How an Adivasi Party is Changing Political Equations in Southern Rajasthan’s Tribal Districts

The Bharat Adivasi Party has increased its clout in the region, banking on issues such as increased reservation for the tribal population and a separate state for the tribal Bhil community.

Jaipur: Earlier this month, the BJP announced 15 candidates for the upcoming Lok Sabha elections in Rajasthan, a state where the saffron party and its allies have bagged all 25 parliamentary seats in the last two general elections.

Among the candidates named by the BJP is veteran tribal politician Mahendrajeet Singh Malviya, who last month had switched from the Congress to the BJP and has now been named as the party’s candidate from the Banswara Lok Sabha constituency.

At present, the Banswara parliamentary seat is represented by BJP MP Kanakmal Katara, who this time has been overlooked in the party’s candidate selection process.

A multiple-time MLA and former MP, Malviya was a minister in the Ashok Gehlot-led previous Congress government in the state.

Photo: Facebook/Mahendrajeet Singh Malviya.

Malviya, who had been associated with the Congress since the 1990s, won the Bagidora assembly constituency in Banswara district for four consecutive times starting from 2008.

Despite the Congress facing defeat in last year’s assembly elections in Rajasthan, Malviya had won the Bagidora seat by over 41,000 votes while contesting on a Congress ticket.

The BJP is hoping that by inducting Malviya, who holds substantial clout in the region, it will increase its chances of winning the Banswara Lok Sabha constituency for a third consecutive time.

After joining the BJP, Malviya resigned as an MLA, leaving the Bagidora seat vacant.

Malviya has previously been a Congress MP from Banswara back in 1998.

BJP’s poor performance in southern Rajasthan’s ST seats

So why did the BJP induct local strongman Malviya, a Congress politician, and field him from Banswara while denying a ticket to its incumbent MP Katara, whose work with the RSS-affiliated Vanvasi Kalyan Parishad spans decades in the region?

The answer can be gauged from the BJP’s recent performance in the tribal-dominated Dungarpur and Banswara districts, where all nine assembly constituencies are reserved for the Scheduled Tribe community.

While the BJP emerged as the clear victor in the Rajasthan assembly elections, winning 115 of the 200 assembly constituencies, it could win only two of the nine seats in Dungarpur and Banswara.

Of the remaining seven constituencies, the Bharat Adivasi Party (BAP) won three seats while the Congress was victorious in four constituencies.

Despite the BJP presently holding the Banswara Lok Sabha seat, comprising eight of the nine assembly segments under Dungarpur and Banswara districts, its poor performance reflects the increasing clout of the BAP, which has changed the political equations in southern Rajasthan.

Rise of the BAP

The BAP emerged as a dark horse in the 2023 assembly elections, winning three seats in the Dungarpur and Banswara districts – not an easy feat to pull off in a state where the politics largely revolves around the Congress and BJP, with little space for any third political force.

The BAP had emerged as a splinter group from the Gujarat-based Bharatiya Tribal Party (BTP), with most of the present BAP leaders being earlier associated with the BTP.

Back in 2018, the BTP had won two seats in the region. Subsequently, differences crept in between local tribal leaders in southern Rajasthan and the BTP leadership, which led to the BAP’s creation.

The BAP was created in the run-up to the 2023 assembly elections and enjoyed massive popular support in the tribal region. In its very first electoral foray, the BAP won three seats – Aaspur, Chorasi and Dhariyavad – emerging as a significant player in southern Rajasthan.

Also read: ‘Badlega Raj ya Rivaaj?’: Rajasthan Votes for Change as BJP Scores Decisive Victory

While it was victorious in three seats, BAP candidates finished second in four constituencies – Bagidora, Dungarpur, Sagwara and Ghatol –and third in another four seats – Banswara, Garhi, Kushalgarh and Pratapgarh – in the tribal districts of Dungarpur, Banswara and Pratapgarh.

The fact that in many of these seats, the BAP polled more votes than either the Congress or the BJP reflected the party’s growing support base in the area, banking on issues such as increased reservation for the tribal population and a separate state for the tribal Bhil community.

BAP leaders say that they are all set to contest the Lok Sabha elections

“We are planning to contest elections in around six-seven seats in Rajasthan, including Banswara, Udaipur, Chittorgarh [and] Tonk-Sawai Madhopur. The BJP has inducted Malviya after seeing the power of the BAP. We are confident of winning the Banswara seat from where the BJP is fielding Malviya, Mohanlal Roat, national president of the BAP, told The Wire.

He continued: “The Congress is slowly shrinking in the tribal districts and the BAP is emerging as the main threat to the BJP. Our cadre is 2 lakh strong and we have supporters in every village.”

Roat added that the BAP is at present deciding on alliances with other parties.

Congress’s dilemma and alliance talks with BTP

After losing Malviya – its tallest leader in southern Rajasthan – to the BJP, the Congress, which had fared well in the tribal districts of Banswara and Dungarpur in the 2023 assembly election which it otherwise lost, is presently in a dilemma and is rethinking its strategy in the region.

Congress leaders have been scathing in slamming Malviya for joining the BJP.

“He [Malviya] will not be accepted in the BJP. Our Congress workers had made him this big a leader, and he betrayed them. He was not the son of a king. He was the son of an Adivasi, who rose because of the Congress, became a minister and was given important departments,” Govind Singh Dotasra recently told reporters.

