What is Behind the Disappearance of Modi’s ‘400 paar’ Slogan?

It’s the ground reality after hitting the campaign trail. But there is more to it than that. The BJP’s defensiveness springs from OBC/Dalit pushback on its leaders saying continuously that they want to change the constitution – read as finish reservations.

New Delhi: Defence minister Rajnath Singh has again been forced to say the BJP will not change the basic structure of the Indian constitution nor finish reservations should it return to power.

Rajnath Singh, senior cabinet colleague of Narendra Modi, has again been cornered on reservations, telling The Hindu in an interview on Thursday (April 25) that “There is no question of ending reservations. I firmly believe that we need reservations. I also firmly hold that we will never feel the need to change the basic structure of the constitution.”

On April 23, Amit Shah was forced to go out of his way while campaigning in Maharashtra’s Akola and say, “SC/ST, OBC reservation will not be scrapped with [the] BJP in power”.

Why is ‘BJP will scrap reservations’ gaining traction?

There are good reasons why the belief that the BJP intends to change the constitution has caught on and is threatening to snowball.

There are even better reasons why they need to worry, as with a pure upper caste vote, there is no Modi government.

The success of the BJP is a product of the increasing hold, since 2009, on the OBC vote.

CSDS figures speak of how the BJP has been successful in securing a very significant section of the OBC vote. From 17% of the OBC vote in 2009, it has managed to go up to securing nearly 47% of the OBC vote share in 2019.

But this share is set to be drastically reduced if the BJP is suspected of wanting to scrap reservations if it returns to power.

But BJP leaders say, 400 = ‘change constitution’

The BJP’s own leaders, across the length and breadth of the country, have spoken of calling for 400 seats as they want to change the constitution.

Now, all talk of “400 paar” (‘beyond 400’) has gone missing as concerns have snowballed amongst the BJP’s potential Dalit, tribal and OBC supporters that a larger majority to the BJP would mean that reservations would be nixed.

• The ball was set rolling by none other than a key Modi appointee: the chairman of the PM’s Economic Advisory Council, Bibek Debroy, in his newspaper article on August 14, 2023 titled, ‘There’s a case for ‘we the people’ to embrace a new constitution, leaving no room for ambiguity.

He went as far as to say, “amendments won’t do”. The PM’s Economic Advisory Council tried to backtrack, saying it was his “personal opinion” in a public post, as did Debroy, but the seed took root.

That it was coming directly and explicitly from someone who was Modi’s handpicked choice made it tough for the party to shake it off.

• On March 11, 2024, a BJP MP from Karnataka, Anantkumar Hegde, declared a “400-seat target to amend the constitution”. Hegde is seen as rabid, close to the Sangh.

That confirmed how it was not just some technocrat like Debroy but a Sangh man speaking. Hegde did not get nominated to contest the Lok Sabha polls, but the video of him clearly saying this continues to circulate.

• Weeks after that, on April 2, 2024, Jyoti Mirdha, a recent defector from the Congress, piped up at a public meeting. She implied that her party would need a large majority to make changes to the constitution. Mirdha was targeted sharply by the Congress, and then quietened.

• It was the turn of another seasoned UP MP, twice MP from Faizabad and longterm MLA from Ayodhya, Lallu Singh, to speak and say that a two-thirds majority was needed to change or make a new constitution.

Lallu Singh made the remarks at a public meeting at Milkipur assembly constituency. News reports pointed out how he was the third leader to make such statements in the last two months.

• Arun Govil, the BJP’s candidate from Meerut, then chimed in on April 15, being heard in a clip that went viral, asserting that there have been changes in the constitution over time and that there was “no harm in it.”

Govil was responding to allegations that the BJP would change the constitution if it returned to power in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections. 

“The constitution has witnessed changes over a period of time. Change is a sign of development. It’s not a bad thing. Situations were different at that time; the current situation is different, so if changes are to be made … the constitution doesn’t change with one person’s intention. It can be changed with everybody’s consensus,” he said.

The belief that the BJP, a party with disciplined MPs and leaders, a coherent ideological line and its leaders in diverse parts of the country would not say this unless it was a firm decision taken centrally, has only gained in strength over the past few months and weeks.

Historically, RSS/BJP opposed the constitution

Added to this is the background score of the RSS/BJP’s track record on the constitution (read as shorthand for finishing reservations).

