Bihar
Assembly Elections 2015: The future awaits long-term outcome!
By
S.K.T.
Nasar
Kolkata
Many nicknamed
Bihar Assembly Elections 2015 as Mini-General Election of India. This rubric
proved right at the end of the process. Now that Bihar Elections are over, it
is time to dispassionately revisit this outstanding show. Unfortunately, even a
truly dispassionate account would not be seen as unbiased in the present
charged din. The good news, however, is that there was no violent strife throughout
the extravaganza. The Election Commission of India (ECI) ordered re-polling in
only two booths. Parliamentary democracy has triumphed! The people of Bihar have
won. Bihar has shown the way forward to India.
Bharatya Janta
Party (BJP) propelled its campaign on a hyperbole. Their campaign was spearheaded
by Prime Minister Narendra Damodardas Modi and BJP President Amitbhai
Anilchandra Shah. Only they were in public view. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak
Sangh (RSS) provided logistics from back stage in the early days; the veil blew
off in later phases.
The grand alliance
alias mahagathbandhan of Janta Dal (United) [JDU], Rashtrya Janta Dal
(RJD) and Indian National Congress (INC) was unexpected because these three political
formations were on war with each other until their coming together
for Bihar elections. The notion of their joining hands appeared to be ridiculous
and unsustainable. Electioneering by BJP-RSS was based on consideration that
the mahagathbandhan was too fragile to fall apart even before ECI
announced the elections. This assumption proved to be a grievous
error of political judgment.
BJP-RSS entered
the election fray as National Democratic Alliance (NDA) with smaller parties
such as Lok
Jan Shakti Party (LJSP/LJP) of Union Minister Ram Vilas Paswan, Bihar Rashtriya Lok Samta Party (RLSP) headed by Upendra
Kushwaha, Jitan Ram Manjhi-led Hindustani Awam Morcha (Secular) [HAM(S)],
Sampurna Vikas Dal (SVD) captained by Ranjan Prasad Yadav and the likes who had
dissociated on personal grudge rather than ideology with either JD(U) or RJD.
Nitish Kumar
(JDU) was the sitting Chief Minister of Bihar at the launch of mahagathbandhan.
Lalu Prasad Yadav (RJD) was, and still is banned from contesting elections for
some more time to come. One-time friends, they were foes. Both rooted in Bihar
have a vast experience of Bihar politics and chief ministership of the state. The
foes-turned-friends have the know-how of national politics. They have both been
well known as very effective and extremely assertive Union Cabinet Ministers.
Calling them as mere caste leaders of Bihar would be erroneous. Mulayam Singh
Yadav, the undisputed leader and founder of Samajwadi Party (SP) and Sonia
Gandhi (INC) joined JD (U)-RJD coalition a bit late but nevertheless with
enthusiasm. Thus the JD (U)-RJD-INC-SP combination was called the mahagathbandhan,
the mega coalition. SP pulled out of mahagathbandhan when seat sharing
was underway. JD (U) sacrificed 15 seats of 115 sitting Members of Legislative
Assembly at that point in time. RJD was the winner in seat shares. The final tally of seats to be contested was
100 (JDU):100 (RJD):40 (INC). The mahagathbandhan stood like one rock
throughout the great election process. Mahagathbandhan was resurgent.
Composition of
parties in NDA and mahagathbandhan was too confusing for common voters,
but public has innovative ways to sort out issues. The common man recognised
only two formations – BJP for NDA and mahagathbandhan for Nitish-Lalu
duo. It was as if a two party election was being held! Communist parties for
reasons known only to them entered the elections as one block independent of the
two major formations. Communists were largely ignored by the electorate. All
India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) founded by Asaduddin Owaisi put
candidates in Muslim majority border areas i.e. Seemanchal districts but failed
to win a single seat.
BJP-RSS family,
the Parivar was overconfident and arrogant. Modi-Shah campaign was of lowly
quality that was countered by Lalu head on. Modi had begun the campaign with
the development agenda but without actionable plans for Bihar. Modi-Shah
knew only Gujrat. Nitish-Lalu knew their Bihar. Modi’s Gujrat-model development
agenda was demolished point to point with facts, figures and actionable approach
for Bihar by Nitish. Modi was eloquent yet changing course of rhetoric. Nitish
was lacklustre yet widely perceived to be honest, serious and consistent. INC
of Sonia-Rahul struggled to climb up the electoral ladder yet was given due
importance within mahagathbandhan. BJP-RSS, on the other hand, made Sushil
Modi, a long-time active leader, play errand boy to Modi-Shah. Patrons of BJP such
as L.K. Advani, M.M. Joshi and Jaswant Singh as also
BJP leaders from Bihar were conspicuous by their absence during electioneering.
Famous and experienced leaders such as C. P. Thakur and Shatrughna Sinha were
not allowed by BJP to be seen in public. Thus, ‘Bihar’ was completely absent
from BJP campaigning; ‘Gujrat’ and ‘RSS’ over dominated the scene. Bihar
electors refused to buy this idea.
