["While Kumar claimed to be a Congress supporter all his life, of late
he’s begun developing trust in Modi. “If people are suffering, why
would you vote for him?” I asked. “Madam,” he began, “I feel that in a
few days, Rs 2 lakh will be credited to my account. It will be given
by the government. When there is so much black money returning to
them, where do you think all that money would go? Modi is bound to
give it to people like us. He is going to be the next Jayalalithaa.
What Amma did for her people, Modi will do for us.”"

While how deep and how widespread is the support for demonetisation is
a matter of (largely) subjective assessment, even if we concede the
claim of the author, this support cannot be a fixed quantity.
Disillusionment and alienation is bound to follow unless tangible
(desired) results show up in the days to come.
Let alone Rs. 2 lakh, if the regime can deposit even Rs. 15,000.00 in
every Jan Dhan account, as had been speculated by (a section of) the
media, that could be a real game-changer.
But in case of lacklustre outcome, the public response is bound to be negative.
Of course, the levers of state power provide a lot of leeway in
perception management.
Nevertheless.]

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/web-edits/what-makes-india-stand-behind-pm-modi-despite-the-demonetisation-chaos/

What makes India stand behind PM Modi, despite the demonetisation chaos?
Despite the severe ramifications of demonetisation, Modi remains
popular. He continues to be revered. In fact, his image seems bigger
than ever before.

Written by Radhika Iyengar | Updated: December 9, 2016 8:07 pm

Modi’s image is built on hyperbole – the “Vikaas Purush” (Development
Man) with a “56-inch chest” – commands respect, authority and trust.
Source: PTI

We just completed a month of demonetisation. Weeks back, one would
have argued that Narendra Modi’s move would leave behind deep,
irreversible fissures not only in the Indian economy, but also in the
public’s perception of the Prime Minister. But even as he and the rest
of the country gauge full ramifications of the move, Modi remains
popular. In fact, he continues to be revered. His image seems bigger
than ever before.

Recently, my domestic help, candidly informed me how demonetisation
has plummeted her further into poverty. She was scrounging for money
and was taking leave to return to her village, where marriages had
been broken, jobs had been lost and people had died. When I asked her
whether this will stop her from voting for Modi, she said it would
not. “This move of his is a strong step which will really remove black
money,” she told me with uncanny confidence. She really believed in
Modi. It’s this faith in the man, this strong belief that Modi is here
to uplift the underprivileged, that makes her want to vote for the
Lotus again. “It’s a bold step,” she told me.

WATCH | Supreme Court Seeks Centre’s Response Over Various Issues
Regarding Demonetisation
Supreme Court Seeks Centre's Response Over Various Issues Regarding
Demonetisation

Words like ‘bold’ and ‘radical’, with the occasional ‘surgical
strike’, have begun dominating the lexicon of the central government.
This is in addition to the overwhelming sense of nationalism, a
binding sentiment that’s concurrent with strong antipathy for anyone
who opposes demonetisation.

While demonetisation has had repercussions of catastrophic
proportions, Modi has not faced intense, angered protests – yet. Of
course, the Opposition has been attacking him from Day 1, but Modi
seems to be unaffected. Weeks after the note ban announcement, the
opposition staged a nationwide protest. But that too failed to make
much of an impact. Crowds across the country gathered on the streets,
but led by independent parties they lacked a unified voice and spirit.
Despite the heightened chaos, Modi remained unscathed.

What is it about Narendra Modi then, that comfortably places him in
favour of the public? A man who was once embroiled in the 2002 Gujarat
riots and paired with words like “mass-murderer” and “fascist” has
been able to rebrand himself as the messiah who would take India
forward.

Modi resurrected himself, presenting himself as a charismatic,
flamboyant orator with impressive business expertise. During the
elections in 2014, he posed himself as a beacon of hope who’d pull a
collapsing economy back on its feet. That was a strong narrative he
had built throughout the election campaign, punctuated with promises
of economic progress and obliteration of corruption. His party
provided Gujarat as a case study of the magnified development Modi had
made in that state as a chief minister. The people believed, and Modi
won.

Two years into office, with the Opposition repeatedly questioning his
inability to mitigate unemployment or eradicate corruption, Modi seems
to have decided to take on all accusations with one sweeping move that
would leave the opposition, and the country, speechless. Despite the
chaos of the note ban announced on November 8, Modi asked for a 50-day
window, conveying confidently that things would be better after that.
*
En route to work today, I broke into a conversation with my cab
driver, Pawan Kumar, on demonetisation. “How are you dealing with
this?” I asked. He narrated the difficulties he was facing and how his
family was suffering. “If there is no cash in my hands, how will a
poor person like me work or buy vegetables? The banks have no money to
give, no matter what time of the day you stand in the queue. People
cannot access their own money. A man may take a genuine wedding card
to show that his daughter is getting married, but there are numerous
formalities – eventually he is denied the amount he wants.”
Immediately I interjected, “Would you still vote for Modi in the next
elections then?” Kumar responded with a vociferous, “Yes”.