Four months after the RSS mouthpiece Organiser began publication in July 1949, the publication came down heavily on the constitution days after its adoption on November 26, 1949.

In its issue dated November 30 that year, the periodical left no ambiguity and stated:

“The worst about the new Constitution of Bharat is that there is nothing Bharatiya about it. The drafters of the constitution have incorporated in it elements of British, American, Canadian, Swiss and sundry other Constitutions. But there is no trace of ancient Bharatiya constitutional laws, institutions, nomenclature and phraseology in it…

In our Constitution, there is no mention of the unique constitutional development in ancient Bharat. Manu’s Laws were written long before Lycurgus of Sparta or Solon of Persia. To this day, his laws as enunciated in the Manusmriti, excite the admiration of the world and elicit spontaneous obedience and conformity. But to our constitutional pundits that means nothing.”

The Manusmriti “has been a go-to treatise for a large number of Hindutva votaries”, wrote journalist and author Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay. V.D. Savarkar made the following assertion about it:

“Manusmriti is that scripture which is most worshipable after Vedas for our Hindu Nation and which from ancient times has become the basis of our culture-customs, thought and practice. This book for centuries has codified the spiritual and divine march of our nation. 

Even today the rules which are followed by crores of Hindus in their lives and practice are based on Manusmriti. Today Manusmriti is Hindu Law.”

The primacy to the Manusmriti over the Indian constitution is the long-held belief of the Sangh and makes OBCs, Dalits and tribals anxious about the intentions of the BJP should it manage to scramble back to power.

RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat was cited in an interview in RSS mouthpiece Panchjanya in 2015 as saying that reservations ought to be revisited (code for making fundamental changes in the constitution).

Analysts attribute the BJP’s rout to the Mahagathbandhan in the Bihar state assembly polls that followed later that year to that statement.

Hate Speech FIR Against Karnataka BJP MP Over ‘Mosque Will Be Destroyed’ Comment

‘Like Babri Masjid was demolished, Chinnada Palli mosque will be demolished in Bhatkal,’ the MP had said.

New Delhi: Police in Karnataka have filed a suo motu case against Bharatiya Janata Party Lok Sabha MP Anantkumar Hegde in the wake of him saying that a mosque in Bhatkal will be destroyed like the Babri Masjid in Uttar Pradesh was in 1992.

“Like Babri Masjid was demolished, Chinnada Palli mosque will be demolished in Bhatkal. The media can write it as a threat, but we don’t care. But, we will do it. This is not the decision of Anantkumar Hegde, but it is the decision of the Hindu community,” the MP said, according to Hindustan Times. 

As reported by The Wire, Hegde had also said that “the Hindu community won’t rest until more mosques are reclaimed”.

His comment was made on the lines of Babri Masjid demolition in Ayodhya and the same location where the ruling BJP party is holding the consecration ceremony of the under-construction Ram temple.

Kumata Police have filed a case invoking sections related to hate speech and an attempt to create unrest in the district against Hegde.

Karwar SP Vishnuvarshan said that investigations are on.

Reports have noted how Hegde has begun to say controversial things in public speeches and attempted to link it with his hopes for a ticket in the upcoming Lok Sabha election.

Congress leaders, including chief minister Siddaramaiah and culture minister Shivaraj Tangadagi, have criticised Hegde over his speech. The latter called him a “dog,” the Hindu reported.

Controversial BJP MP Says ‘Hindus Won’t Rest Till More Mosques Reclaimed’

Anantkumar Hedge is not new to controversy. Earlier, he had claimed that he would change the country’s constitution.

New Delhi: Karnataka’s controversial leader BJP leader Anantkumar Hegde, known for his communal remarks, once again raked controversy with his statements on mosques.

Hegde, who is a member of parliament from the Uttara Karnataka constituency, said that “the Hindu community won’t rest until more mosques are reclaimed”. His comment was made on the lines of Babri Masjid demolition in Ayodhya and the same location where the ruling BJP party is holding the consecration ceremony of the under-construction Ram temple.

Hedge is not new to controversy. Earlier, he had claimed that he would change the country’s constitution.

The recent communal statement was made by Hegde while criticising the Congress party leaders for being “anti-Hindu”. The Congress has decided to skip the January 22 ceremony at Ayodhya.

