Despite Losing the J&K Elections, BJP Holds the Key to Restoring Peace in the Region

Will the BJP permit a government led by the NC – which the saffron party has done everything to denigrate, degrade and demolish – to function smoothly?

The outcome of the recently held assembly elections in Jammu and Kashmir is of historical proportions in both parts of the former state and, in the case of the Kashmir valley, a rare ideological magnificence, reflecting the focused will of the people in spite of every dangerous distraction that New Delhi could lay in their path and despite the absence, from the winning alliance, of a regional party (PDP) that is a part of the national-level INDIA bloc. 

A verdict such as this can paint the sky blue if New Delhi is imaginative and constructively supports the people’s efforts and their popularly elected government, which is to be led by National Conference vice-president Omar Abdullah. 

On the flip side, the sky can just as easily be painted in the frightful dark colours that have marred life in Kashmir, most notably since militancy and terrorism emerged on the scene in the late 1980s, and once again in pronounced fashion since August 2019, when the Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led government removed J&K’s special constitutional status, severely impacting civil liberties and human rights.

A psychological sense of having been forsaken and left bereft descended upon Kashmir when the Union government downgraded the former state to a Union Territory, in violation of constitutional practice so strong, that wishing not to tread on uncertain territory, the Supreme Court avoided adjudicating on it when duly urged to do so. 

It’s therefore principally up to New Delhi to determine whether conditions can be brought about for a civilised and enduring peace to descend on Kashmir under the government expected to take office shortly. The choice is not any more just Pakistan’s, which harbours terrorist bases and is in the habit of despatching desperadoes to J&K to perpetrate violence and disturb the conditions. 

On account of its impressive electoral showing in the Jammu region, the BJP, which runs New Delhi, could be tempted to disrupt governance on a communal basis in an effort to discredit the NC, its leadership, the Congress party (a key NC ally  and the INDIA bloc.   

Electorally, by casting their lot with the NC, the people of Kashmir have delivered a strong ideological message against terrorism – foreign and home-grown – and against communal elements in New Delhi as well as their political hangers-on in Kashmir. 

This can be an intimation of healing. It challenges the assiduously disseminated canard that every Kashmiri is secretly a Pakistani, and a terrorist to boot, for no reason other than having the same religion as most Pakistanis.    

Underlining the pervasive nature of the swing back to NC in Kashmir’s electoral politics, the NC-led alliance won in a steady pattern across the valley, leaving only a pitiable number of seats for other parties and independents (most of whom were NC rebels and are likely to return to the party fold). Such a result ensues from the common voter’s spectacularly clear-headed voting for brand NC, without really caring for candidates and rejecting most other choices. 

The Congress, as the NC’s close associates, thus managed to pick up a few seats, although showing little flair of its own other than Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat Jodo Yatra in 2022-23, to uphold constitutional values, which had drawn a warm response in the valley. That’s about as far as the Congress’ contribution to the electoral effort goes, other than the fact that the national party consciously chose to stand with the NC. 

If Mehbooba Mufti’s People’s Democratic Party (PDP) were a part of the NC-led winning alliance, a fuller phalanx in the true spirit of the national-level INDIA bloc to challenge the BJP may have emerged. It could’ve helped to perhaps reduce BJP numbers in the Jammu division, where the saffron party has performed remarkably well. 

Keeping out the PDP reflected disregard of the intra-INDIA coalition ‘dharma’ or duty, but the voter stayed on focus and went with the storied NC whose history has many strands, perhaps the most significant of which is to disregard Jinnah’s urgings to join a Muslim Pakistan and choosing instead to go with Mahatma Gandhi’s ‘secular’ India.

In Kashmir’s context, the present election result marks a pivotal moment. It has come after many trials and tribulations and hits and misses. Given the valley’s decades-long trauma, the foregrounding of the NC by voters re-tells a past tale, with shades of atonement stitched into it. At various times in Kashmir’s history, dubious diversions have beguiled the populace. 

A defining aspect of the NC’s story is the path-breaking decision of its founder, Sheikh Mohammed Abdullah, to dissociate with the Muslim Conference and establish the National Conference in 1932, enabling Kashmiris of all faiths to join. 

Thus, in October 1947, when the so-called tribal raiders from newly-created Pakistan descended on Kashmir to seize the valley, the people’s militia organised by the NC – which resisted the invaders before the Indian Army could arrive- – had among its sector commanders Syed Mir Qasim (a future chief minister) as well as Durga Prasad Dhar, an important figure of the Indira Gandhi-era, and Pran Nath Jalali, a well-known journalist who would later head the PTI’s Srinagar Bureau. Under the NC’s stewardship, the Kashmiri Pandit has never been discriminated against on grounds of faith. This deserves to be recalled.  

The recent Assembly polls and the Lok Sabha election in May had one thing in common – the voter participation was impressive. Both exercises appeared free as well as fair to observers. There was an important important difference, though. 

In the Lok Sabha election, NC leader Omar Abdullah was defeated by separatist leader Engineer Rashid who was jailed in Delhi under the stringent Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA). Rashid was facilitated in fighting elections from prison by the ruling party’s allies. The NC fared below par.

The jailed man’s relatives in Kashmir played the victim card to the hilt in the campaign and, seizing widespread public alienation, trounced Abdullah and another well-known politician. Kashmir was suddenly agog with possibilities as assembly polls were round the corner. 

The banned Jamaat-e-Islami, whose credo rests on the idea that Kashmir ought to be Ilaqa-e-Pakistan (a territory of Pakistan),  was sufficiently emboldened by these developments to field some of its own cadres as independent candidates in the assembly polls. There were widespread rumours that the ruling BJP was pulling strings from behind in order to further its long-term plan of dismantling the NC, Kashmir’s heritage party along with the Congress and the PDP, on the grounds that they were “dynastic” and seeking to create a new breed of politicians in “New Kashmir”. 

This was to be achieved by creating conditions for all kinds of candidates, including those of the banned and communal J-e-I, to enter the poll fray and divide the anti-NC vote. As Hindu and Muslim communal politics appeared to march in tandem, the big fear was: Is the BJP’s action creating the conditions for the return of pro-Pakistan extremist politics in the valley? This was the subject of public discussion for many weeks before the assembly polls. An incipient sense of panic was overtaking the Valley. 

Ordinary voters have sturdily demonstrated, however, that they have a mind of their own and that they appear to have no interest in returning to the bad old days. Additionally, they voted in sufficient numbers and in a particular pattern to leave no room for doubt that they wanted a regional party to form a stable government, hoping, in the process, to negate the national BJP’s ambition to install a Hindu chief minister in a Muslim-majority Union Territory.