***While Kumar claimed to be a Congress supporter all his life, of
late he’s begun developing trust in Modi. “If people are suffering,
why would you vote for him?” I asked. “Madam,” he began, “I feel that
in a few days, Rs 2 lakh will be credited to my account. It will be
given by the government. When there is so much black money returning
to them, where do you think all that money would go? Modi is bound to
give it to people like us. He is going to be the next Jayalalithaa.
What Amma did for her people, Modi will do for us.”*** [Emphasis
added.]

There is a strong belief that Modi, a “transparent Prime Minister” of
impeccable integrity, is going to expunge black money. Interestingly,
this belief is predominantly deep-seated in the minds of those who are
affected by domonetisation the most – the lower economic class. They
are guided by the belief that finally, the elite (the inexplicably
rich and therefore, corrupt) will suffer and in return, the lower
class will gain.

It’s not just the belief nurtured by the poor that their bank accounts
will see an unexpected hike. What also governs their mood is their
unwavering faith in their Prime Minister. Kumar’s comparison of Modi
to the late J Jayalalithaa, the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu who
despite having countless corruption accusations sustained a god-like
authority over her people, shows Modi’s propensity to rise to that
stature. Maybe he already has.

It’s that intelligently crafted image projected by Modi that makes him
tick. His image built on hyperbole – the “Vikaas Purush” (Development
Man) with a “56-inch chest” – commands respect, authority and trust.
He projects himself as a stern, no-nonsense leader with a sharp
business/development acumen who has a firm hold over his country. But
when the going gets tough, that image conveniently melts to reveal a
sacrificing, vulnerable side of the Prime Minister. “I know that
forces are up against me,” he said days after the note ban
announcement. “They may not let me live, they may ruin me, because
their loot of 70 years is in trouble, but I am prepared!” That day, he
struck the strongest chord he could with the janta – an emotional one.
In response, the crowd broke into a resounding applause.

Modi has worked hard on building this glorified image. He works even
harder to maintain it. He skillfully maneuvers the narrative that
revolves around him and revels in it. He is in control. He chooses his
battles and he chooses his interviews. In comparison to his
predecessor Manmohan Singh, who gave many interviews while holding
office, Modi has given only three public interviews to the Indian
media as he crosses the halfway mark in office. Interestingly,
throughout the 2014 elections, Modi had attacked Manmohan Singh as a
quiet leader, calling him a “Maunmohan Singh”. However, Modi himself
has often taken the safe route, by choosing to remain silent or rarely
saying much, when certain severe issues have plagued the country.
Seeing this as a grave shortcoming, even Manmohan Singh commented:
“The public in our country expects the prime minister to take the lead
in managing public opinion. But he has never spoken; whether it is on
the beef problem or whether it is what happened in Muzaffarnagar or
elsewhere, he has kept quiet… He is the prime minister of all the
people of India and he must give every Indian the confidence that in
him we have a prime minister who cares for our well-being.”

Modi is a masterful orator, not a discussant. He often steers clear of
interviews that have national broadcasts – interviews that would pick
his brain and put him in a spot.
Addressing the masses in Mann ki Baat, speaking to a young crowd
gathered to attend a Coldplay concert via live-streaming, however, all
ensure a one-way narrative. It’s where he highlights his achievements,
draws out a blueprint of what he intends to do, or pleads for support.
It’s a one-way streaming of information given to the public, where
there is no one to question him or ask him to explain things further.
And that helps him to retain control of his narrative. It’s the same
narrative that has been pushed and extended to the realm of
demonetisation. In India today, the popular perception is that those
who are for demonetisation are “honest”, while the naysayers are
“anti-national”. The dissenters are potential hoarders of black money,
a coterie of people he intends to dismantle.

However, regardless of the debilitating circumstances demonetisation
has birthed: the lack of circulation of new notes, the snaking bank
lines, the ensuing unemployment, the losses faced by small-sectors and
the agricultural sector, families being unable to afford weddings, the
deaths – despite all this, the move seems exceptionally popular. And
Modi knew its popularity all along. If there was one thing that united
people, particularly the lower class, was their disgust for
corruption. Their disgust for the wealthy with their fat bank
accounts, the corrupt government officials who demanded extra money to
get a job done, the sly cops who’d ask for underhanded bribes. Modi
had seen it himself when the Aam Aadmi Party (that poses itself as an
anti-corruption machinery), won the Delhi elections in 2015. Taking
cue from the pulse of the crowd, Modi decided to pluck the chord of
national resonance, by plucking out 86 per cent of the Indian
currency. It was a risk he took, but it was one bound to win support.
That’s his foresight.

Perhaps it is because of this anti-corruption drive that many, despite
the inconvenience, are standing behind Modi by standing in lines. It
will bring a better future, they think.
Kumar said that for a better future, “bali dena zaroori hai” (The
sacrifice is important). And that’s another chord Modi has managed to
strike – the chord of sacrifice. By ‘sacrificing’, many Indians feel
they are a part of this great, ‘historic’ movement. Their sacrifice
will be a contribution to India’s advancement, which in their
ordinary, uneventful lives, makes them feel important, entitled.


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Peace Is Doable

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