Lashing out at Hegde, the Karnataka chief minister Siddaramaiah said “It (statement) reflects Hegde’s culture.” Siddaramaiah, who was speaking Bagalkot said that nothing better could be expected from a person like Ananth Kumar Hegde. “He was the one who said he would change the Constitution when he was a Minister,” Siddaramaiah reminded.

According to the Hindu’s report, Hegde, who maintained a low profile in the recent few years, is back to making controversial statements as the general elections are nearing and it is speculated that the party could consider another candidate for the Lok Sabha seat.

Facebook Row: BJP MP Nishikant Dubey Asks LS Speaker to Replace Tharoor as Head of IT Panel

Dubey and Tharoor filed breach of privilege notices against each other on Wednesday after a spat on social media over summoning Facebook India executives.

New Delhi: Stepping up his attack against parliamentary panel on information technology chairman Shashi Tharoor, BJP MP and a member of the panel Nishikant Dubey on Thursday wrote a letter to the Lok Sabha Speaker requesting him to remove the Congress leader from the post.

Citing the Lok Sabha rules, Dubey requested Speaker Om Birla to appoint any other member as the chairman of the committee in his place.

Taking a dig at Tharoor, Dubey alleged,”speaking in ‘Spencerian’ English with a foreign accent does not give freedom to an individual to not only disregard our glorious parliamentary institutions/organs to meet his own political ambitions but also to abuse our constitution.”

Also read: Shashi Tharoor Gives Breach of Privilege Notice Against BJP MP for ‘Disparaging Remarks’

Ever since Tharoor has become the panel head, “he is running the affairs of the committee in a thoroughly unprofessional manner and to serve his political agenda of spreading rumours and defaming my party,” Dubey said in the letter.

“..it would be highly improper for Dr. Shashi Tharoor to continue and regulate the proceedings of the committee. I, therefore, appeal to your good self to persuade Dr. Tharoor to proceed on leave and thereafter,… choose another member of the Committee to act as Chairperson,” Dubey said in the letter.

Dubey and Tharoor have filed breach of privilege notices against each other on Wednesday after a spat on social media over the Congress leader’s remarks on summoning the Facebook India executives over reports that the social media giant went soft on some BJP leaders who had made hate speeches ahead of the general elections last year.

While Dubey said Tharoor was treating the committee as an extension of Congress party, the Congress leader had alleged that the BJP MP made “disparaging remarks” on social media over his decision to summon a panel meeting to discuss the alleged “misconduct” of Facebook.

Shashi Tharoor Gives Breach of Privilege Notice Against BJP MP for ‘Disparaging Remarks’

A Twitter duel erupted between BJP MP Nishikant Dubey and Tharoor over the prospect of a parliamentary panel seeking to hear from Facebook about allegations that it went easy on hate speech in India.

New Delhi: Congress MP Shashi Tharoor, who heads the parliamentary panel on information technology, has given a notice for breach of privilege against BJP MP Nishikant Dubey, alleging that he made “disparaging remarks” on social media over his decision to summon a panel meeting to discuss alleged “misconduct” of Facebook.

In his letter to Lok Sabha speaker Om Birla, Tharoor took strong objection to Dubey’s remarks on Twitter that “the Chairman of Standing Committee does not have the authority to do anything without discussion of the agenda with its members”.

Tharoor said Dubey accused him of championing his political party’s “agenda without authorisation by the Committee and Speaker”.

Dubey’s remarks came after Tharoor had said on Sunday that the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Information Technology would like to hear from Facebook about a media report on its conduct and what it proposes to do about hate-speech in India.

Anguished over “disparaging” remarks made by Dubey against his decision to call a meeting of the panel, Tharoor said it amounted to breach of privilege of his position as a member of parliament and the chairman of the standing committee.

“The matter pertains to the disparaging remarks made by Dubey on a social media platform regarding my decision to summon a Committee meeting to discuss the alleged misconduct of Facebook and seek clarity on the measures that it intends to undertake to curb the spread of hate speech and fake news,” Tharoor said.