In Jammu –in contrast to the unfolding of events in the valley – this indeed appeared as a concrete possibility, should the BJP cross a certain threshold of support in the wider Jammu region. 

The Prime Minister’s rallying call in the plains of Jammu, as the campaign closed, was to raise hopes of a Hindu chief minister. For Modi, a history-making event of unimaginable ideological value glimmered in prospect in the theatre of India’s politics – a prize that might equal, if not surpass, the making of a new Ram temple in Ayodhya, and far exceeding election successes in any other part of the country. 

Jammu voters eventually chose to overlook the bubbling dissatisfaction with the BJP’s decision to dilute Article 370 of the Constitution to end J&K’s autonomous status (which brought to the local people exclusively the benefit of land rights, jobs and education) as the BJP astutely shaped communal sentiments, taking advantage of the challenger Congress’ rank inability to exploit anti-incumbency.  

So, where does Jammu and Kashmir go from here? A national party in power at the Centre, widely seen as a communal entity, has beaten all comers in the Jammu region and may have knocked on the doors of the chief minister’s office if it had won some half a dozen more seats. In the valley, a regional party whose birth and history has defined the making of Jammu and Kashmir in the modern era, has stormed the citadel, defeating BJP’s carefully laid out plans, set to form government tomorrow.

Will the BJP permit a government led by the NC – which the saffron party has done everything to denigrate, degrade and demolish – to function smoothly? This will be a question in people’s minds in Srinagar, Jammu and Delhi. Will Modi’s BJP return statehood to J&K when it has failed to come to power? 

The rules were amended by the Centre last July. to transfer control to the Lieutenant Governor a wide array of subjects which, in the federal system, belong to the state and its chief minister. These subjects include law and order and jurisdiction over the police. The emasculation of Article 370 has already taken out land and land use from the former state’s jurisdiction. Are these potential flashpoints for J&K politics that may derail any prospect of tranquillity? And will that expand scope for Pakistan’s meddling?

In his post-election comment, Dr. Karan Singh, who would have been the hereditary ruler of J&K if the feudal order had not passed and was indeed made Sadr-e-Riasat, has urged the restoration of statehood “without delay”. It is noteworthy that he has also urged that “domiciliary provisions” be introduced in J&K as in Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh. 

This effectively means that the right to land should be with the people of J&K with exceptions made for those who qualify to become its domiciles. This may be a useful line of enquiry after the abrogation of Articles 370 and 35-A. But it is important that the Centre permit the post-election authority to function without hindrance. That is the least that may be expected. Kashmir has a worldwide resonance. 

Anand K. Sahay is a journalist and political commentator based in New Delhi.

‘Routine Admin Made Into Great Bonanza’: Congress Slams Modi’s Publicised Release of Farmers’ Funds

Congress’s Jairam Ramesh has said the current instalment was already delayed due to “the PM’s electoral calculus.”

New Delhi: The hype over Narendra Modi signing the ‘first file’ to release the latest instalment of PM Kisan Samman Nidhi in his new term has evoked a sharp response from the Congress.

Congress’s chief spokesperson Jairam Ramesh said that the latest instalment of the scheme was already delayed, and an entitlement guaranteed to farmers by the union government’s policy was being made out to appear as Modi’s benevolence.

“The 16th instalment of PM Kisan Nidhi was due in January 2024, but was delayed by a month for the PM’s electoral calculus,” Ramesh said in a post on X.

“The एक तिहाई (one-third) Pradhan Mantri has done nobody a great favour by signing this file: these are legitimate entitlements due to farmers according to his Government’s own policy. He has made a habit of converting routine administrative decisions into some great bonanza that he is bestowing upon the people. Clearly, he still thinks of himself as not biological, but divine.”

“The 17th installment of PM Kisan Nidhi was due in April/May 2024, but was delayed by the enforcement of the Model Code of Conduct,” he said, adding “aap chronology samajhiye (understand the timeline)”, in a dig at BJP union minister Amit Shah who first used the phrase to allege criminal conspiracy charges against anti-CAA activists.

Ramesh said that if the PM was “genuinely concerned about farmer welfare”, he should deliver on five demands of farmers: legalise minimum support price according to the Swaminathan Commission’s formula, waive off farm loans and set up a commission to properly implement it, guarantee insurance claims for farmers, hold consultations with farmers to set up a new export-import policy, and do away with GST on essential inputs for farming.

A Tussle Between Two Political Streams

The new North versus South debate is alarming because it signals a democratic environment increasingly under the threat of a xenophobic intolerance of our smaller cultural republics.

Around the same time the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) won back three majority Hindu states from the Congress, the National Crime Registration Bureau (NCRB) report for the last two years was published. It almost got lost in the din that followed the BJP sweeping three out of four states in the crucial Hindi belt.

Mrinal Pande

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

The NCRB data gives us invaluable insights into the direction we are headed. It reports that the last two years have recorded a 45% rise in hate speech and other acts that deepen and promote enmity between groups on grounds of language, religion, race, and place of birth registered under IPC(153 A).

The number of such cases reported has risen from 993 in 2021 to 1,444. It is no accident that maximum cases of hate speech were reported from UP (217), followed by Rajasthan (191) and Maharashtra (178). All these states have seen bitterly contested state elections in the last two years. It is also notable that the number of hate crimes registered a peak in some northeastern states and in Telangana, which have had state elections recently. 

Elections in India kindle extraordinary emotions and hopes. Winning an election is seen, among the contestants, equivalent to stumbling upon a treasure. Not only does it trigger a process during which most winners speedily get rich, it also strengthens a sort of mystical conviction that it is all to be credited to ‘The Leader’ looking upon the ‘Chosen Ones’ with an eye of grace that elevates them above all others as infallible.

Many photographs preserve such moments of teary-eyed joy and feet touching among showers of rose petals. Look at the faces and the background carefully. The vigour, glory and significance it confers upon the Hindu religion as the divine wind under the party’s sails are obvious. Religion and a brilliantly aggressive leadership, both the winners and their voters are convinced that they have together created this period of accelerated expansion, winning coalition partners and influencing new voters from among the faithful. Jai ho! Jai ho! Such euphoria among the winners is a quintessentially Indian phenomena.

But before many begin to lament the degradation of the land of the Buddha and Gandhi, let’s cast an honest look at our past where hate speech, bombast and revenge, it seems, have frequently moved hand in hand whenever empires were being built and razed from Saindhav Pradesh to Magadh or from Tungbhadra region to Calicut.   