The Congress’s Rajasthan unit is in a dilemma after Malviya’s exit. File image. Photo: X/@INCRajasthan.

“The workers will ensure that he loses the Lok Sabha election. He was a leader because of Congress workers.”

Malviya’s departure has also made the Congress explore options of a possible alliance with the BAP in the region.

While state Congress president Dotasra maintained that any decision on allying with other parties would be taken by the committee formed by the party’s high command to decide on alliances, sources in the Rajasthan Congress confirmed that alliance talks are presently ongoing with the BAP.

While Congress leaders may be tight-lipped about any possible alliance with the BAP, sources said that sections within the grand old party are seriously considering a possible alliance with the BAP, as the Congress doesn’t want to lose out in a three-way contest involving itself, the BJP and the BAP in a region where the Congress had fared well in the assembly elections.

BJP leaders said that the party is confident of winning the Banswara seat once again with the help of a popular tribal leader like Malviya.

“Mahendrajeet Malviya was an MLA for four consecutive times. He has been an MP before and members of his family have been the zila pramukh since the last 25 years. Congress had been losing elections but Malviya had been winning. Had the Congress been able to make someone win elections, it could have made Rahul Gandhi win from Amethi,” said Rajasthan BJP spokesperson Laxmikant Bhardwaj.

“Malviya is a leader with public support and instead of him being a leader because of the Congress, it was the Congress which was present in the area because of his influence,” Bhardwaj added.

“With Malviya quitting Congress, the party has been erased from the entire region. The BJP will benefit from Malviya joining the party and we are confident of winning the Banswara seat.”

While back in 2014, the BJP had won all 25 Lok Sabha seats in the state, in 2019, the party was victorious in 24 seats while the Rashtriya Loktantrik Party, which was then its ally and a part of the National Democratic Alliance, had won the Nagaur parliamentary seat.

Rajasthan: Congress and BJP Join Hands to Scuttle the Rise of Bharatiya Tribal Party

In a recent election to the post of the zila pramukh, the Congress thwarted the election of the BTP candidate and instead extended support to the BJP candidate.

Jaipur: The recent Panchayat and Zila Parishad polls in Rajasthan have laid bare the desperation with which the Congress and the BJP have tried to thwart tribal movement in the state.

The two national rival parties have extended support to each other to ensure that the Bharatiya Tribal Party’s (BTP) candidate is not elected as the zila pramukh (chairperson for this Zila Parishad) in Rajasthan’s tribal belt of Dungarpur.

In the elections to the 27-seat Dungarpur Zila Parishad held earlier this month, the BTP candidate Parwati Doda secured 13 votes, while the Congress and the BJP obtained six and eight votes respectively. Doda was short of just one vote from the halfway mark (14 in this case) needed to be elected as the zila pramukh.

The zila pramukh is chosen amongst the elected members of the Zila Parishad. Each elected member has to nominate a name and the candidate who secures the largest number of nominations becomes the zila pramukh.

When it came to the selection of the zila pramukh, the BTP expected the Congress party, whom it had supported during the Rajya Sabha polls and the political showdown between chief minister Ashok Gehlot and his former deputy chief minister Sachin Pilot this year, to extend support to it with just one vote to its candidate. However, the Congress, with its six votes, joined hands with the BJP and paved the way for BJP candidate Surya Ahari to be elected as the zila pramukh, with 14 nominations.

This incident has made clear that both the Congress and the BJP are wary of the BTP’s increasing popularity in Dungarpur.

The condition of both the national parties in this tribal area can be inferred from the fact that the BTP, which is still not a “recognised” party as per the standards set by the Election Commission of India, has compelled the two arch-rivals to come together to save face.

Also read: Ground Report: How the Bharatiya Tribal Party Is Making Its Mark in Rajasthan

The Congress and the BJP are also dreading the BTP’s aim to expand its support in the nearby tribal areas of Banswara, Pratapgarh and Udaipur.

In Southern Rajasthan, where the Bhil tribe holds a decisive vote share, the Bharatiya Tribal Party (BTP) led by the Bhils has been gaining prominence. In its maiden electoral contest in 2018, the party effortlessly won two of the four Scheduled Tribes (ST) reserved seats – Chorasi and Sagwara – in the tribal belt of Dungarpur, while the Congress and the BJP won the remaining seats. At the third seat in Dungarpur, namely Aspur, the difference between the votes secured by the BTP candidate Umesh and BJP’s winning candidate was merely 5,330.

In the 2013 assembly elections, the BJP had won all the four seats of Dungarpur and in the 2008 polls, the Congress had secured these four seats. This is the primary reason why the Congress and the BJP are not able to come to grips with the advances made by the party led by the Bhil tribe.

BTP has been striving to protect the interests and rights of the tribal population in Dungarpur. The mandate has gone down well with the tribal youth, who are further persuading elders to back the party.

The BTP is focused on delivering on its 17-point agenda dealing with various rights and interests of tribals that have been neglected by successive state governments led by the Congress and the BJP over decades.

“We are aiming to ensure the basic rights of the tribals which include access to drinking water, government jobs, right over forest land and implementation of Schedule five of the Constitution,” Kanti Bhai Roat, a BTP member in Dungarpur, told The Wire.

Chandulal Baranda from Dungarpur said that the tribals didn’t have access to drinking water until the BTP made its way into the state assembly.