Also read: Afraid of Angering BJP, Facebook Ignored Hate Speech Rules for Party’s Anti-Muslim Posts: Report

“Nishikant Dubey’s derogatory remarks have not only brought disrepute to my position as a Member of Parliament and Chairman but also to an institution that mirrors the will of the people of our country,” Tharoor alleged in the letter, a copy of which was also marked to Sunil Kumar Singh, chairman of Parliamentary Standing Committee on Privileges, Lok Sabha.

Tharoor urged Birla to issue necessary directions to initiate proceedings against Dubey for “committing a breach of privilege on multiple accounts and contempt of the House”.

“I sincerely hope that stringent action is taken in this matter so that it serves as a deterrent to the occurrence of similar incidents in future and restores public trust in Parliament,” the MP from Thiruvananthapuram said in the letter dated August 18.

Meanwhile, tagging a tweet on a media report about the rules and functioning of committees, Dubey on Wednesday tweeted, “In the last 11 years as an MP, I have neither violated any rules nor would I let anyone violate or abuse their power for their parties personal vendetta with agenda.”

Referring to the recently published news report in the Wall Street Journal, which claimed that Facebook refused to apply hate speech rules to certain ruling party politicians, Tharoor, in the letter, underlined the serious nature of allegations made against the social media platform and its far-reaching implications on the citizens’ right to information.

Also read: Congress Writes To Zuckerberg Over Facebook’s Alleged Bias, Demands Probe

Tharoor said he sought to convene the Committee meeting as part of the normal course of discussions on “safeguarding citizens’ rights and prevention of misuse of social/online news media platforms”.

The topic or agenda of the meeting “not only features on the list of subjects earmarked at the beginning of the year for the Committee’s deliberations but also was finalised by the members of the Committee at our first meeting, and bulletinised with your consent,” the Congress leader said.

Despite this, Tharoor alleged Dubey “insultingly criticised” his decision to do so.

Tharoor alleged that Dubey’s remarks amounted to a three-fold breach of privilege.

“The contemptuous words used by … Dubey have cast aspersions on the intent and integrity with which I fulfil my duties as an elected representative…,” he said.

Such words constitute unwarranted vilification of the Committee’s name and the manner in which it discharges its functions, Tharoor alleged.

“His actions have painted an ignominious picture of the revered institution of Parliament by indicating that its functionaries have circumvented the process that they are expected to follow,” he said.

Citing rules and procedures of Parliament, Tharoor reiterated that the subject of the meeting had been unanimously approved by the committee members, speaker’s and Lok Sabha secretary general’s offices and thereafter it was placed in the public domain through publication in the bulletin.

“Therefore, to claim that the chairman has acted in excess of his authority to convene a meeting on a pre-approved agenda, and has proceeded without seeking the necessary approvals, is tantamount to contempt of the due procedure followed by the House,” Tharoor said.

A Twitter duel had erupted between Dubey and opposition MPs Tharoor and Mahua Moitra over the prospect of the panel seeking views of Facebook on the WSJ report.

In the report published on Friday, US newspaper the Wall Street Journal cited interviews with unnamed Facebook insiders to claim that one of its senior India policy executives intervened in internal communication to stop a permanent ban on a BJP MLA from Telangana after he allegedly made communally charged posts.

Reacting to the controversy, Facebook on Monday said the company’s social media platform prohibits hate speech and content that incites violence, adding these policies are enforced globally without regard to political affiliation.

“While we know there is more to do, we’re making progress on enforcement and conduct regular audits of our process to ensure fairness and accuracy,” a Facebook spokesperson said.

Afraid of Angering BJP, Facebook Ignored Hate Speech Rules for Party’s Anti-Muslim Posts: Report

A report in the Wall Street Journal, quoting unnamed current and former FB officials, alleges a top Facebook India official opposed taking down hate speech posts by a BJP MLA over worries it would damage the company’s business prospects in India.

New Delhi: A top Facebook official in India was opposed to applying the social media platform’s hate speech rules to at least one Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) politician and other “Hindu nationalist individuals and groups”, according to a new report published by The Wall Street Journal.

This was despite the fact that the content posted by these individuals or groups had been “flagged internally for promoting violence”.

The Wall Street Journal report says that Ankhi Das, who is Facebook’s top public policy executive in India, opposed applying hate speech rules to the BJP’s T. Raja Singh out of fear of ruining the company’s relationship with the ruling party.