The Kaushitaki Upanishad has a tale about Indra, by then self-proclaimed king of kings among Aryan gods. He had Pratardan, the son of Divodas, as his sidekick. Pratardan helped Indra plan his first coup against his own father. “O Son of Divodas,” Indra drunk on this victory, tells his mate Pratardan, “I shall grant you a boon now. What is it to be?” Pratardan gave the standard reply, saying he wanted nothing for himself, only love and welfare for all the people. Indra’s reply to Pratardan makes it clear how empire building is not about happiness and public welfare, but about raw power and merciless and sustained aggression: “The boon of power I give you is not for dispensing public welfare. Behold, I am The Truth. Study me closely for your own good. I have killed Tvashtr,a the creator of the Vajra. I fed the band of Aroormaga monks to Salavrik (dogs or wolves). I have broken up countless treaties made on earth, in sky and further up in heavens. But not a hair on my head was disturbed. If after receiving this wisdom from me, you can fathom the whys and wherefores of my acts, even if you go and murder your own kin, you shall cease to hesitate and not allow any emotions to cross your face ever again.”

Also read: Divided Cadre, Soft Hindutva and Other Factors That Don’t Help the Congress

Peace returned briefly to their valley. But such absolute power among gods and men is usually followed by hubris. The fall began. Indra lost out to the younger priest-led pantheon of Sanatan gods. Hari or Vishnu a Vaishnavite god joined the company of Hara (Shiva) and the coalition of Harihara was born. Enraged by the rising popularity of Krishna, now deemed the Avatara of Hari, Indra sent a terrible cloud burst to drown the region that defied his authority. At this Krishna is said to have picked up a whole mountain (Govardhan Parvat) on his little finger as an umbrella to protect his people and their herds and foiled the cyclonic deluge sent by an ageing Indra. 

Krishna’s own rise is associated with considerable violence after barely evading the efforts by uncle Kamsa to kill the infant born to jailed parents. As a teenager, he killed the royal tormentor of his parents and the killer of his siblings and proceeded to crown  one of his close associates as king of Mathura. Then he got busy with his dream project: to form a coalition of republics. Today, there are countless temples to him, none to Indra, now remembered only at the beginning of festivals by a token flag (Indra Dhwaja)!

Thus the rise and fall of empires in India.

Political victories of the sort we have just seen are reminders that like Indra, like Krishna traumatised by an abusive childhood, leadership may often harbour a grudge resulting in reprisals and revenge. Recent mocking of the Opposition and their brilliant early leaders while celebrating victory of the party sweeps away the popular western games theory, according to which politics is like chess, complex but always played with inalienable rules. 

Truth is in the wars for absolute power, each side fights for itself, with neither the referees nor the audiences. 

“What,” Indra jauntily asks Pratardan, “exactly are rules, or ‘rights’ and ‘wrongs’ ?” Hadn’t he, the king of kings killed his own first contact, his chief arms dealer Tvashtra by his own hand without hesitating or allowing an emotion to cross his brow?

Myth proposes, action disposes. 

For generations our parents had handed us homilies about right and wrong – civil speech, civil rights, and good manners. Today, they are just handing out laptops, the internet, and 3D printers. The more gifted and curious among the millennials, like Indra in his time, will at some point access not only the darknet to hack archives and lives but also AI and sophisticated spyware destroying all those who may bear witness against them later. 

Through this 75-year journey as one nation, we are now facing a period when privileged star kids in The Archies reveal a generation that is not interested in all that s**t. English literacy and markets have created bubbles for the privileged where they live and love and have their being. Vision 2047 means nothing to them. They are, like many grown ups, in denial about reality: environmentally driven migrations. The political dominance of the Delhi-led north pitted against a southern resistance from the highly literate and prosperous southern states. Punjab is slowly evaporating as an agricultural haven like Bihar did in the 19th century. And more bedraggled semi-literate migrants will soon be streaming down south from the north. Will they leave any footprints in southern states other than Bhojpuri and Punjabi pop, full of more abusive words and images?

Language extinctions driven by social hubris and political spite and the confrontations over ‘imposition’ of an artificial uniformity – One Nation, One Flag, One Law – have been alien to our democracy. And our people have always fiercely rejected the efforts at homogenisation of local cultures. The new North versus South debate is alarming because it signals a democratic environment increasingly under the threat of a xenophobic intolerance of our smaller cultural republics. The only way to survive such toxicity is to pause, look back and make an honest assessment of our own past history of elections, of Indians from across the Wagah border and their culture and languages coming in, settling in happily, creating their own forms of pidgin dialects and enriching our and culture. It is the 75th year of our democracy and we are shrinking on many fronts.

Iti Varnavidah perhoornipunam tam nibodhat.” (Thus words to the wise from the linguists. Try to make what you will out of them.)

Paniniya Shiksha

Mrinal Pande is a writer and veteran journalist.

Karnataka: Congress Releases Clip, Claims BJP Leader Wants to ‘Assassinate’ Kharge

The Congress claimed that Manikanta Rathod, the BJP candidate who will face off against Priyank Kharge, said told a saffron party worker that he would “wipe off” the wife and children of its president.

Bengaluru: On a day when Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s roadshow in the Karnataka capital drew the most attention, the Congress alleged that the BJP was “conspiring to assassinate” its president Mallikarjun Kharge and his family. In a press briefing an hour before Modi’s roadshow began on Saturday, May 6, the party’s state in-charge Randeep Singh Surjewala released an audio clip of a purported conversation between Manikanta Rathod, the BJP’s candidate from north Karnataka’s Chittapur, and a local BJP leader. The former, apparently says that he would “wipe off” the wife and children of Kharge. Rathod is in the electoral fray opposite Priyank Kharge, the Congress president’s son.

While The Wire has not verified the authenticity of the tapes or the claims made by the Congress, Surjewala said that the alleged “assassination” plot shows the BJP fears the Congress’s electoral prospects in the May 10 assembly polls. He added that Rathod also happened to be “the blue-eyed boy” of both the prime minister and Karnataka chief minister B.S.Bommai. 

The Congress says that the BJP worker, Ravi, is allegedly heard bragging about “44 cases” registered against him. He is also heard using expletives against Kharge. When Ravi asked for the phone number of someone in the Kharge camp, Rathod allegedly responded by saying that if he had the phone number, he would have wiped off Kharge’s wife and children. 