“We could not carry out agricultural activities because the irrigation facility was given to only the rich, upper-caste farmers and to the city,” said Baranda.

In its election manifesto, the BTP promised that the Mahi-Galiakot and Kadana-Genji pipeline projects would be implemented to provide water from the Mahi and Kandana dams to the Galiakot and Genji villages of Dungarpur respectively.

Also read: Rajasthan: BJP Leads in Panchayat Samiti and Zila Parishad Elections

In September this year, the tribals in Dungarpur also staged protests demanding the recruitment of reserved category candidates to the 1,167 vacant unreserved positions for teachers from 2018, which is one of the 17 demands of the BTP listed in its manifesto.

Relations between the Congress and the BTP strained after a Congress MLA from Bagidora in Rajasthan’s Banswara Mahendra Jeet Malviya levelled serious allegations against the two BTP MLAs last month. He claimed that each of them took Rs 5 crore from the Congress to extend their support to the party for the Rajya Sabha polls and during the floor test necessitated due to the infighting between Gehlot and Pilot.

Already upset over such allegations, the outright denial of the post of the zila pramukh in Dungarpur has further infuriated BTP. It has now declared that it will withdraw its support for the Ashok Gehlot-led Congress government in Rajasthan.

“BTP always extended support to both the Congress and the BJP but they don’t reciprocate. We have been raising the issues that are central to the tribals which is why we are getting massive support,” BTP’s national president Maheshbhai Vasava told The Wire.

The Congress workers in Dungarpur say that the party’s move to support the BJP has severely damaged its reputation in the region.

“In the remote areas, it’s very crucial to maintain the trust of the public. Now, how do we assure the tribals that the Congress supports their interests?” a Congress party worker in Dungarpur said, on the condition of anonymity.

The Congress has not offered any explanation for supporting the BJP instead of BTP. However, the BTP has said that the Congress was hand in glove with the BJP. “The BJP-Congress ‘coalition’ was hidden for so many years. BTP may not have been able to make its Chairperson even after winning, but it has certainly exposed that the BJP and the Congress are the same,” BTP founder Chhotubhai Vasava tweeted on Friday.

BJP Gets a 25-0 Repeat of 2014 in Rajasthan

The vote margin has increased to 64,341 in Jodhpur, where chief minister Ashok Gehlot’s son Vaibhav Gehlot is trailing behind BJP’s Gajendra Singh Shekhawat.

Jaipur: The BJP is all set for a clean sweep in Rajasthan again with the party bagging six seats and leading in 18 others in the Lok Sabha election results declared Thursday, barely five months after it lost to the Congress in the assembly polls.

BJP candidates Bhagirath Chaudhary (Ajmer), Kailash Chaudhary (Barmer), Subhash Chandra Baheria (Bhilwara), Rajita Koli (Bharatpur), Devji Patel (Jalore) and Sukhbir Singh (Tonk-Sawaimadhpur) were declared elected.

Baheria won by a high vote margin of 6,12,000 votes.

NDA alliance partner Rashtriya Loktantrik Party candidate Hanuman Beniwal is leading on the Nagaur seat.

The BJP had bagged all 25 seats in the 2014 Lok Sabha election.

Vaibhav Gehlot faced defeat in his maiden election from the Jodhpur Lok Sabha seat which was won by the BJP’s Gajendra Singh Shekhawat for a second consecutive time.

Shekhawat won the seat with a high margin of 2,74,440 votes.

Union minister Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore is leading in Jaipur Rural constituency by 2.89 lakh votes.

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Over the years, Lok Sabha elections in Rajasthan have more or less been a two-party affair. Other than a seat or two, the BJP and the Congress scoop up the rest.

In the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, the BJP had won 25 seats in Rajasthan, repeating a 1984 verdict when the Congress party had won all 25 for the first time in the state.

Much of this success was attributed to the formidable Modi wave in 2014. However, the BJP lost ground in the assembly elections held in 2018 despite extensive campaigning by the prime minister.

While there was a marginal difference in the percentage of votes secured by the two parties in the assembly polls, Congress managed to win 27 more seats than the BJP with a lead of mere 0.23% of votes.

The contest this time is bound to be very close.

Relying on past victories, the BJP has fielded sitting MPs in 16 seats in Rajasthan. Tickets have also been allotted to candidates who didn’t quite share a cordial relationship with former chief minister Vasundhara Raje.

It is believed that the BJP has sidelined Raje especially because of her tussle with Amit Shah-Narendra Modi. This infighting is also likely to affect the party’s prospects in the state.

On the contrary, the Congress has fielded a mix of senior and new faces. Vaibhav Gehlot, the chief minister’s son, is fighting from the Jodhpur Lok Sabha seat against Union minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat. The Congress is also fielding Manvendra Singh, son of a senior BJP leader Jaswant Singh from Barmer. 

During the last assembly elections, the state witnessed the emergence of a third front. A predominantly tribal party called the Bharatiya Tribal Party won two out of the eight seats in the tribal belt of the state.

The Jat community, which had been longing for strong leadership, found solace in Rashtriya Lok Tantrik Party and influential Jat leader Hanuman Beniwal. The party won three seats.

Both parties are also contesting the general elections.

Under the rule of the previous BJP government, several incidents of cow-related violence where Muslims were targeted took place. However, the Congress, despite coming to power in the state, has yet to action and confront the BJP for the lapses that took place.