Singh is the saffron party’s lone MLA in the Telangana assembly and is notorious for making communally provocative statements.

“Ms. Das, whose job also includes lobbying India’s government on Facebook’s behalf, told staff members that punishing violations by politicians from Mr. Modi’s party would damage the company’s business prospects in the country…,” the report said, quoting unnamed current and former company officials.

Also read: Facebook’s Uneven Enforcement of Hate Speech Rules in India Highlighted in New Study

“The current and former Facebook employees said Ms. Das’s intervention on behalf of Mr. Singh is part of a broader pattern of favoritism by Facebook toward Mr. Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party and Hindu hard-liners,” it added.

Not sole factor, says Facebook spokesperson

A company spokesperson told The Wall Street Journal that while Das had raised concerns about the political fallout that would result from designating Singh a “dangerous individual”, her opposition was not the sole factor that determined whether the BJP politician should remain on the platform.

The spokesperson added that Facebook is still considering whether it will ban Singh.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Das’s team also took “no action” after BJP politicians posted content accusing Muslims of intentionally spreading the coronavirus, plotting against the nation and making a noise about “love jihad” – the term the Sangh parivar uses to describe a mythical  conspiracy by Muslims men seeking to seduce and marry Hindu women in order to convert them to Islam.

Election help?

In addition to this, unnamed former employees quoted by the US newspaper claim that Das had also provided the BJP with “favourable treatment on election-related issues”.

Also read: Delhi Police Mum as Facebook’s Zuckerberg Says Kapil Mishra Speech ‘Encouraged Violence’

“In April of last year, days before voting began in India’s general election, Facebook announced it had taken down inauthentic pages tied to Pakistan’s military and the Congress party, the BJP’s main rival party. But it didn’t disclose it also removed pages with false news tied to the BJP, because Ms. Das intervened,” the report said, quoting unnamed former Facebook employees.

According to the media report, several posts by Singh and BJP MP Anantkumar Hegde, which were filled with anti-Muslim rhetoric, were not deleted by Facebook until it was brought to their attention by Wall Street Journal reporters.

“Facebook deleted some of Mr. Singh’s postings after the Journal asked about them. It said Mr. Singh no longer is permitted to have an official, verified account, designated with a blue check mark badge,” the report notes.

Also Read: The Past and Future of Facebook and BJP’s Mutually Beneficial Relationship

“While Twitter has suspended Mr. Hegde’s account as a result of such [anti-Muslim] posts, prompting him to call for an investigation of the company, Facebook took no action until the Journal sought comment from the company about his “Corona Jihad” posts. Facebook removed some of them on Thursday. Mr. Hegde didn’t respond to a request for comment.”

With regard to the WSJ story, a Facebook spokesperson noted that the company enforces its policy “without regard to anyone’s political position”.  “We prohibit hate speech and content that incites violence and we enforce these policies globally without regard to anyone’s political position or party affiliation. While we know there is more to do, we’re making progress on enforcement and conduct regular audits of our process to ensure fairness and accuracy,” the spokesperson said.

The Wire has sought a response to the WSJ story from Ankhi Das and will update this report when it is received.

‘Adjustment with British’: Repeat Offender Hegde Lampoons Gandhi’s Freedom Movement

Hegde likened the freedom effort to a 20-20 cricket match.

New Delhi: Questioning the freedom movement led by Mahatma Gandhi, former Union minister and current Lok Sabha MP Anant Kumar Hegde has reportedly referred to it as a ”staged drama” born out of an “adjustment” with the British.

Reports have said that the BJP brass is already miffed with Hegde, who has in the past said lines which have landed the party in trouble. The party has allegedly asked for an apology from Hegde.

“There were two types of freedom fighters, one who believed in shastra (arms) and another in shaastra (intellectual motivators). There was also another category of freedom fighters who used to ask the British how to carry out the freedom struggle,” Hegde was heard saying in a video which has gone viral.

“We will abide by whatever you say…simply adjustment and understanding…. like 20-20 [cricket match],” the Uttara Kannada MP said about this alleged faction of the freedom movement.

Hegde alleged that the third category of freedom fighters had pleaded with the British to recognise their freedom struggle and requested that they be imprisoned.

“They (pleaded with the British) – it’s enough if you properly take care of us, nothing more than that.”