Surjewala said that the BJP’s “frustration and desperation” have reached dangerous levels. “Instead of presenting a vision of development for Karnataka, the pathetic state of the BJP is that they coin one ugly polarising issue a day to somehow save their skins from answering for the 40% corruption (allegations). Even these abusive and divisive tactics of the BJP are sinking without a trace. Now, they are using assassination plots as their last weapon,” the Congress leader said.

“…the assassination plots have entered the electoral discourse of Karnataka and this was the lowest political discourse anyone can stoop to,” Surjewala said, adding that the Congress is confident of securing a comfortable majority because of the “blessings showered by Kannadigas”.

The prime minister was scheduled to canvass in Chittapur but cancelled his plan as Rathod was recently convicted in a criminal case. Responding to the allegation, Rathod rejected the charges and said, “It is all a lie. They are playing some fake audio. The Congress is levelling baseless allegations fearing defeat.” 

PM Modi, in his last mile push to the party’s campaign, is scheduled to be in a 36-kilometre roadshow across at least 18 of the 28 assembly constituencies of Bengaluru. Over the last week, he has also hogged media attention over his speeches that opposition parties have alleged to be a brazen attempt to polarise the electorate along religious lines. The opposition parties have said that such efforts to create religious polarisation are meant to deflect attention from the failures of the Bommai-led BJP government in the state.

The Opposition’s Task Is To Forgo Particularistic Ambitions for the Larger Good

The key to any effective opposition coalition rests on a shared set of goals rather than ideological affirmations.

Delhi, the governance capital of the country, has been trapped in controversial pulls and pushes at different historical moments. The intensity of embroilment has peaked every time the Union government has stood in formidable opposition to the NCT-Delhi government, calibrating the cooperative federal structure envisioned by the founding fathers of the constitution. The crisis that precipitates from such contrariety is a display of the naked egoistic inter-party bickering that ramshackle the quality of public life. With the additive rise of one-party saffron hegemony since 2014, any interruption in power consolidation has been met with unleashing of targeted controls over the opposition. In the Platonian sense, the virtue-based eudemonistic conception of politics for ‘good life’ is rejected to favour the possibilities of the Machiavellian framework of coercion creating legality.

The power tussle between Delhi and the Union government has never been as acute as now. The fundamental antagonism arises from the contemporaneous ascendancy of the BJP and the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP). For the first time, the BJP has experienced a deluge of acceptability as a popular majoritarian government after the 11th Lok Sabha general elections, while AAP too gained electoral majorities in Delhi and Punjab within a decade of its existence. Emanating from the anti-corruption movement, the transfer of power was not a cakewalk for AAP. In fact, the upping of ante against the Centre has caused bleeding sores between the Lieutenant Governor and the chief minister. The only reaping advantage of the situation is the deconstruction of the image of Arvind Kejriwal as a single-state miracle to a national leader, positioning him as one of the contenders to Prime Minister Narender Modi in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections.

In the run to the 2024 general elections, the BJP has been partially malevolent to the opposition. From scathing criticism of Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat Jodo Yatra to ordering probes into alleged corruption by opposition leaders, the BJP is focused on decimating any likelihood of alternative leadership. Many opposition leaders have been summoned by central investigative agencies, including Arvind Kejriwal and TMC MP Abhishek Banerjee, in relation to alleged misgovernance, misappropriation and scams. Some have also been jailed; prominent among them are AAP’s Delhi education minister Manish Sisodia and health minister Satyendra Jain. The fear of persecution has fostered the steady defection of many to the BJP, reducing the national presence of regional actors. The evolving single-eyed strategy is centred around the fragmentation of any opposition unity to preserve the majoritarian supremacy of the BJP in parliament. This hierarchical structure of “subordination and rule” is similar to one on which monarchic vivere sicuro (live securely) rests.

The active interference of the BJP via the LG in routine Delhi governance has questioned the intent of many public projects, leading to everyday squabbles. Such deadlocks have not deterred AAP from venturing into geographical expansion for presence in different pockets of the country. Striding on its national ambition, the electorally motivated AAP strategised to fight elections in the saffron headquarters, Gujarat, and also in Goa. The party won five maiden seats with a vote share of 12.92% in the Gujarat assembly elections and a 6.8.% vote share with two seats in the Goa assembly elections. Gradually, achieving the status of a national party has only steered it towards boisterous long-term populist campaigns against the BJP. Some of them are personal attacks on the BJP’s top-rung leadership while others are framed in the form of a choice between two contradictory governance models. The new public sphere of social media has seen a plethora of anecdotes challenging the credibility of the PM. It has sharpened the digital warfare between the ruling dispensation and the opposition parties aiming to gain popularity to set the election mood of the country.

The key to any effective opposition coalition rests on a shared set of goals rather than ideological affirmations. A grand alliance that is solely unidirectional in its objective to defeat the BJP is possible when different regional actors forgo their personal interest in power. The discernible danger lies in the unequal seat-sharing between national parties and regional parties in any asymmetrical conglomerative arrangement. Any dividend gained by the Congress and its allies in the Bharat Jodo Yatra, reflected in the impending state assembly elections, will push for political configurations that undermine regional actors. Any anti-Congress third front will survive only when regional parties design a blueprint of winnability, annihilating differences and equalising relationships of power.

The idea for the opposition is to evolve a nuanced strategy of reverse ‘Matsya-Nyaya’, the law of bigger fish swallowing the smaller fishes. In reverse, the smaller fish can mobilise for aggregation to save themselves from the bigger fish. Thereby, the opposition has the task of forgoing their particularistic ambitions for the larger good of arresting the weevil-like decay of the democratic structures. When the question is the continuity and endurance of the constitutionally premised political system, political parties have to overcome the risk of democratic malfeasance. The in-built mechanism of resilience has to be re-initiated to reject any structural reframing by majoritarianism.

Anita Tagore is associate professor, Kalindi College, University of Delhi. She is also a lawyer and socio-legal researcher.

Rahul Gandhi’s March is a Good Idea, But What About a Congress Jodo Yatra Too?

Ashok Gehlot’s withdrawal from contesting party elections may ensure status quo in Rajasthan, but the Congress still needs to set its house in order.

For a politician they routinely disparage as a clueless dilettante and a ‘pappu’, the Sanghis are obsessed with Rahul Gandhi. They leave no chance to lampoon and ridicule him, and the Bharat Jodo Yatra has given them a lot of opportunities.

The yatra, which he is leading, will take Gandhi and his team of Congress workers, from Kanyakumari to Kashmir over 150 days, and aims to focus on unity, in contrast, presumably, to the attempts to polarise society. Along the way, local crowds join in and invariably there are photo-ops, when men, women and children come up to him, whom he then hugs and smiles at. The Congress social media team, which has become extremely sharp of late, ensures that these images are spread far and wide. This way they can bypass the mainstream media, which either ignores him or joins in the establishment chorus.

