Friday, May 26, 2023

Great Expectations: Modi Govt since 2014 .....

 Great Expectations: Modi Govt since 2014 


It's a turning point in India's political history. The sense of entitlement has made ways for hard work and talent. 


The Modi government was sworn in first on May 26, 2014 and so technically Nine years over.

However, the BJP and the centre will celebrate completion of nine years in office on May 30 and a month-long outreach will be launched as in 2019 for the second term, PM Narendra Modi and his council of ministers were sworn in on May 30th. 


It was a period of 'Great Expectations'.... "Sundar thi mein woh pathik, meri sundarta nikhar gayi... (I was beautiful oh stranger, my beauty also stunned one and all).





There are many tales, milestones and anecdotes of achievements. The country braved through century's worst health and socio-economic crises in 2020 and  2021 and the Prime Minister gave slogans like 'Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas' and punctuated it with elements of Viswas (faith) and Prayas (concerted efforts with a unity of purpose). 


'Organiser'


PM Modi and BJP have only used the multiple challenges to reinforce his political position and offer himself to the people as a strong Hindu nationalist leader in a country with about one billion Hindus in a population of 1.35 billion.


The ruling BJP and the union government's ministers are hyperactive in claiming a positive performance for the government. And what suits the official gambit is that there is still no big challenge to Modi at the national level from opposition parties. 


The period of 9 years created an unprecedented atmosphere of religious nationalism -- and something that might

have unnerved some forces both within India and outside, but united the nation. The country also seems

determined to fight corruption and easy flow of black money. This was readily amplified in RBI's recent moves

to withdraw Rs 2000 currency notes and even many from PM's rival quarters have backed the decision.


The opponents on the other side banked on a select school of media and even overseas fourth estate. The toxic

phrases and one-liners flowed in.

While Modi's detractors would like to describe him as a politician, who "has failed to deliver" (Time magazine

in 2019), his admirers and common people still believe him to be a messiah, a miracle man. 'Modi hae toh mumkin

hae'. To many he is still the best political bet for the BJP and his government represents aspirations and myriad dreams.


Since May 2019 when Narendra Modi returned to power for the second time, the Karnataka poll outcome was only the second victory for Rahul Gandhi and the Congress. The first was Himachal Pradesh in December 2022. Even Congres leaders have admitted that in both Himachal Pradesh and Karnataka, the Congress victories were largely attributed to local factors. So where is the Rahul Gandhi angle to take on Modi? 


"The BJP could win 15 assembly polls out of 25 since 2019," says party national vice president M Chuba Ao and

goes on to exude confidence that in 2024, the saffron party will increase the tally from its 2019 poll tally of

303. 

If the first five years of Modi government catered to issues like Swachh Abhiyan, Jan Dhan, constructing toilets and Beti Bachao programmes; between 2019 and 2023, the Prime Minister laid emphasis on ideological moorings.


Hence the Citizenship Amendment Act; Article 370, construction of the Ram temple in Ayodhya based on the Supreme Court’s verdict and even strengthening the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA) which gave teeth to agencies to designate an individual as a terrorist and impound properties got priorities.

 

In 2019, Amit Shah, then

BJP national president and now Home Minister, said mit Shah, if the party returned to power in 2019, it would be in power for next 50 years.


Some interpreted these as threats while BJP leaders said such statements were only a reflection of confidence in the party's leadership.The 2019 elections India also marks a significant drop in communist influence, mainly in the form of ideology.



Besides Congress, Modi regime in last years has hit caste based parties BSP and Samajwadi Party. 

The communists lost miserably in their so-called bastions in Kerala and West Bengal. Left parties did not win any of the 42 seats in West Bengal, where they ruled for 34 years until 2011. Although communists continue to run the state government in Kerala, their influence in national polity nearly ended. 


Several opposition parties including Trinamool Congress and Congress are now often accused of being anti-Hindu. That resulted in Congress and other opposition leaders visiting temples to put on a show for the media.



In September 2016 and February 2019,  Modi hardened his stance against arch-rival Pakistan when the countries' two militaries traded blows over Kashmir.


The election results have likewise been seen as an approval of Modi's muscular brand of nationalism. There was a right synthesis along with the developmental agenda and the spirit of Hindutva values.



Speaking about elections and achievements, Delhi BJP president  Virendra Sachdeva, said that his party won because "people admired our sincerity and the last-man-delivery.


"People were content with what they got--the gas cylinders, rural houses and toilets," Sachdeva says. 


In the end, Indian political history is now at a turning point. The decimation of the Congress suggests the total collapse of the old political system that had thrived banking on appeasement of minorities and encouraged corruption and a sense of entitlement.


Modi has also shown how he abhors Nehruvian politics and what the BJP calls the dynasty rule Nehru family. Nehru, his daughter Indira Gandhi and her son Rajiv Gandhi together headed the government in New Delhi for 37 years.


There is an unleashing of 'new politics' and the forces will in future perhaps have to toe the new line as being already articulated by the BJP --- a high rate of delivery in good governance.


Modi showing his abhorrence to Nehruvian politics has also gone in his favour as for the first time, younger lots and

disgruntled Indians thought the existing system - status quo - was being seriously challenged.


  Ends 


No comments:

Post a Comment

Can 'Junior Lalu' upset Narendra Modi in Bihar?

Can Junior Lalu upset Modi in Bihar?  Patna Of course there has been a lot of hype about Prime Minister Narendra Modi's repeated visits ...