“None of these so-called leaders were beaten up by the cops even once. Their independence movement was one big drama. It was staged by these leaders with the approval of the British. It was not a genuine fight. It was an adjustment freedom struggle,” NDTV quoted Hegde as having said.

Also read: Union Minister Hegde Puts Foot in Mouth (Again), Likens Dalits to Dogs

He then made an indirect reference to Gandhi.

“People supporting Congress keep saying that India got independence because of the fast unto death and satyagraha. This is not true. The British did not leave the country because of satyagraha. Britishers gave independence out of frustration. My blood boils when I read history. Such people become Mahatma in our country.”

“Those who sacrificed their lives and worked towards big change in the country were dumped in the dark corners of history, but those who fought in adjustment with the British became freedom fighters with certificate…This is the tragedy of the country,” Hegde also said.

Before the Lok Sabha election of 2019, Hegde ran into controversy by referring to then Congress president Rahul Gandhi as a “hybrid born to a Muslim and a Christian.”

In 2018, Hegde likened Dalit protesters to dogs in Karnataka’s Ballari. In 2017, he asked people to identify themselves by their caste or religion, instead of saying that they are secular.

(With PTI inputs)

Jignesh Mevani Slams Anantkumar Hegde for Dalit Comment, Urges Modi to Take Action

“This (Hegde’s comments) shows the brahmanical and evil mindset of the Sangh parivar and its functionaries from top to bottom, which has no place for Dalits.”

“This (Hegde’s comments) shows the brahmanical and evil mindset of the Sangh parivar and its functionaries from top to bottom, which has no place for Dalits.”


New Delhi:
Newly-elected MLA and Dalit leader Jignesh Mevani on Monday urged Prime Minister Narendra Modi to drop Anantkumar Hegde from his cabinet for his comment likening Dalit protestors to dogs.

The minister was on his way to a job fair in Ballari, Karnataka on Saturday when a group of Dalit protestors blocked his convoy and raised slogans protesting his comments about secularism and changing the constitution. They also accused him of being anti-Dalit. Later at the fair, while mentioning the protests, Hegde said, “We are stubborn people. When dogs bark on the road, we don’t care.”

Hegde is minister of state for skill development and entrepreneurship in the Modi government at the Centre.

“This (Hegde’s comments) shows the brahmanical and evil mindset of the Sangh parivar and its functionaries from top to bottom, which has no place for Dalits,” said Mevani. He also demanded that an FIR should be registered against the minister and he should be arrested as “this was an offence under Atrocities Act”.

After the programme on Saturday, Dalit protestors staged a demonstration and, waving black scarves, shouted slogans against Hegde. Some persons were taken into custody by the police when they tried to block the minister’s convoy, The Hindu reported.


Also read: Here’s a Look Back at the ‘Skills’ Modi’s New Skill Development Minister Brings


The minister later told news agency PTI that his remarks were misinterpreted. “I haven’t made any such remark against Dalits. The Congress is deliberately trying to damage my image by alluding the remark to Dalits,” said Hegde, claiming that his remark was actually made against the “so-called intellectuals” who were critical of his political stand on various issues.

Actor Prakash Raj, a household name in Karnataka and much of south India, and a vocal critic of Modi and the BJP’s policies, slammed the Union minister on Twitter.

He also demanded that senior BJP leaders ask Hedge to resign from his post.

Mevani alleged that it was Hegde who encouraged members of the Bharatiya Janata Party Yuva Morcha to sprinkle cow urine on the stage of a programme where the actor had spoken to ‘purify’ it a few days ago.

Union Minister Hegde Puts Foot in Mouth (Again), Likens Dalits to Dogs

“When dogs bark on the road, we don’t care.”

“When dogs bark on the road, we don’t care.”

Union minister Anantkumar Hegde

Union minister Anantkumar Hegde. Credit: Facebook

New Delhi: Union minister Ananthkumar Hegde, who made headlines in December last year for his comments about the constitution, has once again managed to put his foot in his mouth by reportedly comparing Dalit protestors with dogs.

The minister was on his way to a job fair in Ballari, Karnataka on Saturday when a group of Dalit protestors blocked his convoy and raised slogans protesting his comments about secularism and changing the constitution. They also accused him of being anti-Dalit. Later at the fair, while mentioning the protests, Hegde said, “We are stubborn people. When dogs bark on the road, we don’t care.”