Even so, in December last year, the Ashok Gehlot-led Congress government took significant steps to build a positive image for the party. These include an extensive farm loan waiver and an increment in the unemployment allowance to the youth.

However, agrarian distress is still a major concern. Farmers, under the leadership of All India Kisan Sabha, has led many protests across the state. Due to drought-like conditions, crop loss has been inevitable.

With the compulsory premium deduction from the Kisan Credit Card-holding farmers under the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana and subsequent non-payment of the insurance claim, farmers in the state are largely unhappy with the scheme and have diligently resented it.

Farmers in the Shekhawati region have also raised the demand of implementation of Swaminathan report. As a result, the left managed to win two seats in agriculturally-dominant Hanumangarh and Jodhpur last year.

After the Balakot airstrikes, Modi’s ‘Vote for Pulwama martyrs’ appeal is likely to make an impact on the votes of the Rajput and Jat communities in Rajasthan that have traditionally served the armed forces. Pervasive unemployment has time and again created a negative opinion of the Modi government, but whether it would be able to deflect votes is a matter that remains to be seen.

Hundreds of Homes in Jaipur Slum Demolished to Make Way for Modi’s Rally

However, the police has refuted every claim of houses being destroyed in the Mansarovar area slums ahead of the rally.

Jaipur: Ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s rally in Jaipur on Wednesday, at least 300 homes in a slum bordering the rally venue in Jaipur’s Mansarovar area were razed to the ground by bulldozers.

On Sunday morning, the police reached a slum situated at an open ground near VT road that was finalised for the rally and gave only a few minutes to the slum-dwellers to vacate the area. Only a few of them were lucky enough to take their essential belongings with them before their houses were destroyed. Ever since Sunday, they have been struggling to find a safe place to keep their belongings. 

“The authorities destroyed our homes for a function and it doesn’t pain even them in the slightest. Do they realise how much it takes to build a home again? Even the tirpaal (canvas) that we use to make a small hut costs around Rs 500, and that’s not at all easy for us to gather,” Lalitha, a resident of the slum area told The Wire.

Portion of the rally venue that was cleared of the slum houses. Credit: Shruti Jain.

Their primary focus is to at least save their household items from the police even if means to stack them in vacant plots full of garbage. “Sure, we live on roads but that doesn’t mean we can live in garbage too. There is so much filth here that we can’t even cook. Our utensils have begun to stink now,” said Lakshmi, another resident. 

Dependent on daily wages for their expenses, these slum-dwellers have not been able to go out for work for fear that their luggage – which is currently kept on roads – might be tossed away by the police anytime. Coupled with the lack of income, these families are ultimately unable to cook food for themselves.

Also read: Farmers in Rajasthan to Vote Against Land Auction Notices and Irrigation Charges

“I work as a domestic help in a nearby house, but I’m on leave since Sunday because we can’t go to work leaving our luggage on the roads. The police have already threatened us not to be seen anywhere around the venue of the rally and if they’ll find us, our luggage would be destroyed in the same way they destroyed our homes,” said Pooja, resident of the slum alongside the VT road area.

“It’s been four days since anyone of us has cooked food. There is no money to get food and, for poor people like us, it’s easy to get a sound sleep with a hungry stomach,” she added.

Madhu (L) and Lalitha (R) showing the spot at the rally venue which used to be their house four days ago. Credit: Shruti Jain.

There are several kids among the displaced who are compelled to stay on the road in the scorching summer heat. At a time when mercury levels have risen to 45 degrees in the capital, these slum-dwellers have been deprived of even the slightest conveniences, like that of even a tattered roof over their heads.

To make matters worse for them, their presence on the roads within residential colonies is attracting complaints from residents who fear their settlement in their locality.

“Our mothers look after the luggage and send us to a nearby park as it has some trees, but the locality is raising questions about our luggage being kept outside their homes. Anyone of them can complain to the police about our location so we keep wandering,” said Govind, a class III student from the slum area.

A night ahead of the rally, a few slum-dwellers who were sleeping on the ground that once used to be their home, were beaten up by the police. Several of them were injured. “We have been sleeping on that spot for more than two decades now. It has less of mosquitoes because the wind blows at a fairly good speed here. So, we went just to sleep there but the police had issues with that also,” said Kalu, one of the slum-dweller who was beaten up by the police for sleeping at the venue.

They say the reason behind demolishing slums ahead of such events for ‘security reasons’ is that, in case of any planned terrorist activity, it becomes easier for fringe elements to mix with the slum-dwellers.

“The authorities believe that we perpetuate terrorism. Just because we are not educated and don’t have good jobs, doesn’t mean that we can be traitors to our own country. We are not even allowed to enter the rallies that are arranged at the place that is our home,” said Raju.

The slum-dwellers collectively criticised political parties of using their name to garner votes while treating them inhumanly in reality. “Modi says he comes from a poor family, but still he isn’t at all concerned about the poor people like us whose homes have been demolished for his rally,” added Kalu.

However, the police has refuted every claim of houses being destroyed in the Mansarovar area slums ahead of the rally.

Speaking to The Wire, superintendent of police, Jaipur (south) Yogesh Dadhich said, “We haven’t broke a single house in the city. Our team might have checked a few people, but it isn’t possible that any house was broken.”