The tenor of
campaigning was obnoxious from the beginning. Expressions such as ‘bad DNA’, ‘shaitan’
(devil), ‘brhmapishach’ (devil incarnate), ‘narbakhchi’
(cannibal) et cetera have left a clinging bitter taste. Suddenly, the
inhuman lynching of Akhlaque by a mob at Dadri based on manufactured rumor that
he had kept beef in his refrigerator took the centre stage. Then on cow and
beef became the preferred rhetoric. Agenda of development were sidelined and finally
abandoned. Unprintable expletives were freely exchanged. The mainstay of BJP-RSS
collectively called the Sangh Parivar has always been anti-Muslim and
hate-Muslim formula. This ideology not only pervaded Bihar electioneering but
resorted to a fierce propaganda during the campaign. Mahagathbandhan were
prepared for it; the Nitish-Lalu-Sonia trio worked quietly among the masses
notwithstanding the liberal use of electronic social media. Prashant Kishore,
who had formulated strategies for Narendra Modi to win the 2014 Parliamentary
elections, was hired by Nitish to assist JDU for the Bihar assembly elections
2015. Nitish matched Modi in the use of social media and surpassed the latter
in placing developments achieved and developmental strategy for Bihar. Lalu
consolidated the communities of Muslim-Yadav (MY), other backward castes (OBCs)
and extremely backward castes (EBCs) in his typical style; his supporters
campaigned door to door. Sonia-Rahul provided a national touch to mahagathbandhan.
Thus, mahagathbandhan succeeded in connecting Bihar with India while the
NDA harped on Gujrat state and the still-awaited achche din (good days)
for India and for Bihar. Mahagathbandhan penetrated deep among masses. NDA
hovered over Bihar.
The five-phase
polling was remarkable thanks to Bihar electorate. Violence was not reported
from anywhere. India waited for the counting of votes on 8 November 2015. India
was glued on that day to television and radio since the morning as never
before. Channel after TV channel began with reports of sweeping NDA victory.
Mobile phones were busy and calls crisscrossed for over four hours. NDA
supporters around India began bursting crackers, playing holi and
exchanging laddus. Paid national channels enthusiastically showed this tamasha.
Expert panelists and psephologists appeared on the screen to boast how real their
predictions were and began talking about the post-election achche din.
The merry making by NDA and hauling of always-on-TV experts suddenly stopped.
Something grossly devastating appeared to have happened. ETV-Bihar was,
however, reporting the true picture. National Channels were fooling viewers in
India and beyond with lies. They took about four hours in coming to terms with
the reality. And, the reality was that Mahagathbandhan, not NDA was
wining Assembly seats. Shameless paid National TV channels never apologised to
viewers for such unpardonable goof up. Here was the first disgraceful national fallout
of Bihar elections. By noon time the results were becoming clearer. The rest is
history. The final tally of seats won was: Mahagathbandhan-178 seats won
{80(RJD)+71[JD(U)]+27(INC)}; NDA-58 seats won
{BJP(53)+RLSP(2)+LJSP(2)+HAM(S)(1)}and Others-7 seats won [CPI
(L)(3)+Independents(4). Mahagathbandhan turned out to be the winner.
The
swearing in of the new government of Nitish Kumar on 20 November 2015 was
gala. About two lakh persons had gathered at Gandhi Maidan, the most prominent venue
in Patna where Quit India Movement of 1942 was launched and where Jaiprakash
Narayan embarked on his total revolution. The new government formation
was undoubtedly a national event. Party leaders from across the country such as
Mamata Banerjee, Arvind Kejriwal, Sharad Yadav, Sharad Pawar, Deve Gowda, Rahul
Gandhi, Faruque Abdullah, Sitaram Yechuri, representatives of Dravid Munetra
Kazhagham (DMK), Shiv Sena and Akali Dal et cetera were present alongside the Chief
Ministers of nine states and one former Prime Minister. Two of his cabinet and
BJP colleagues M. Venkaiah Naidu and Rajiv Pratap Rudy represented Prime
Minister Modi. This list is long and dignitaries represented the whole of the
country.
Bihar
Governor Ram Nath Kovind administered the oath of office. Nitish Kumar took
oath as the Chief Minister of Bihar for the fifth time. Tejaswi Kumar, the
second son of Lalu Prasad Yadav and Rabri Devi both former Chief Minister of
Bihar, joined the Cabinet and tipped to be the Deputy Chief Minister. Tej Pratap Yadav, younger brother of Tejaswi, inducted as a cabinet minister
while taking the oath of Office, mispronounced a word that would convey the
antonym of the right word. The Governor intervened and corrected Tej Pratap. It was apparent that Lalu
had salvoed the first shot. Nitish has the backing of 71 JDU MLAs. Lalu has 80
RJD MLAs. Sonia has 27 INC MLAs. Sushil Modi of BJP has the support of 58 NDA
MLAs.
Lalu
is likely to, and in most probability will derail the governance of Nitish. BJP-RSS think tank is now chanting that the whole affair was restricted
only to Bihar elections; nothing to do with either the Union Government or the
national BJP leadership. India thinks otherwise.
We are watching with fingers crossed!
We are watching with fingers crossed!
========================================
No comments:
Post a Comment