At the close of the second phase of the Karnataka polls, the scene here is interesting to say something because not much can be said about the political situation here. For some stunningly researched poll predictions and poll-watch kind of information, look no further than Offstumped. This is more a culmination of five years’ worth of observations of some amazingly dirty tour de farce enacted in this state.
For about five years, this state has not had a government. The two “coalition” governments hardly governed. The Janata Dal (Secular) undoubtedly is the villain of the piece but so are the other two. The difference is Deve Gowda willingly stripped himself in public and is paying a rather heavy price for it. As for the state, and Bangalore, enough has been said.
Here is my take on each of the major parties, followed by a roundup of how it augurs for the state.
Congress
When the polls were announced, Sonia Gandhi decided to finally satisfy S.M Krishna’s itch to return to Karnataka politics. Krishna was banished to Maharashtra to meet Deve Gowda’s demand to keep his arch-rival away. However, between 2004 and now, things here have drastically altered. With the Dalit movement gaining strength–actually, with BSP’s gradual ascension giving the Congress party jitters–several sections in the party aren’t comfortable projecting Krishna as the Chief Ministerial candidate. For now, Mallikarjun Kharge is shining as the Dalit leadership face of the Congress party. The inclusion of Siddaramaiah, unarguably the most powerful Kuruba leader, into the Congress party is another factor against Krishna. And neither is this only about Krishna. If the Congress wins, it is anybody’s guess about the kind of fight that will erupt between these aspirants.
And infighting is the least of its real problems. Of all the three major contenders, the Congress party never really had a poll strategy. It lost valuable time trying resolve the bickering over tickets and trying to even draft a decent manifesto. Rahul Gandhi’s whirlwind tour didn’t exactly lift up anybody’s spirits. The most surprising element was the way the party neglected its long-time stronghold, Bellary. Ever since the BJP took it over, the Congress party seems to have resigned to fate.
Janata Dal (Secular)
Also known as the Family Party. Everybody in the party is effectively Master Deve Gowda’s voice. See this post for a fuller explanation. Gowda’s desertion of the BJP may not be his nemesis this time but it has done undoable damage to the “party.” However, as one of the remaining leaders who can mobilise the masses, JD(S) will fare pretty decent but nobody will be surprised if it is washed out. Enough said.
BJP
The tide seems to have turned in its favour largely due to sympathy, which Deve Gowda gifted it. However, elections are not won on sympathy alone. A huge plus to BJP is its near-total consolidation of votes in North Karnataka, most of South Canara, and parts of North Canara. In addition, the crossing over of several disgruntled JD(S) Vokkaliga leaders may well add some strength to the party in the Old Mysore region (that includes Bangalore, Mysore, and surrounding areas). This region has dominated Karnataka politics for decades, and the BJP has been unable to make a significant dent here. The BJP also has near-total support of the Lingayats (equal in strength and power as the Vokkaligas), something that the Congress and JD(S) have steadily lost.
The BJP however, has absolutely no visible Dalit or “minority” faces that it can use to attract votes. Like the Congress, it is stricken with infighting. Its biggest drawback is the absolute lack of a strong leader. Of the worst, Yediyurappa–its projected Chief Ministerial candidate–looks reasonably okay but that is purely as an afterthought. One reason for this may lie in history. All of its firebrand leaders have hailed from the North. The BJP’s rise here–in recent times–has been the result of disgruntled migration from other parties. To be fair to it, it has steadily built its base in North and Coastal Karnataka but that isn’t the work of a few charismatic/firebrand leaders.
BSP
The fact that it is being mentioned as a contender is in its favour. During the 2004 polls, the BSP had made minor dents into the Congress backward castes/tribes/Dalit votebank in several areas in North Karnataka and a few places down South. Unless the Congress party has a really strong strategy to retain this vote bank, it is certain to go the Lingayat way: absolute alienation and eventual mass-migration to the BSP.
The Roundup
Irrespective of who wins, the biggest problem is leadership or at the very least, governance. Apart from a wafer-thin minority, there’s nary a politician who can reasonably articulate on policy. To be fair, Yediyurappa hasn’t had a chance so let the devil get its due.
Also, cutting across party lines, everybody’s success mantra seems to be rice at 2 Rupees a Kg, loan waivers amounting to stupendous sums, free power, and similarly-dangerous sops. Bangalore’s infrastructure is an also-ran item on the agenda. Briefly, this seems to be their idea of development.
But the most surprising (or is it?) element is the “mood on the ground,” (a detestable phrase borrowed from the media). Having followed Kannada news channels and papers, folks here seem to want to give the “BJP a chance.” And it might well be the BJP’s last chance here.
And that “mood” kind of explains a lot.
5 Comments
Sandeep,
A fair number of BJP-Karnataka members are long time members. Darn, Yediyurappa went to jail during the Emergency, and Ananth has been with the party all his life, and so is Sadananda Gowda isn’t he? What is surprising is despite the strong support the BJP enjoys on the coast, it has no state level leader from the Bunt and Konkani communities. But the BJP must beware. No leader can be taken for granted if they haven’t risen thru the ranks. See what happened in the case of Manohar Parikar’s sishya Digambar Kamath who defected to the Congress, taking advantage of the anti-Marathi mood in hte Goa unit of the party. The BJP’s problem seems to be a problem of plenty - plenty of dedicated party workers from every community, but just a few leaders who are almost power hungry. Notably Ananth Kumar has been a great disappointment. He has been an incompetent minister and middling good legislator and gets re-elected only due to his hardworking wife. Maybe Karnataka is behind Gujarat and Rajasthan on the curve thpough ahead of MP. But if the party is not careful it may see Karnataka go the way of UP, which is now all but lost to the BJP.
Yediyurappa doesnt inspire much confidence if you hear him speak. I have seen him appear on TV discussions and he sounds like a joker! The other day, he was actually reading out from written notes to some queries put forth by, of all people, Prannoy Roy, who didnt miss the chance to take potshots at him!
I wonder if this impression is only because he is not comfortable with the English language or he does that in Kannada too!
Sandeep,
Yadiyurrappa may not be a great leader, but consider leaders we got in the state today, he is far more better man to be given a chance. I guess now a days he is gaining a FAME, remember he challenged Bangarappa to opt for one place when Banarappa had stood in Soraba also.
You know, at least we don’t want see development like Gulbarga (Place of Karge and Dharma Sighing) in state…
why cant the kannadigas muster courage to fight the reddy mafia in bellary.why is yeddi falling at the feet of BJP honchos?it is nauseating.Advani and rajnath have a smirk on their faces.What does the future hold?
Any views,sandeep.The BJP needs to enhance its support among madhva swamis,konkanis and in hyd. karnataka.
The BJP can enhance its presence in hosur and ooty.There is a substantial kannada/baduga population there.
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[...] Well GVL Narasimha Rao has stuck his neck out and spoken and so has fellow blogger Sandeep, so where is the CNN-IBN’s Yogendra Yadav - Will he rise to the challenge and defend his prognositcation against global benchmarks or concede and quit ? [...]
[...] In an earlier post, I had noted that Deve Gowda & co has virtually gifted this election to the BJP. Within four years, the JD(S), riding purely on blackmail and extreme haughtiness has reduced itself to a nonentity. It is a failed business enterprise. As a certain Milind, a party spokesperson noted, the political suicide of the JD(S) was scripted by (Deve Gowda-blessed) the mass exodus of senior leaders. He understandably omitted mentioning the worst sort of rug-pulling his CEO indulged in. [...]