The mood at Modi’s rally in Jaipur on Wednesday was dull. The crowd gathered at the rally mostly comprised of BJP workers. Even the traffic in the city was normal despite a rally being scheduled during peak office hours in the evening.

Ground Report: How the Bharatiya Tribal Party Is Making Its Mark in Rajasthan

In the Banswara-Dungarpur region, Kanti Lal Roat’s campaign has his opponents worried.

Banswara (Rajasthan): “Welcome to Bhil Pradesh,” says Kanti Lal Roat, a smile playing on his face as he points to the rusted and leaking corrugated iron roof of a nearby building. “See, this is just another post office in our tribal area, you can ask Narendra Modi to have a look at it. One shower and all the mail goes.”

The post office serves two villages – Malmattha and Dhamoh – and a large crowd from the two villages has gathered here to hear Roat, the 43-year-old candidate of the Bhartiya Tribal Party (BTP) from Banswara-Dungarpur in southern Rajasthan, where tribals are 76% of the population, the highest anywhere in the state.

This is an area contiguous to Gujarat, where the BTP was founded in 2017 by Choubhai Vasava. It debuted in the 2018 state elections in Rajasthan and created a sensation – winning two of the eight assembly seats of Banswara and finishing second in two others. This unprecedented tribal upsurge in the largely bipolar politics of the state has now culminated in a bid for the Lok Sabha. The party is contesting four seats – the reserved tribal seats of Banswara and Udaipur, as well as Chittor and Jodhpur.

“The Bhils have never had a voice, no one to fight for our adhikar (rights), we are going to do just that,” says 39-year-old Rajkumar, an MLA recently elected from the Chorasi assembly constituency in Dungarpur.  Like most other BTP members, he is under 45 and cut his teeth on student politics.

The BTP emerged out of the Bhil Adivasi Vidyarthi Morcha, a student organisation founded in 2015. The Morcha itself was a response to the anti-reservation thrust of the Vasundhara Raje government. The Raje government, despite an adverse high court ruling, had sought to implement a quota for non-tribal local people in the tribal areas to meet the demands of an RSS-backed organisation called the Samanta Manch. The Morcha was quick to gain ground, winning three consecutive student elections in Dungarpur University. Rajkumar says, “The ABVP (RSS’s students’ wing) was the giant we slew, the NSUI (Congress’s students’ wing) is inconsequential here and though we defeated the SFI (Left student group), we don’t have a problem with them.”

A dramatic leap from student politics to national elections, the BTP cadre is mostly under 45. Credit: Pooja Arya

From student politics to a battle for the Lok Sabha is a dramatic leap. The party is struggling for funds and resources to fight a national election. Like most BTP candidates, Roat has to make do with very little. Every morning after a meeting with his party members, he sets out on the campaign trail in a rented car while others follow on motorcycles. On some days, his supporters may hire an extra car. When we accompanied Roat across the villages of Dungapur, he was quick to ask, “Hope you don’t mind if some of our people sit in your car?”

In this David and Goliath battle against well-funded and entrenched BJP and Congress candidates, what works to Roat’s advantage is the energy of the BTP cadre and their knowledge of the terrain. “In a reserved seat, even our rivals are Bhils but unko Dilli kee hawa lag gayee hai (they’ve been infected by the Delhi air), they’ve forgotten how to climb the dungars (hills),” he tells me.   

In innumerable informal meetings through the day, his speeches tie together the larger context of tribal rights – from the implementation of the constitution’s fifth schedule to the push for a separate Bhil Pradesh – to local issues – the need for medical facilities in one place or the requirement for lifting water from the Kurya Kund dam in another. It is this intimacy with the terrain and the people that separates the BTP from its rivals.

In a village in Simalwara, Dungarpur, Roat points to a man with a bow and arrow slung on his shoulder, “Yelesh Bhai is not standing there to provide Adivasi colour, he is a wonderful archer.”

He then turns to a gathering of about 150 villagers who have collected near the panchayat office and continues, “We are children of Eklavya, archery is in our blood, every child here knows who Limba Ram is.”

A BTP worker addresses an election sabha: We don’t need the RSS and other bhagwa types to tell us about the Mahabharat, we are children of Eklavya. Credit: Pooja Arya

Roat rubbishes the claim the Vanvasi Kalyan Parishad has made in the past that Limba Ram was discovered through their Eklavya Khelkood Pratiyogita, a school programme, “The RSS claims they have a sports programme through which they found Limba Ram, how come they never found anyone else?”

Roat’s speeches, with their consistent emphasis on the distinct cultural identity of the Bhils, resonate with the Bhil and Meena population which form the backbone of the BTP’s support base.

In Asaspur village, he stops to point to two figurines placed under a Mahua tree, and a white flag with stars and a moon etched on it, “This is our dharm jhanda (religious flag), these are our isht devtas (clan deities) but the Sangh wants us to be Hindus in their style. So now the Bhartiya Tribal Pary has its own Adivasi Sangh.”