The BJP’s ‘IT’ cell, not particularly known for his penchant for facts or the truth, has trained its guns on Gandhi. First, it focused on his t-shirt, saying it was priced at Rs 41,000.The point of it was somewhat vague, but it was generally meant to show his extravagant ways. 

This feeble attempt backfired in the most spectacular way, when the Congress brought up Narendra Modi’s monogrammed suit, said to have cost Rs 10 lakhs. The prime minister wore the suit, with ‘Narendra Damodardas Modi’ in gold thread, running down its entire length, during a meeting with US president Barack Obama. He was ridiculed even then, and Gandhi had called his government ‘suit boot ki sarkar’. Stung, Modi got rid of it and it was bought by a Gujarati diamond trader for Rs 4.31 crore, thus, immediately entering the Guinness Book of World Records. The Congress also pointed to Modi’s expensive dark glasses and other accoutrements.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the pinstripe suit gifted to him by business Ramesh Virani, along with Barack Obama in Delhi. Photo: PTI

The Congress publicity and social media team now has a new, sharp edge to it, and doesn’t wait too long to hit back.

Unaffected by this humiliation, the indefatigable IT cell and its many supporters have continued on their trolling spree, even if it means spreading fake information.

A tweet showing him hugging a young woman with cropped hair, juxtaposed with another women, saying, “Look carefully. Not Bharat Jodo, this is Bharat Todo!”. The second photo was that of Amulya Leona Noronha, a Bangalore-based activist who was arrested in February 2020 for allegedly chanting “Pakistan zindabad”, but the woman with Gandhi was Youth Congress leader Miva Jolly. The tweet appeared on the day when Hollywood actor John Cusack tweeted in Gandhi’s support and the attempt at spreading fake news fell flat.

So far, the trolling has not really made much of an impact but it will not stop his opponents to continue to run him down – he seems to haunt them. The BJP’s stated plan of “Congress-mukt Bharat” aims to decimate the Congress and in their minds, the Gandhi family stands in the way. Finish them and the Congress is over. 

The Yatra meanwhile rolls on, even if the questions surrounding it remain. What is it intending to achieve, apart from contrasting with the attempts to divide the country on religious grounds? It is foregrounding Rahul Gandhi at a time when he has made it clear he will not stand for the party elections. Does it aim to draw attention to the Congress as a party that believes in secular values? Or, since many senior leaders have joined in, to show the Congress as a party that is united?

There is an irony here because just as the Yatra picks up pace, the Congress is facing a crisis of sorts in Rajasthan which, if not handled with finesse, could result in the collapse of the only big state that is still with the party. 

Also read: Just as Things Appeared To Be Falling in Place, Congress Is in Crisis Again

Supporters of chief minister Ashok Gehlot, who until recently was a candidate in the Congress presidential elections, have made it clear that should he shifted to the headquarters, his replacement should be someone who stood up to the BJP, or else they will en masse resign, a clear signal that Sachin Pilot – whom the ‘High Command’ is supposed to be pushing – is not acceptable.

Pilot had revolted against his party, and holed up in a resort with his supporters, but eventually returned after the Gandhi’s mollified him. Tensions between Pilot and Gehlot have not entirely gone away and a vast majority of MLAs are with the chief minister; a central imposition to foist Pilot will seriously backfire. It shows not just Gehlot’s clout in his home state but is importance to the party – he is one of the few seniors clear about his Congress loyalties but is capable of shaking up the establishment if pushed too far.

Gehlot has since withdrawn from the Congress party contest, so it will now be status quo in Rajasthan.

But this will not please Sachin Pilot and those who are with him who will now seen Gehlot’s return as the party succumbing to his blackmail and their own leader’s chances receding.

Relations between Gehlot and Pilot will only worsen. The latter is not without his own supporters, even if they may be just a few, and will no doubt contemplate next steps; with a rich BJP on the prowl, there could be trouble down the road. A lot of finesse is required here, to save the government.

Most other states where the Congress was in power are no longer with it, either because of MLAs changing sides overnight or because it lost the elections. In Maharashtra, where it was in a coalition, the abrupt rebellion by a large number of Shiv Sena MLAs meant that the MVA government collapsed, taking down the Congress and the NCP with it. In Punjab, where the chief minister Amarinder Singh was deposed by the party bosses months before the elections, it lost to AAP. Singh meanwhile, after a short burst of defiance in trying to form his own outfit, has joined the BJP.

The Congress now needs to set its house in order. A new president, elected by due process, is welcome and should provide an opportunity to start rebuilding the organisation, but only if he is given a free hand and there is no shadow ‘high command’. But first the party has to sort out Rajasthan – a successful outcome there will set the tone and then ensure that MLAs and MPs stay within the fold. Perhaps there is also a need for a Congress Jodo Yatra.

A version of this piece was first published on The India Cable – a premium newsletter from The Wire & Galileo Ideas – and has been republished here. To subscribe to The India Cable, click here.

With a Taste of Delhi’s Hostile Police Force, Has the Congress Party Finally Awoken?

The Delhi police’s treatment of its top leaders could prove to be a wake up call for the party, which chose to remain largely silent during a series of attacks on civil liberties in the past few years.

New Delhi: As the Congress party continue to protest the Enforcement Directorate (ED)’s questioning of Rahul Gandhi for the third consecutive day, the party appeared to be much more organised than it has been over the past few years.

Be it protests against the human rights abuses by state governments led by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) or the attacks on several opposition leaders, the Congress seemed to have never been able to mobilise its leadership to rally around such issues.

However, in the ED episode, the Congress has not only shown that it is still the biggest opposition party in the country but has also signalled clearly that it is not willing to hold back anymore.

During the recent Chintan Shivir at Udaipur, the Congress had declared its intention to organise district-level rallies in mid-June – exactly this time – as an outreach programme with a message of secular and constitutional nationalism while highlighting the broken promises of the Narendra Modi-led government. That did not take off.

Congress sources claimed that the sudden outbreak of COVID-19 among its top leadership – including party president Sonia Gandhi, her daughter Priyanka Gandhi-Vadra, and general secretary K.C. Venugopal – set things back for the party.

Over the last three days, however, Gandhi-Vadra was seen at the protests against the ED’s summons to Rahul Gandhi, and Venugopal was seen being pushed and dragged by the Delhi police officers in the agitations that top Congress leaders launched against the Modi government.