Hegde is minister of state for skill development and entrepreneurship in the Narendra Modi government at the centre.

After the programme, the Dalit protestors staged a demonstration and, waving black scarves, shouted slogans against Hegde. Some persons were taken into custody by the police when they tried to block the minister’s convoy, The Hindu reported.

The minister later told news agency PTI that his remarks were misinterpreted. “I haven’t made any such remark against Dalits. The Congress is deliberately trying to damage my image by alluding the remark to Dalits,” said Hegde, claiming that his remark was actually made against the “so-called intellectuals” who were critical of his political stand on various issues.


Also Read: Here’s a Look Back at the ‘Skills’ Modi’s New Skill Development Minister Brings


Actor Prakash Raj, a household name in Karnataka and much of south India, and a vocal critic of Modi and the BJP’s policies, slammed the Union minister on Twitter.

He also demanded that senior BJP leaders ask Hedge to resign from his post.

A brief history of dogs and pups

Modi himself faced a lot of flak in 2013 for using a canine analogy while referring to the 2002 riot killings in Gujarat during his time as chief minister. When asked in an interview with Reuters whether he regretted the violence, he compared his feelings to the occupant of a car involved in an accident:

Narendra Modi

Credit: Reuters

“…someone else is driving a car and we’re sitting behind, even then if a puppy comes under the wheel, will it be painful or not? Of course it is. If I’m a chief minister or not, I’m a human being. If something bad happens anywhere, it is natural to be sad,” he said.

Like Hegde, Modi, too, later claimed that there had been a “gross distortion” of his remark.

In October 2015, General V.K. Singh (retd.), minister of state for overseas Indians, triggered a controversy by downplaying the killing of two Dalit children and dragging dogs in to make the point that the central government ought not not to be blamed:

“If somebody throws a stone at a dog, then the government is responsible. It is not like that,” he said.

Serial offender Hegde

Speaking at an event in December 2017, Ananthkumar Hegde kicked up a row when he said: “A few people say the constitution mentions the word secular, so you have to agree. Because it’s there in the constitution, we will respect it, but this will change in the near future. The constitution has changed many times before. We are here and have come to change the constitution. We will change it.”


Also Read: Keep Me Out of ‘Shameful’ Tipu Jayanti Event, Union Minister Hegde Tells Karnataka Government


He went on to add, “There is a new culture now of secularists. If someone says I am a Muslim, or I am a Christian, or I am a Lingayat, or I am a Hindu, I feel very happy because he knows his roots. But these people who call themselves secularists, I don’t know what to call them. They are like people without parentage or who don’t know their bloodline. They don’t know themselves. They don’t know their parents, but they call themselves secular. If someone says I am secular, I get suspicious. I hope there are no secularists here.”

Hegde, a five-time BJP MP, was also caught on CCTV assaulting doctors at a private hospital in his hometown of Sirsi. According to an Indian Express report, the police had to file a suo motu case after the doctors and the hospital authorities refused to report the incident.


Also Read: Opposition Slams Hegde’s Remark on BJP Changing Constitution, Says It Reflects RSS’s Age-Old Agenda


In a separate incident, Hegde, who has been a member the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and an activist of the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Moracha (ABVP), was also booked for hate speech for making derogatory remarks against Islam.

Hegde was quoted to have said “as long as there is Islam in this world, there will be terrorism” during a press conference.

His views on Ayodhya also fit the narrative the Sangh parivar and BJP have been promoting for years.

anantkumar hegde ayodhya

Screenshot courtesy: AltNews.in

An AltNews.in report plunged into Hedge’s Twitter history when he became minister and concluded: “It is shocking that a person with so much apparent hate for various religions has been chosen to be a minister in a multi-cultural country like ours.”

‘Your Knowledge of History Is Highly Polluted’: A Response to Anantkumar Hegde

“If the task of drafting the constitution had fallen into the hands of the likes of you and your ancestors, the illusionists, then you would have created hell and called it heaven.”

“If the task of drafting the constitution had fallen into the hands of the likes of you and your ancestors, the illusionists, then you would have created hell and called it heaven.”