The rhetoric of Bhil self-assertion is new to the region, which has seen two decades of intense saffronisation. Southern Rajasthan – Udaipur, Dungpuar, Banswara – which accounts for almost two thirds of Rajasthan’s 12.5% tribal population, has long been a bastion of the Vanvasi Kalyan Parishad, an RSS affiliate set up to work in tribal areas. The RSS also runs a comprehensive ‘Banswara Project’ which focuses on pushing its agenda through schools, cultural organisations and even medical camps, while the Vishwa Hindu Parishad has 500 schools in Banswara alone. In addition, several other Hindu organisations such as the Gayatri Parivar have worked here in recent years. Roat claims the Gayatri Parivar is trying teach tribals the “right way to do havanas and chant mantras”.

Kanti Lal Roat, the BTP candidate from Banswara: Jaipal Munda said the Adivasis will respect both, its own flag and that of the nation. The two must co-exist. Why were we not allowed to hold a celebration in honour of Jaipal Munda? Credit: Pooja Arya

Meeting this challenge is not easy. The Bhils have been assimilated within the Hindu fold over a long period of time and this is evident everywhere. Stopping at a hut that houses a small school in Malmattha village, Roat asks for the images of Durga and Ram on the wall to be covered up before he speaks, but acknowledges there is a limit to how far they can go. Bhil women, he notes, wear the ghunghat, but that is not something the party is willing to challenge yet.

What the party is able to do is to turn RSS’s own tactics against it. To attract the Bhils, the Sangh has been using traditional narratives such as the legend of Bhilu Rana, a Bhil chieftain who is believed to have fought alongside Maharana Pratap.  It has also refurbished and massively expanded a memorial to commemorate the Bhil martyrdom at Mangarh, often referred to as the Jallianwalah of the Bhils.

Hari Ram Meena, a retired police officer and writer based in Dungarpur, has written an account of this in his book Dhuni Tapey Teer (When Arrows Were Heated Up). It describes how in 1913, two British commanders ordered the Bhil Mewar Corp to fire on a gathering of 1,500 Bhils, led by their religious leader Govind Guru. Meena tells me, “The BJP might have built a big memorial, but if you look at it you’ll see that the statue of Govind Guru is dwarfed by one of Lord Hanuman.”

Meena’s awareness of the RSS’s intentions is shared by BTP candidates. “We revere Govind Guru but these icons are being used by Hindutva groups to colonise tribals,” Roat warns his audiences. The icons that don’t suit the RSS, he adds, are ignored.

Roat’s referring to the events of last August. On World Indigenous Day, the Bhil Vidyarthi Morcha was denied permission to celebrate the life of the Oxford-educated Indian hockey Olympian Jaipal Munda, the only tribal member of the constituent assembly.

BJP candidate from Banswara, Kanti Lal Katara. Credit: Pooja Arya

“Why should we be denied the right to celebrate modern heroes who spoke of the unity of tribals, of our unique culture and our own flag? Munda said the Adivasi flag will co-exist with the nation’s flag and we will salute both,” Roat says.

The impact of his words, and his campaign, is not lost on his rivals. The BJP candidate, RSS hardliner Kanti Lal Katara, suggests the reason the BJP’s hold over the tribals has slipped is because his predecessor, chosen by ‘Vasundhraji’, was “too liberal in his thinking”. It is indicative of the seriousness of the BTP threat that he simultaneously accuses the party of bringing a Naxali vichardhara into Rajasthan and working at the behest of missionaries.

The Congress is even more worried. Having seen this traditional stronghold being impacted by the RSS’s work, it has managed a comeback in the recent assembly elections. But now it fears the BTP’s impact will not just be restricted to Rajasthan and its seven candidates in North Gujarat will also hurt the Congress’s chances there. For Tarachand Bhagora, a three-time MP, the BTP is not a Naxal or a missionary plot, “Mark my words, the BTP is a creation of Vasundhraji, it’s a BJP proxy.”

In the face of repeated bids to slander and split his party, Kanti Lal Roat responds with a quiet confidence, “We are fighting to win a ticket to parliament, but even if we don’t make it we know we will decide who will. We will continue to play a big role in the politics of this region.”

Congress Will Now Rule Rajasthan, But BJP Gave it a Tough Fight

The question of who will take the top post is now echoing in the state.

Jaipur: The Congress party won 99 out of the 199 seats in which the assembly elections took place in Rajasthan. This is a slight deviation from the exit polls which predicted a clean sweep by the grand old party.

With BJP securing 73 seats and the polling percentage in the state dropping to 74.21% from the previous 75.67% – despite Modi’s high-decibel campaign revolving around Ram mandir, Congress’s 60 years of rule and positive self-appraisal of BJP’s schemes – the relevance of ‘Modi factor’ has become debatable. Even Adityanath’s communal rhetoric couldn’t attain the saffron party a victory in Pokhran, although the margin was quite narrow.

The question of who will take the top post is now echoing in the state. Both the front-runners, Sachin Pilot and Ashok Gehlot have repeatedly told the media that Rahul Gandhi would have the final say. Meanwhile, the MLAs have been asked to reach the capital Jaipur by noon on Wednesday.

“As far as who will become the chief minister is concerned, go to Rahul Gandhi because it is a decision that will be taken collectively,” said Gehlot.

The party is open to the winning candidates from Bahujan Samaj Party, independent and other parties. “We are in touch with like-minded, anti-BJP parties,” Pilot told reporters.

Independent winners

Nine out of the 13 winning independent candidates are rebel Congress leaders who were denied tickets – Ramila Khadiya from Kushalgarh, Raj Kumar Gaur from Ganganagar, Laxman Meena from Bassi, Babulal Nagar from Dudu, Ramkesh from Gangapur, Sanyam Lodha from Sirohi, Alok Beniwal from Shahpura, Mahadeo Singh from Khandela and Khushveer Singh from Marwar Junction.