The Delhi police’s haughty action meted out to the primary opposition party, in fact, shows the manner in which the capital’s police force has behaved with most protests and agitations in the last few years. Once known as one of the most professional workforces, the Delhi police under the Amit Shah-led Union home ministry has given a similar treatment to students and dissenters during the anti-Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) movement and several other such protests against a swell of human rights abuses against minorities and other marginalised groups.

The Delhi police have also been under civil society’s scrutiny for allegedly trying to implicate victims of the Delhi riots in false cases while letting off the apparent perpetrators of the communal violence with minimal action.

Also read: Delhi 2020 | the Real Conspiracy, Episode 1: What the Delhi Police Chose Not to See

Even though the Congress has criticised the Delhi police’s heavy-handedness in such cases, its responses have mostly been muted. In view of that, the treatment meted out to the Congress leaders in the last three days may have come as a reality check for the grand old party.

What the primary opposition party has had to face in the last three days at the hands of the police is somewhat unprecedented, indicating a near-complete erosion of autonomy of such security agencies.

While most Congress leaders were detained with force and many senior leaders were beaten up and kicked on the first two days of the protests, the party was up for yet another shock when Delhi police officers barged into the Congress headquarters without permission. The police visit appeared to be part of their usual intimidation tactics. But that the police could do so clearly indicates that the agency has political patronage. After all, the same Delhi police has functioned under the Congress-administered home ministry for years.

 

This brings us to the larger political optics of such highhanded action of the police. Only days before, the Congress and other opposition had been at the forefront of cornering the Modi government over the international outrage against India following the BJP spokesperson Nupur Sharma’s disparaging remarks against Prophet Muhammad. The Modi government was forced to diplomatically manage a probable crisis because of the BJP’s political blunder.

The summoning of Rahul Gandhi by the ED and the brutal takedown of the party’s protests immediately after has the scope to deflect attention away from one of the rare situations where the Modi government has come across as nervous.

The action against Rahul Gandhi and the top Congress leaders, on the other hand, also goes on to show that the Union government’s authoritarian impulses are not merely directed against minorities but all those who will dissent in the future – that the bulldozer that has become symbolic of such instinct will spare none. Be it political parties, civil liberties activists, environmentalists, and all those who voice their criticism of the government’s policies and its majoritarian urges, all will be seen as what the UP chief minister Adityanath brands as upadravis (rowdies) and will be silenced through force.

At the moment, however, the Congress doesn’t seem to be taking such treatment lying down. Its chief spokesperson Randeep Surjewala has announced similar protests in all states in front of governors’ houses and in all district centres. He has also demanded a first information report against the officers who “trespassed” the AICC office in Delhi and called the state action “absolute goondaism”.

The summoning of Rahul Gandhi by the central probe agency has probably awakened the Congress party. It took direct action against the Gandhi family to bring the Congress leadership out of its slumber. The top leadership rallying around Rahul Gandhi indicates a distinct possibility that the Gandhi scion may as well be the most acceptable face as the Congress’s next president. The party may take some hope from the united action it has managed to mount in front of a hostile police force.

Better late than never.

Kicking Out the Gandhis is Not a Panacea for the Congress as Experts Seem to Suggest

The party needs to find a new consensus to forge its way ahead, and this consensus has to involve even ordinary party workers.

The Calvinist-Corporate discourse in the US recognises but two kinds of citizens: the winners and the losers.

Those that fall in between are convoluted wasters who pretend to have something up their intellectual sleeve that weakens democracy by questioning the dominant binary narrative.

Thus when the Indian National Congress pulled off an unexpected victory in 2004 even as Vajpayee-led India was said to be “shining”, Sonia Gandhi was hailed as a great leader.

And, what do you know, again in 2009.

Not having done the same since 2014, the Gandhis are in the dog-house of “expert” political opinion.

Even normally sedate and sanguine television channels began carrying repeated programmes, with reputed anchors smirking and sniggering with a single-point obsession: will there now be a non-Gandhi leadership to the party or not.

The failure of the party to win elections are thus meant to be laid solely at the door of the Gandhis; and, corporate practices are invoked to show how when the “bottom line” crashes, CEOs are removed.

This of course is a historically illuminating circumstance, suggesting how the quality, worth, and success of political formations are now judged as corporate failures or successes.

One would have liked thoughtful and intellectually objective channels to initiate a rather more far-reaching debate: why does one kind of politics, regardless of leadership, succeed at one time and fail at another during the dynamic twists and turns of national life?

Also Read: The Congress Is Doomed Unless It Moves Away From the ‘Three of Us’

Not infrequently do we hear perceptive students of history remark that India before and after 2014 has suffered an epistemic rupture, no longer amenable to lazy formulations of the old, expedient kind.

A probe into what body of transformations has caused that rupture could then lead to more considered evaluations of the discrete genius both of political formations and their leaderships.

Should such matters be subjected merely to corporate yardsticks, failures of “leadership” might come to be detected in parties other than the Congress as well, and resignations sought beyond the Gandhis.

What may we say of the BJP leadership that fails to win most of the republic beyond the cow belt? Or of the Left parties whose record in this sense must be seen as forgettable and abysmal?

Yet, no demands have so far been made for the BJP top brass to lay down leadership mace, since India both below the Vindhyas and along the Eastern coast remains immune to their superlative prowess.

Nor is it argued that a Sitaram Yechury ought to give up his general secretaryship of the CPI(M) because his party remains confined as a “success” now in one state only, despite being a “national” party.

Nor is the dynasty accusation singularly applicable only to the Gandhis, since, as sections of the media often note, such practices afflict most of India’s political parties, and at most levels of organisation – barring the Left.

Remember that the Liberal Democratic Party in Britain, more than a century old, has hardly ever occupied the seat of governmental power, but nobody has suggested that the party’s leaderships have solely been guilty of this circumstance, or that the party should be wound up unless it jettisons those planks of its ideology which set it apart from a winning concatenation of gestures.

Any discussion or analysis of party-political “failures” or of political leaderships must reach beyond headline-grabbing stories to a scrutiny of how, through history, polities come to change character, wholly or in part, and how any principled political formation is pressed to either jettison their principles, unsuccessfully most of the time, or find alternate ways of intervening in national life such as do not always lead to electoral successes.

It is another rather crass matter that individuals who now stand for elections on one party’s platform, and then make fruitful adjustments with some other party which they may have lambasted during their electoral campaigns are seen as “smart” cookies who place “success” above “principle”.

