*Politically assertive RSS is the need of the hour- I *


*14 Sep 2009*

*Present status of BJP*

*
*The 2009 election defeat was more humiliating for the BJP than that of
2004. The latest defeat can be attributed to failure to analyse the reasons
for the 2004 defeat. The party failed to analyse state-wise,
constitution-wise problems, reasons for receiving the people’s mandate in
1999, what promises were made to the electorate then, whether it ruled as
per people’s expectations, and whether it convincingly conveyed the reasons
for its inability to fulfill commitments.

BJP also failed to take steps to grow and strengthen itself in states where
it is weak in the last decade. Though the party retained power in stronghold
states like Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh etc., it lost in its
Rajasthan stronghold mainly due to internal strife. Its victory in states
such as Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, etc could be attributed more to
anti-incumbency faced by Congress governments than the growth of its support
base. Even in Delhi, it could not sustain itself in the assembly elections
despite its overwhelming victory in the local body polls. The only state
where it can claim a sort of genuine victory along with growth in support
base is Karnataka.

There can be no doubt that the five year UPA regime was one of the worst
India has seen since independence. The performance of Manmohan government
was below par in almost all fields, whether education, health, agriculture,
home affairs, external affairs, security, or economy. A responsible and
shrewd opposition would and should have used the failures of the UPA
government to its advantage, both inside and outside parliament. BJP
miserably failed in this aspect and lost a great opportunity to come back to
power. In fact, it has been committing more mistakes after its loss now,
than what it had done after its loss in 2004.

*General categories of political parties*

In general, we can place political parties in three categories: ‘Dynastic’
(Family Corporations - like Congress, DMK, RJD, PMK, Shiv Sena, Akali Dal,
National Conference, PDP, JD-S, etc); ‘Autocratic’ (Personal fiefdoms – like
AIADMK, BSP, NCP, Trinamool Congress, Viduthalai Chiruththai Katchi, etc);
and Democratic (parties with considerable inner democracy such as BJP, CPM,
CPI, JD-U, etc).

With regards to Dynastic parties, the credit for electoral victories goes to
the concerned families and any blame is borne by other leaders and cadres.
As long as the family has spineless leaders and cadres waiting at the
doorsteps, the party doesn’t face any problems after electoral defeats.
Similarly, with regard to Autocratic parties, the credit for victories goes
to the party supremos, and as long as sycophant leaders and cadres crawl at
their feet, they do not face any problems after electoral losses. With
regard to Democratic parties, which have a semblance of inner party
democracy, credits for victories are generally shared by attributing them to
‘team work’. But the moment the parties lose, problems arise and blame games
start leading to chaos! The BJP is exactly at this kind of a stage now.

Both the dynastic and autocratic parties have been able to regain their
composure after losses due to the control the families and supremos have
over leaders and cadres. The nation has witnessed such revivifications many
times. But after two consecutive defeats, the BJP seems to have lost its
balance totally. This is not good for the country and democracy.

*Leaders’ failure and party’s fall*

Even after 100 days of UPA’s second term, the BJP has not come out of its
conundrum. A party which claims to be ‘a party with a difference,’ boasting
inner party democracy and discipline, should have immediately made future
plans. The leaders should have analysed the reasons for defeat, decided to
act as a constructive opposition, discussed strengthening the party in
weaker areas and prepared a roadmap for the next five years. For a party
with seasoned and capable leaders, it doesn’t augur well not to have come
out of its imbroglio even after 100 days of defeat.

BJP leaders are all experienced and have seen many elections. It is sad to
see them blaming each other and fighting with one another. Leaders like
Jaswant Singh, Yashwant Sinha and Arun Shourie could not digest the
recognition given to others like Arun Jaitley and Sushma Swaraj without
going into a sensible analysis of the electoral defeat. The forced
resignation of B.C. Khanduri as Uttarakhand Chief Minister after putting the
blame on him for the party’s defeat, and the party’s incapacity to do the
same to Vasundhara Raje, has become a problem. The media speculated about a
resultant cold war between Rajnath and Advani due to Vasundhara taking
advantage of being in Advani’s coterie and refusing to abide by Rajnath’s
diktat.

*Haphazard handling of Jaswant Singh issue*

As Jaswant, Yashwant and Shourie felt humiliated at the lack of response
from the party high command to their calls and letters, they aired their
grievances via the media and Yashwant also quit all party posts. These
developments cast an ugly spell on the party. Meanwhile, some excerpts from
Jaswant Singh’s book, “Jinnah: India-Partition, Independence,” glorifying
Mohammed Ali Jinnah and criticizing Sardar Patel and Jawaharlal Nehru, was
leaked to the media, which made BJP leaders boycott its launch function. In
fact, Party president Rajnath Singh had earlier prevailed over Jaswant to
postpone the launch of his book by citing the Rajasthan Assembly and
subsequent general elections.

The ‘Chintan Baithak’ was organized in Shimla; Yashwant Sinha and Arun
Shourie were not invited. Only Jaswant Singh had an invitation and he
reached Shimla in time. The BJP leaders, fuming because of the book, hastily
decided to expel him from the party and conveyed the decision to him by
phone. The news shocked the nation, as he was one of the founder leaders of
the party; had served it for three decades; was Minister of Finance and
External Affairs during the NDA regime; and had held various party posts and
was an ex-serviceman too!

Jaswant’s expulsion without even calling him for an enquiry and giving him
an opportunity to explain his position created a sort of sympathy for him
among the general public. Even a section within the party was unhappy at the
way he was expelled. Nevertheless, the party sent a tough message that
anyone defying the party and deviating from ideology would meet the same
fate.

Advani’s infamous Jinnah speech of 2005 came back to haunt the party and a
section felt Jaswant should not be axed when Advani was pardoned for the
same mistake of praising Jinnah. But there is a lot of difference between
the two and Jaswant blamed Sardar Patel for the Partition apart from
eulogizing Jinnah and clearing his name. Though the BJP’s expelling Jaswant
was uncivilized, the way he behaved after his expulsion by name calling,
criticizing RSS, making a number of allegations and going to Pakistan and
criticizing our national leaders in their media, made the nation feel his
expulsion was right after all.

*Consequences of Jaswant’s expulsion*

The BJP high command started pressurizing Vasundara to resign from the post
of leader of the leader in the Rajasthan Assembly. Though leaders like
Yashwant Sinha kept quiet after Jaswant’s expulsion, Vasundara kept evading
the party diktat and Arun Shourie minced no words in criticizing the high
command in an interview to a TV Channel. He came down hard on them, but
cleverly praised the RSS and appealed to the RSS leadership to take control
of the party.

This clever ploy restrained the leadership from taking any disciplinary
action against Shourie, despite his calling them provocative names. The
alertness which the high command showed against Jaswant could not be shown
against Arun Shourie and this made B.C. Khanduri question the action against
him while Vasundara was spared.

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