Anantkumar Hegde. Credit: Facebook/Anantkumar Hegde

Anantkumar Hegde. Credit: Facebook/Anantkumar Hegde

Union minister Mr Anantkumar Hegde ji, it is frightening to have to listen to the words you have spoken at Kuknoor in Yelburga taluk. “Those who are unaware of their parentage are the ones who call themselves secularists,” you say deridingly. Now we have to make you aware of your own parentage. It is hatred that is your father, intolerance your mother, illusion your ancestry, falsehood (mithya) the source of your knowledge. I think this should be enough.

What hurts me even now, whenever I remember it, is Atal Bihari Vajpayee, BJP’s leader, being in an insensate state. Similarly, George Fernandes, a part of the NDA and who comes from a socialist background, is also in an insensate state.  It then seems that precisely because leaders like these are not active in your party that the present BJP and the NDA end up making such senseless and irresponsible statements.

And then another statement of yours, “Every human being is an animal when he is born but it is what he does that makes him a human being.” In your case, I somehow feel it is quite the opposite. Even amidst the din you make, I would request you to pay attention to Kuvempu’s concept of “Being the universal human at birth itself”.

Furthermore, your knowledge of history is highly polluted. You say that the deformity called caste has grown in recent times. I have noted that you said “…in recent times”. In that case, which era’s caste would you want? That of the Peshwas? At the time of the sepoy uprising, if the British were to lose their war against the Peshwas, then Peshwa rule would end up creating hell for marginalised communities. This is what the highly enlightened members from these marginalised communities felt, including Jyotiba Phule. What was the reason? Why did they feel so? If you understand this, you will understand India.

Then, like a battle cry on the warfront, you said, “We will change the constitution…that is why we are here!” If the task of drafting the constitution had fallen into the hands of the likes of you and your ancestors, the illusionists, then you would have created hell and called it heaven. Mother India survived precisely because Dr Ambedkar drafted the constitution. Care should be taken to ensure that constitutional amendments move follow the principles of the constitution’s preamble. It would bode well for you to remember this, especially as a member of parliament.

Recently, there are some rumours that have been circulating widely. If the BJP comes to power in Karnataka, then the vibhuti-across-his-forehead-Yeddyurappa will start sporting the Vaishnavite tilak (urdhva pundra), together with a shell and gong placed in his hands. The rumours also say Anantkumar Hedge himself will become the chief minister. Going by BJP’s Delhi-Nagpur lagaami politics, the rumours seem to hold some truth. And if this were to happen, there is widespread dread that you will turn Karnataka into a graveyard. In that scenario, even Yeddyurappa might seem like a better option. Instead, the wise voter may decide that since such a bleak scenario faces Karnataka, with either of them at the helm, they should make sure that the BJP loses the election. I believe that will happen, because our mythology and history have consistently shown that we do not tolerate certain limits being crossed.

Now, a few words for you. The religious fundamentalists who were rattled by Kuvempu’s rationality kept responding abhorrently to him. Kuvempu, unperturbed by all this, said, “Those who enter the wrestling ring ought to wear a loincloth. I will not battle with those who don’t even wear one.” I would ask you to keep these words in your mind. Maybe then you, and the likes of you, who make the streets your battlefield, could save yourselves some humiliation.

Once, Yogendra Yadav (Swaraj India’s president) and I were discussing the word secularism. “There is no proper translation in India’s vernacular languages for the word secularism. Instead of translating, we need to search for a word from amongst us that is its equivalent. In India, dharma is usually understood to mean ‘duty’, and words such as vrittidharma (duties towards one’s profession), rajadharma (duties of the king), putradharma (duties of the son) are born from that very meaning. Can you find a word for secularism?” he had asked. Just like the way plants absorb muck, producing fruits and flowers, the muck of your speech has transformed itself, birthing a new word for secularism. That word is sahanadharma (religion of tolerance). This sahanadharma ought to exist within religion, as well as between different religions. Since I came upon this word because of you, Mr Hegde sahib, I thank you.

Translated from Kannada by Rashmi Munikempanna.

Devanoora Mahadeva, acclaimed Kannada writer, Dalit activist and Swaraj India leader, is the author of Kusumabale, which won the 1990 Sahitya Akademi award. He was also conferred the Padma Shri in 2011, both of which he returned, in 2015, to mark his stand against growing intolerance in the country.

This article was originally published by Indian Cultural Forum.