File photo of Sonia, Rahul and Priyanka Gandhi. Photo: PTI/Ravi Choudhary

India after 2014

Here is what the Congress may ponder with some irony: that the neo-Liberal economic policies it set in motion in 2004 came to yield a new class of affluent and influential Indians who now regard free-booting capitalism as the non-negotiable feature of India’s march to greatness.

(After all, the Manmohan Singh UPA government did nearly triple India’s GDP from $709 billion to $2 trillion over a time span of ten years! Curiously, over the last seven years, this figure has only gone up to some $2.7 trillion dollars – a point to think about in relation to claims of “development” made by the corporate-cosy Modi dispensation.)

Concomitantly, this new class of Indians has come to look down upon the sort of rights-based welfarism that accompanied the neo-Liberal policies of the ten years of UPA rule.

Seizing upon that altered Zeitgeist, a corporate-funded and driven right-wing cannily introduced a religion-based reconstruction of the public psyche, especially in the Hindi belt, to counter a secularism propagated as inimical to majority interests.

That ideological package was then sealed in a militarist call to defend the “true nation” against the “other”, both within and without the country.

These reformulations have led to an uncritical assent to a new centralised leadership cult, affecting all aspects of the republic’s democratic moorings – its educational preferences, the constitutionally mandated independence of state institutions, the choices made by bulk of the media, the deployment of punitive agencies to quell critical voices, however salubrious to a democracy.

And no mere change of leadership in the Congress can then be a panacea to meet the onslaught which has fundamentally impacted older habits of allegiance and idealism among vast sections of Indians.

The Congress

It is noteworthy that despite these calamitous shifts in national perceptions and in the psyche of the hoi polloi, which in the Hindi belt, no longer minds the objective destitutions and degradations of its livelihood opportunities and realities so long its majoritarian identity makes it feel close to the seat of power, the grand old party still draws a vote share next only to the ruling right-wing BJP – 12 crores against the BJP’s 23 crores in the last general elections.

But, to go any further, as Salman Khurshid has recently stated, it is not just the matter of the Gandhis in leadership that the party needs to ponder but rather the “crisis of ideas” (Khurshid’s term) that has inevitably ensued upon the drastically altered Zeitgeist.

There are now those in the Congress who recommend going the Hindutva way, others either the socialist or the capitalist way, and yet others who warn against berating Modi, as Khurshid does.

Think that even among the disgruntled, the spectrum of differences on matters of ideology – be it with respect to “nationalism”, economic policy, relations with neighbouring countries, inter-community relations and the rights of minorities, tribals, even different sections of Kashmiris, the independence and use of state institutions –  are substantial; no Mani Shankar Aiyar, for example, may be expected to see eye to eye with policy directions that a Kapil Sibal may have in mind on a plethora of issues.  

Khurshid, therefore, is on the ball in suggesting that not until the party finds a new consensus can any leadership be expected either to formulate with confidence lines of policy or be successful in delivering results.

Salman Khurshid. Photo: The Wire

Way forward

Not being Prashant Kishor, this intervenor has no sleight-of-hand recipe to recommend to a party that is more than 125 years old, having gone through and negotiated vicissitudes of great complexity in its magnificent career.

As a mere citizen wedded to the ideals that the freedom movement bequeathed to us and that the Indian National Congress has sought to pursue, however strenuously or not at different points of its history, both in government and in the opposition, I will say this:

Take all ideological and policy options to the last woman and man in every party forum, from block level upwards; let a free and bold expression of views have their democratic play, take a vote among  all party organisations – among women, minorities, students, the youth wing, panchayat leaders etc.,

Bring the outcome to an elected AICC, take a vote there, bring the outcome to an elected CWC, and pass on the consensus, or the majority view to an elected party president, and take it from there.

I may emphasise the importance of taking a vote at each point; not until there is a registered record of opinions can either opportunism or bickering come to an end.

This, as is well-known, is the way in which Communist parties formulate their “line” which is then handed to the politburo to implement.

One thing seems certain to me: the conundrum that the grand old party now confronts may not be resolved by mere iterations of time-tested positions, or declarations of intent by eminent Congress people, or any pro forma reshuffling of personnel here, there or elsewhere.

Only a  hard-nosed dive into the features of the conundrum may yield a course of theory and practice to which Congress women and men feel freshly committed, and one that they may be trusted to propagate with conviction from the grassroots upwards.

And the entire membership of the party must be drafted behind the reformulated directions, and set to work 24×7 as do workers of the ruling BJP.

One other thing that also must be put to debate at all forums is this: should the Congress seek reunification with those who have gone on to float separate parties, and in what ways may the Congress seek to build bridges with diverse secular parties to forge an Indian People’s Front to combat the fascistic turn of the Indian state.

I may proffer the anguished view that the fate of the Congress party seems to me symbiotically interwoven with the fate of the republic per se.

It would be in order for media channels friendly to the republic and attentive to the quality of problems that the grand old party faces to consider their own future as well in that larger conglomeration of concerns, and make bold and strenuous efforts to address the national crisis.

Badri Raina taught at Delhi University.

Decision on Next Uttarakhand CM Likely After BJP Legislative Party Meet on March 19

While several senior party leaders have thrown their hat in the ring, the dice appears loaded in favour of Pushkar Singh Dhami – despite his loss in the assembly elections.

New Delhi: The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has made up its mind to wait for the ‘auspicious’ period to start after Holashtak to make a final announcement on who would be the next chief minister of Uttarakhand. Though acting chief minister Pushkar Singh Dhami, who was given the reins of the state only last July, was the natural choice, his loss in the assembly election from Khatima has just added a touch of uncertainty to the process.

Incidentally, the BJP appears to be following the Hindu practice of not doing any auspicious work during the period of Holashtak, which begins eight days before Holi. As such while the result of the Uttarakhand polls was announced on March 10, the party has still not announced any name for the CM’s post. The BJP had won 47 seats in the 70-member House while the Congress had bagged 19.

While several senior party leaders – from the state and former central leaders – have thrown their hat in the ring, the dice appears loaded in favour of Dhami. He was in New Delhi on March 15 and is learnt to have met Union home minister Amit Shah, BJP national president J.P. Nadda, BJP organisation secretary B.L. Santosh and Rajya Sabha MP and national spokesperson Anil Baluni.

The Uttarakhand BJP president also visited Delhi along with Dhami and met several senior party leaders.

Following the meeting, the BJP announced that a decision was taken by its parliamentary board to appoint defence minister Rajnath Singh as observer and minister of state for external affairs Meenakshi Lekhi as the co-observer for Uttarakhand.