This reflects the party’s poor decision on choosing candidatures.

Agrarian distress made irrelevant

Interestingly, Vasundhara Raje’s half-hearted attempt of waiving only short-term loans taken by small and marginal farmers from cooperative banks couldn’t garner votes. Out of the 11 seats in Ganganagar and Hanumangarh in northern Rajasthan, where the farmers’ protests were at its peak, BJP won five seats, Congress four, Communist Party of India (Marxist) one and an independent candidate took one.

CPI(M) couldn’t win any seat in Sikar, the epicentre of farmers’ protest in the Shekhawati region. Both its candidates, Amra Ram and Pema Ram lost the elections. However, even BJP has been reduced to zero there.

Also read: Congress Looks All Set to Form Government in Rajasthan

Alwar

Out of the ten seats contested in Alwar, BJP’s tally was reduced to two seats – Alwar (Urban) and Mundawar. In the rest of the constituencies, Congress won four, BSP two and two went to independents. In the adjoining Bharatpur, BJP couldn’t win a single seat.

The result is seen as an answer to the uncomfortable silence BJP maintained over cow vigilante attacks that took place in the constituency.

Congress party workers celebrate. Credit: PTI

BJP yet to manage its association with the Muslim community

Sachin Pilot, Congress’s front-runner for the chief ministerial post, won by a huge margin of over 50,000 votes in Tonk, a Muslim-dominated constituency where BJP had fielded Yunus Khan, its sole Muslim candidate. The main reason why Khan couldn’t bring in the Muslim vote was his over-indulgence in Hindutva politics.

In four seats of Tonk, BJP managed a win only in Malpura. In Nagaur too, BJP has been reduced to two seats – Makrana and Nagaur.

Was anti-Raje sentiment a hype?

Vasundhara Raje managed an effortless win from her home turf Jhalrapatan despite Congress fielding Manvendra Singh, son of former external affairs minister Jaswant Singh against her.

Even so, the BJP won all the four seats from Jhalawar, putting the much-hyped ‘anti-Raje but not anti-Modi’ mood in the state to rest.

From Ajmer – the bastion of BJP since the 1990s where the Congress had made inroads in the Lok Sabha by-polls in January – BJP has shown resurgence, winning five seats out of the eight seats and reducing Congress to two seats and independent candidates to one.

The reserved seats

Surprisingly, the Meena belt of Rajasthan, which is known to vote for the BJP, paved the way for the newly-emerged Bhartiya Tribal Party in Dungarpur, which took of the four seats, reducing the BJP to one. Even in Karauli, the Meena seats – Sapotra and Todabhim – went to Congress. Lalsot seat in Dausa also went to Congress.

Bahujan Samaj Party managed win six seats – Karauli, Udaipurwati, Nadbai, Nagar, Kishangarh bas and Tijara.

Shocking defeats

Rameshwar Lal Dudi, leader of the opposition in the Rajasthan legislative assembly, lost the Nokha seat in Bikaner to BJP’s Biharilal Bishnoi with a margin of 8,663 votes. He had managed a comfortable win of 66,554 votes in the last election over the then BJP candidate. In the run-up to the polls, infighting between Pilot and Dudi has surfaced quite a few times.

Former National Commission for Women chief Girija Vyas, who contested from the Udaipur seat against Gulab Chand Kataria, home minister of Rajasthan, also lost.

Habibur Rahman, former BJP MLA from Nagaur who had recently joined Congress and was given the party’s ticket from Nagaur seat, lost by 13,008 votes.

Third front

A third front emerged in Rajasthan politics with two parties – Rising Jat leader Hanuman Beniwal’s Rashtriya Loktantrik Party (RLTP) and BJP rebel Ghanshyam Tiwari’s Bharat Vahini Party (BVP). While Beniwal emerged victorious on the Khinvsar seat, Tiwari lost his seat to Ashok Lahoty, the Jaipur mayor. Tiwari has been winning this seat since 2003 from BJP’s ticket.

While RLTP won three seats, BVP took none.

Congress Looks All Set to Form Government in Rajasthan

Although the Congress secured only 0.5% more votes than the BJP, it proved enough to take the party across the half-way mark required to form a government independently.

New Delhi: Growing farmer distress, unemployment and communal and caste violence all contributed to the downfall of the Vasundhara Raje-led BJP government in Rajasthan. The Congress has emerged as the single-largest party in the 200-member Rajasthan assembly and was headed to winning close to 100 seats out of the 199 for which counting took place on Tuesday. Election in Ramgarh was postponed due to the death of the BSP candidate.

Though Raje won her own seat of Jhalrapatan, defeating former BJP leader Jaswant Singh’s son Manvendra Singh by a margin of 34980 votes, she could not reverse the “revolving door anti-incumbency” trend which began in 1993 after which the state has never seen an incumbent government to power.

Congress welcomes all like-minded parties

Led ably by the two-time former chief minister Ashok Gehlot and the young Pradesh Congress Committee president Sachin Pilot, the Congress managed to cross the half-way mark on its own. By late afternoon it became clear that the grand old party would form the next government in the state. Pilot then told the media that while he was sure about a complete majority, he would still “welcome all like-minded and anti-BJP parties to support us”.

