister. His successor,
Anandiben Patel, is clearly out of her depth. This was evident in her
poor handling of the reservation stir by the Patel community and it
appears the BJP has paid the price for it in the local elections.

Despite the defeats, the BJP can draw comfort from the fact that it
still has three years before the next general election to win back the
confidence of the people. Acknowledging that its popularity in rural
areas is on the wane, the Modi government is trying to get is act
together. To this end, it recently launched a crop insurance scheme to
provide relief to farmers.

Reaping the benefits

As for the Congress, it can hardly afford to get complacent or assume
that it is on the comeback trail. While the BJP has taken over at the
Centre, regional forces are growing in strength and popularity, with
new players such as the Aam Aadmi Party seeking to increase its
footprint.

The Congress leadership has to recognise that the uncertainty over
Rahul Gandhi’s elevation has caused the party to drift to some extent.
In addition, his inaccessibility and reliance on “non-political
advisors” has not been well received by the rank and file. The party
remains in a shambles in organisational terms, its footprint is vastly
reduced and its state units are riven by factionalism.

It is ironic that while the party is celebrating victories in the
local elections in Chhattisgarh and Maharashtra, these states are
witnessing pitched battles between rival groups. In Maharashtra, the
Gurudas Kamat and Sanjay Nirupam factions are literally slugging it
out in public. And in Chhattisgarh, recent reports about how former
chief minister Ajit Jogi sought to sabotage a by-election is
threatening to snowball into a full-blown crisis. Jogi’s son,
legislator Amit Jogi, has already been suspended in connection with
this controversy and there is widespread speculation that the former
chief minister may walk out from the Congress to form his own party.

But most importantly, the Congress is yet to draw up a credible future
roadmap to revive its fortunes and come up with a slogan that defines
its identity. Senior Congress leaders known to be close to Rahul
Gandhi said they were groping for that one “big bang idea” like
nationalising banks or the rural employment guarantee scheme to
establish a connect with the electorate. “The party is currently in
conversation on this issue,” they said.
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