[That, of all the opponents, Rahul Gandhi-led Congress poses by far the
most major challenge to Modi/BJP is just stating the obvious.
The call for "Congress-Mukt Bharat" is just one testimony.

In the subject context, one can can hardly afford to let slip out of one's
mind that the forthcoming poll may pretty well turn out to be the very last
chance for the survival of Indian democracy and the idea of "India", as had
been forged out in and emerged out of the crucible of the epic
anti-colonial freedom struggle.

The much talked of 'Mahagathbandhan' at the national level, however, is
neither feasible nor may even be desirable.
The constituencies of all the anti-BJP parties are not necessarily
compatible.
Apart from the compulsions of local level dynamics.
That's a chimera one should rather not chase after.

What's, however, still possible is a collage of state-level alliances with
an overarching theme of unseating the evil regime.
The Congress while has got to occupy the pole position nationally, which,
in any case, it is doing right now, may or may not be a constituent of the
major anti-BJP alliance in a particular state.
That should be quite kosher under the circumstances.

In this context, one has also to keep in mind that the Modi-Shah duo is
only too aware of its declining fortune.
The last-minute introduction of the rather hoaxical 10% (EWS) quota for the
"general" category and the way the Presidential awards have been issued
this Republic Day only go to underline that.

They're quite capable of and, in fact, pretty keen to play dirty, as and
when required.
One may, here, recall the way Modi had cooked up a charge of *treason*,
nothing less, against his predecessor and the previous Vice President of
the nation just to garner some extra votes in a medium-sized state poll,
which'd be retracted by Jaitley later on the floor of the parliament, after
the Gujarat poll is well over and the intended purpose served.
(Ref.: <https://twitter.com/officeofrg/status/946038581306441728?lang=en>.)

Modi is far from a risk-averse person.
If pushed to the corner, he can act pretty recklessly, in order to secure
some immediate advantage, regardless of what happens beyond that.
The monstrous demonetisation is a graphic illustration.
(Ref.: <
http://www.documentcloud.org/documents/4311065-India-Demonetisation-One-Year-After-A-Synoptic.html
>.)

Its reported plan to present a "regular" budget, instead of a "vote on
account", as is the norm and demanded by ethics, together with the recent
developments in the RBI, leading to the installation of a faithful former
bureaucrat, an MA in History (ref.: <
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaktikanta_Das>), at its top, leave no space
for any whatever doubt that the regime is hell bent on raiding the funds of
the RBI, in order to shower pre-poll sops all around.

The other known unknown is the Ram Mandir agitation and the orchestrated
demand for an ordinance bypassing the Supreme Court.
Though looks rather unlikely, at the moment, one can hardly be too sure.
Add to that, thelatest pattern of conduct of the Supreme Court.

There could be even other unknown unknowns.

All in all, the situation demands a pretty high level of commitment and
sagacity on the part of those who want "India" to survive.

<<(The) state polls are history. Now the Congress leader will be sorely
tested in two areas. He must do better in UP than his opponents think.
Priyanka Gandhi’s spectacular induction may be helpful here. Mr Gandhi also
needs to bag a couple of pre-poll allies. That’ll be a crucial asset in
augmenting numbers if the result shows a hung Parliament, as is more than
likely.

Rahul Gandhi is the lone Opposition leader who has challenged this
government and the PM across the board — on issues of economics, politics
and ideology, besides the negative impact of policies on ordinary Indians;
other Modi opponents have picked their battles selectively. He is the
opponent the BJP fears.>>]

http://www.asianage.com/opinion/oped/280119/rahul-alone-gives-the-bjp-sleepless-nights.html?fbclid=IwAR3gs_7_RB8336aFBIOeunh0caJ_1TO24UwL7aHs49Na-twDP5k-Ce2vO1M

Rahul alone gives the BJP sleepless nights

Anand K Sahay
Anand Sahay is a senior journalist based in Delhi.

Published : Jan 28, 2019, 1:22 am IST Updated : Jan 28, 2019, 1:22 am IST

In order to avoid misconceptions, it is necessary to underline that we are
firmly in the coalition universe already

Congress President Rahul Gandhi (Photo: PTI/File)

Cometh the hour, cometh the man!” goes the saying (and we may improve it by
adding “woman”). With national polls practically at the door, we shall know
who the man or the woman is going to be only after the election has flashed
past us, not before, such is the tricky electoral wicket. The political
scene is riddled with uncertainties.

If the Congress has notched up tide-turning recent victories in states, the
BJP has enviable organisational prowess and vast money resources with which
to dazzle the voter, browbeat opponents, and win over turncoats, in
addition to the crowd-pulling abilities of PM Narendra Modi.

Until a month and a half ago, when the Assembly election results for three
key Hindi heartland results came in, it was plausible to give Mr Modi
higher probability marks than others for leading the next coalition
government at the Centre. But the situation has not remained static.