Also read: Congress to Form Govt in Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh; MP Race Still Tight

This statement was a far cry from the confidence Congress exuded when it decided to go alone in the polls without allying with others like Bahujan Samaj Party. As the numbers are fluctuating, it appears that the MLAs of BSP, which looks set to win six seats, could either end up in effecting a government formation as they did in 2008 or lend stability to a government.

Gehlot, Pilot remain in race for CM post

Both Gehlot and Pilot won their elections comfortably, and in doing so have set up an interesting contest now for the CM’s job. While Gehlot won the Sardarpura seat for the fifth time, defeating Shambhu Singh of the BJP by over 40,000 votes, Pilot won by a huge margin from Tonk. He defeated transport minister Yoonus Khan, BJP’s lone Muslim candidate, by 54,179 votes.

Another prominent Congress leader who won is C.P. Joshi, who defeated BJP’s Mahesh Pratap Singh in Nathdwara. Joshi had courted controversy earlier and was attacked by the BJP when, while taking a dig at the Modi-Shah duo, he declared that only Brahmins can teach Hinduism.

Comfortable majority but vote share difference marginal

The result in Rajasthan on the whole was in line with most of the opinion polls which predicted a Congress win. But in the final analysis, the Congress fell short on the expectations. Everyone expected the Congress to win by a huge margin and with a significantly higher vote share. But that did not happen. The Congress vote percentage was just about 0.5 percentage points higher than that of the BJP.

That, however, proved enough to take the party across the half way mark. It ended up winning …. seats. Another major gain for the Congress is that it improved dramatically over its performance in 2013 when BJP secured 45.50% votes while Congress managed just 33.31%.

Many BJP ministers trounced

The Congress leaders in this election also trounced a number of senior BJP leaders as they battled hard to wrest power.

BJP’s Social Justice minister Arun Chaturvedi lost to Pratap Singh Khachariya in Civil Lines; water resources minister Rampratap lost to Vinod Kumar in Hanumangarh; and Industry minister Rajpal Singh lost to Lalchand Kataria in Jhotwara.

Then Pramod Bhaya of the Congress defeated agriculture minister Prabhu Lal Saini by a huge margin in Anta.

Also read: Congress Set to Dethrone Vasundhara Raje in Rajasthan

Anjana Udailal of Congress also emerged victorious over urban development and housing minister Srichand Kriplani in Nimbahera.

Cooperative minister Ajay Singh lost by a big margin to Vijaypal Mirdha of the Congress in Degana. Similarly mines minister Surendra Pal Singh lost to Gurmeet Singh Kooner in Karanpur.

Another BJP minister in-charge of Gaupalan, Otaram Devasi, lost to Independent candidate Sanyam Lodha in Sirohi. Lodha had contested the 2013 election on a Congress ticket but lost to Devasi. This time he thus extracted his revenge.

Some BJP ministers just sneaked through

Some BJP ministers also survived after initial scares. Higher education minister Kiran Maheshwari, who was trailing early when the counting began, ultimately defeated Narayan Singh Bhati of the Congress by a big margin in Rajsamand.

Likewise, after trailing initially, home minister Gulab Chand Kataria defeated former Congress Union minister Girija Vyas in Udaipur.

Health minister Kalicharan Saraf was involved in a close contest with Dr. Archana Sharma of the Congress in Malviya Nagar.

Some senior Congress leaders lost despite the party getting close to power. Leader of opposition Rameshwar Duddi lost to Bihari Lal of the BJP in Nokha.

Rajasthan assembly speaker Kailash Meghwal registered his sixth win in state assembly polls. He defeated Mahaveer Prasad of the Congress by 74,542 votes in Shahpura.

Prominent community leaders get through

In Khinwsar, prominent Jat leader Hanuman Beniwal of the Rashtriya Loktantrik Party, who was expelled from the BJP in 2013 after he accused the party leaders of corruption, won the election. He defeated Savai Singh Chaudhary of the Congress. Ahead of the assembly polls, Beniwal declared that his party would contest all 200 seats in the state. His community and party wields significant influence in Shekhawat and Marwar regions of the state.

Also watch: Live: Assembly Elections Results 2018

Another party which contested several seats was the Bharatiya Tribal Party (BTP). Though it secured less than 1% of total votes polled, it made its presence felt in two seats and opened its account, winning Chorasi. There, its candidate Rajkumar Roat defeated BJP’s Sushil Katara by over 12,000 votes. The party was floated by tribal leader Chhotubhai Vasava in 2017 and won two seats in the Gujarat assembly polls the same year.

The Congress also played its cards well in the polls, and this showed in Sapotra. There, its candidate Ramesh Chand Meena defeated BJP candidate Golma Devi, wife of Meena community leader Kirodi Lal Meena.

CPI(M) puts up a good show with support of farmers

The Communist Party of India (Marxist) also rode the anger among the farmers with the BJP government well and bagged two seats. In Bhadra, its candidate Balwan Poonia defeated Sanjeev Kumar of the BJP by a comfortable margin. In February this year, Poonia led a protest of farmers in front of the local State Bank of India branch and secured a refund of extra interest charged by the bank on their Kisan Credit Card accounts. In Shree Dungargarh, CPI(M) candidate Girdharilal also won by a comfortable margin.