It is expected that they would participate in the legislative party meeting of the BJP on March 19, where a decision would be taken on the next chief minister. The name of the next CM is expected to be announced the following day.

It is pertinent to note here that after Dhami’s loss in the assembly poll, over half-a-dozen legislators from the state had offered to resign from their seats so that he could contest the by-election. Apart from Dhami, the names of several other party leaders – including those of former Union minister Ramesh Pokhriyal, and former state cabinet minister Dhan Singh Rawat and Satpal Maharaj – are doing the rounds.

More trouble for Congress?

Meanwhile, the electoral outcome in the state has not augured well for the Congress on several counts. Following Sonia Gandhi’s decision to remove all the state unit chiefs in the five states which went to polls recently, the head of the Uttarakhand unit Ganesh Godiyal submitted his resignation.

In the meantime, a war of words also started between several prominent leaders of Congress in Uttarakhand. As former chief minister and Congress campaign committee chairperson Harish Rawat lost his election from Lalkuan, leader of opposition Pritam Singh took a dig at him saying people should not fight from constituencies where they have not worked for five years.

As many took his comments to be directed at Rawat, the latter responded through a Facebook post by saying that he never wanted to contest any election and only wanted to campaign across the state. But, he said, the Screening Committee asked him to contest as leaders felt it would otherwise send a wrong message.

Rawat says he was forced to contest from Lalkuan

Rawat also denied that he wanted to contest from Lalkuan, saying his preference was to stand from Ramnagar.

This time, he said, the party first decided to field him from Ramnagar but then changed its mind and asked him to contest from Lalkuan, from where he lost to Mohan Singh Bisht of the BJP.

Incidentally, Rawat has never won an election during the regular assembly polls so far. In 2014, following the party’s win, he had won the by-election from Dharchula. Apart from that, he lost from Haridwar Rural and Kichha in 2017 and Lalkuan this year.

Rawat has also contested nine Lok Sabha elections since 1980 and was elected four times – thrice from Almora and once from Haridwar.

Congress Slams Modi Over Motera Stadium Name, Calls it ‘Insult’ to Every Indian

Amid the controversy, the government said the name change involves only the Motera stadium and the sports complex where it is located will continue to be named after Sardar Patel.

New Delhi: The renaming of the refurbished Sardar Patel cricket stadium in Ahmedabad after Prime Minister Narendra Modi triggered a political slugfest on Wednesday, with the opposition Congress saying it was an insult to India’s first home minister and the ruling BJP flagging the naming of numerous stadia in the country after Nehru-Gandhi family members.

The Congress said the renaming of the refurbished Sardar Patel cricket stadium in Ahmedabad after Modi is “an insult to every single Indian”, and asserted that the BJP can never be a “game-changer” but can only be a “name changer”.

Taking a dig, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi again invoked his ‘Hum do humare do’ jibe, claiming that the truth was out with the stadium having the prime minister’s name, two ends being named after corporate houses and Amit Shah’s son being involved in cricket administration.

“Beautiful how the truth reveals itself. Narendra Modi stadium — Adani end — Reliance end. With Jay Shah presiding,” Gandhi tweeted, with the hashtag ‘HumDoHumareDo’.

Amid the controversy, the government said the name change involves only the Motera stadium and the sports complex where it is located will continue to be named after Sardar Patel.

Soon after President Ram Nath Kovind inaugurated the world’s largest cricket stadium in Ahmedabad, which will now be known as ‘Narendra Modi stadium’, social media was flooded with remarks, including by some leaders of the Congress and other opposition parties who alleged that the renaming exercise amounted to an “insult” to Sardar Patel.

Union ministers Prakash Javadekar and Ravi Shankar Prasad hit out at the Congress leaders, saying those who never respected Sardar Patel were objecting to the stadium being named after Modi.

Asked about the allegations, Javadekar told reporters that only the Motera stadium has been renamed and the complex where it is located continues to be named after Vallabhbhai Patel.

Prasad, who was present alongside Javadekar at the media briefing after a cabinet meeting, took a swipe at the Congress leaders, asking whether party chief Sonia Gandhi or Rahul Gandhi have so far praised the world’s tallest statue of Sardar Patel erected at Kevadiya in Gujarat.

Javadekar said the two Congress leaders have not even visited the statue.

Prasad continued, “I want to say this with full responsibility that a tourist place getting global praise has not been visited yet or praised by the two Congress leaders. What else is there to say?”

Congress leader Shashi Tharoor tweeted, “Maybe they just realised the stadium was named for a Home Minister who had banned their parent organisation! Or maybe this is advance booking to ensure the next visiting Head of State is hosted here, like Trump? Or is this the beginning of a legacy-creation-thru-labelling spree (sic)?”

Congress spokesperson Pawan Kher, at a media briefing, said the removal of Patel’s name is an “insult to every single Indian, that hurts every single Indian”.

Information and Broadcasting minister Javadekar tweeted, “The name of the Sports Complex is Sardar Patel Sports Enclave. Only the name of the cricket stadium, within the complex, has been named after Narendra Modi. Ironically, ‘The Family’, which never respected Sardar Patel, even after his death, is now making hue and cry.”

A similar post was tweeted by Kiren Rijiju, Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Youth Affairs and Sports.

Rijiju later also tweeted, “In 2007, Smt Sonia Gandhi came to Arunachal Pradesh and changed beautiful Arunachal University as Rajiv Gandhi University, laid foundation for Rajiv Gandhi Polytechnic, after having Indira Gandhi Park, Rajiv Gandhi Stadium, Nehru Museum, Jawahar Nehru College, list is endless…”

BJP’s national president J.P. Nadda said that naming the world’s largest stadium after the prime minister is a “humble attempt to honour his vision” to take India to the top-most position in the sports arena as well.

The party’s IT cell head Amit Malviya said that “the usual suspects” have a problem just because the cricket stadium, one of the many facilities in the Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel Sports Enclave, has been named after Modi.

“Get used to it! Today, several people speak of India and PM Modi in the same breath…,” he tweeted.

Malviya hit back at Rahul Gandhi, saying he forgets that Adani End is the legacy of times when Congress politicians controlled Gujarat Cricket Association.

“Stands are allocated through an open auction and RaGa and his family are welcome to bid for it But this constant targeting of job creators is a problem!” Malviya said.

He also said probably Rahul Gandhi does not remember that 22 big stadia in the country are named after his father Rajiv Gandhi, grandmother Indira Gandhi and great grandfather Jawaharlal Nehru.

(PTI)