In order to avoid misconceptions, it is necessary to underline that we are
firmly in the coalition universe already. Even the present government is a
coalition of several parties, a political khichri, with the BJP leading it.
The BJP is unlikely to have won 31 per cent of the national vote in 2014
(and enough Parliament seats to have a majority on its own) if it had
fought the polls alone.

Especially given the none-too-bright record of the present regime, few can
doubt that the next government too will be a coalition. With its customary
shrewdness, BJP’s progenitor RSS recently let out that a hung Parliament
was the most likely eventuality in the current situation, puncturing any
possible bravado talk on the BJP’s part of winning a majority.

The BJP’s present attack line that the Opposition parties offer only
unstructured chaos is, thus, plain unsubtle propaganda. The point really is
which political parties line up on which side of the basic ideological and
political dividing line that separates the BJP from the Congress.

Further, all concerned will be keenly watching which leader from the BJP or
from the ranks of its rivals is likely to attract the most support in a
hung Parliament. There are noteworthy probable claimants for the top job on
both sides. Their names are a subject of open speculation.

Being the incumbent leader, Mr Modi is, of course, the pre-eminent
contender from the BJP-RSS quarters. His capacity to draw attention can
never be in doubt. But his government coming up short on delivery in the
wake of turbo-charged propaganda at every step, its principal
characteristic, has boosted hopes not only among rival parties, but also
(with RSS blessings) of some within the saffron camp.

On the other side of the fence, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi has, in the
course of two gruelling years, slow-marched his way into the arc of
contention — first encircling the countryside, as it were, in line with
Chairman Mao’s famous dictum. His putative secular camp rivals for the top
job after the election — principally West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata
Banerjee and BSP leader Mayawati — appear to be more virtual reality than
reality.

In fact, what they seem to possess is their derived status (besides their
ambition). They will get any traction at all if and only if Rahul Gandhi’s
Congress either produces more MPs than the BJP does or is just a shade
behind the BJP in parliamentary numbers, and not if it falls
disappointingly short of a certain threshold.

In short, if the Congress does poorly, the non-Congress secular camp
pretenders to the throne that make so much anti-BJP noise these days will
also be ambushed by history. Can distributaries be bigger than the
mainstream eventually, no matter how much froth they produce?

Mr Gandhi’s case is, in fact, an instructive one. His rising stature in
public estimation (and acceptability as a political figure of substance)
came into full view with the Gujarat Assembly election of 2017 when his
party nearly snatched a victory from the entrenched BJP-RSS in the state
although it had been a low-impact customer for long, and practically absent
from Gujarat’s electoral calculus in the preceding two decades.

The Nehru-Gandhi scion was the indefatigable star campaigner for his side.
He first united a divided state party and got it battle-ready. He showed
sang froid and negotiating skill when he successfully pulled in non-party
young firebrands like Hardik Patel, Jignesh Mewani and Alpesh Thakore,
whose hallmark was rebellion, to do battle alongside him.

Mr Gandhi also overcame the doubts of a deeply sceptical public. When one
recalls that period, it is possible to make the argument that if PM Modi
was not a Gujarat native, and if he hadn’t pleaded with the voters to come
to his aid as he faced an acid test, his party may well have come off
second best.

A few months later, it became evident that Gujarat was not a flash in the
pan for the Congress leader. His campaigning energy and political
strategising stopped a rampaging BJP in Karnataka. Mr Modi and BJP
president Amit Shah worked as hard in the Karnataka Assembly election as
they had done in Gujarat, but this was of no avail. For them, in Karnataka,
the “home-state effect” was absent.

Later the same year, Chhatisgarh, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan (bitterly
feuding Congress factions were made to cooperate in these states too) fell
to the Congress as the BJP was forced to cede space even in regions of
these states where the RSS had been entrenched practically since
Independence.

Elections are hard to call, but there seems to be a certain wind blowing
that disturbs the equanimity of the ruling dispensation. It is the
fast-changing texture of politics which has compelled the government — in
an attempt to woo back voters — to allow education and job quotas even for
income tax-payers among the Hindu upper castes, and this strikes people as
odd.

A government that had set out to bring about economic, social and political
reform is obliged to take recourse to old-fashioned reservation policies to
pull its chestnuts out of the fire.

It is not confident enough to bank on the premise that while the Congress
had notched up Assembly wins, voters do a different arithmetic for Lok
Sabha elections. Psephology suggests that in India’s case the Parliamentary
vote tends to go the same way as in an Assembly if the voting for the two
is within six months of one another. That’s an added headache for the BJP,
and a plus for Mr Gandhi.

But state polls are history. Now the Congress leader will be sorely tested
in two areas. He must do better in UP than his opponents think. Priyanka
Gandhi’s spectacular induction may be helpful here. Mr Gandhi also needs to
bag a couple of pre-poll allies. That’ll be a crucial asset in augmenting
numbers if the result shows a hung Parliament, as is more than likely.

Rahul Gandhi is the lone Opposition leader who has challenged this
government and the PM across the board — on issues of economics, politics
and ideology, besides the negative impact of policies on ordinary Indians;
other Modi opponents have picked their battles selectively. He is the
opponent the BJP fears.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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