Showing posts sorted by relevance for query modi. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query modi. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, July 12, 2013

Exclusive: 'The Makeover And Marketing Of Narendra Modi'

By Siddharth Shukla / INN Bureau

The European diplomats gathered at the German ambassador's residence in New Delhi's lush green embassy enclave quizzed the guest of honour on everything from the economy and communal violence to his political ambitions. But nobody, the representatives from most of the 28 European Union states agreed, could publicly mention the man they were meeting that day: Narendra Modi, country's most controversial politician and, possibly, the next prime minister.

It was a moment that captures the paradox at the heart of Modi, and the caution with which the outside world approaches him. The January lunch at Ambassador Michael Steiner's residence ended a decade-long unofficial EU boycott of the 62-year-old politician, who had just won his third straight term as chief minister of Gujarat. The boycott stemmed from 2002 riots in Gujarat.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Expose: Who Attend Modi Rallies - Are They 'Real or Fake'?

By Sandipan Sharma | Gandhinagar

Rahul Gandhi and his team should attend a Narendra Modi rally. It will help them understand the mind of the Modibhakt and the Modibasher better. Who exactly goes for Narendra Modi rallies? Who screams, shouts and raises the “Modi! Modi!” war cry? Are all his listeners his fans? Why are some BJP candidates competing with each other to host Modi shows? 

Had the Congress been there during Modi’s 5-stop tour of Rajasthan on Tuesday, it would have known some of the answers.

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Focus: Modis Of Mehsana Await Their ‘Moment Of Pride’

By Swetha Patel | Ahmedabad

No bitterness as Narendra Modi’s family and in-laws tackle media frenzy. Days after Narendra Modi made his first public admission of marriage to Jashodaben in his election affidavit, the spotlight is firmly on the Modis of Mehsana — the extended family of the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate.

As Modi’s in-laws scramble to tackle the media frenzy, and rally together for the “jamaai who will be PM”, his own relatives happily recount tales of his younger days.

Sunday, October 02, 2011

Nitish or Modi - Who will make a better PM of India?

By M H Ahssan

When Narendra Modi threw his hat into the ring to become India's next prime minister, he never bargained for the fact that he would stumble on a skull cap. The now famous "cap incident" was a rare instance of spontaneity in a carefully choreographed Sadbhavna fast in Ahmedabad, when the Gujarat Chief Minister, in a gesture of spare-me-the-honour, rejected the cap offered by Maulana Hazrat Sufi Imam Sahi Sayeed Mehendi Husain. For a leader desperate to reach out to the Muslims of Gujarat and to Indians at large, that moment preserved by cameras was heavy with meaning, especially so when Modi displays a penchant for wearing a variety of colourful headgear that display the country's ethnic diversity.

The three-day amity fast was designed by India's most popular state administrator as a Gandhian short-cut to gain political acceptability needed for a national leader-and to announce his own ticket for the top job in 2014. The queue of BJP stalwarts, all as ambitious as Modi but with less credentials, was a sign of his rising clout as frontrunner. But when the curtain dropped on the drama, did Modi look merely desperate-an impatient player overdoing the part?

The question became inevitable as the noise accompanying the self-canonisation in Ahmedabad was in stark contrast to the silence in Patna. Nitish Kumar, the Chief Minister of Bihar, shares only one passion with Modi: development. When Modi hard-sells his own mythology as a 21st century Sardar Patel who deserves a space larger than Gujarat, Nitish quietly waits in the wings, biding his time, patiently sure of himself. When Modi performs his way into front pages and onto prime time television, intimidating his colleagues in BJP and allies in NDA, Nitish takes backstage in Patna and refuses to supply the mandatory soundbites. If the flamboyance in Ahmedabad was divisive, the silence in Patna was reassuring. When the show was over and Modi had his lemonade, one man stood between him and his unhidden prime ministerial ambition: Nitish Kumar.


What is it that makes Modi, unarguably the most popular leader on the Right, a polarising figure in spite of his commendable achievement in bridging the communal divide in post-2002 Gujarat? Why is it that he is still a haunted man, forever struggling for acceptability beyond Gujarat? In opinion polls conducted by india today and even other publications, Modi consistently maintains his lead as India's best chief minister and the best possible prime minister in a non-upa government, but he still cannot take a break from the project of makeover: he is always a work in progress. Modi is trapped in his own image as an uncompromising Hindutva leader. That may be fine with the faithful but in India the gold standard of a right-wing prime minister was set by Atal Bihari Vajpayee, the abiding embodiment of inclusive leadership.

Modi is still the proverbial hardliner, and hardline can get you success, not final success. Then, there is the legal labyrinth of riot-related cases which he continues to navigate, and it is unlikely that he or anyone knows till when. Modi has his rebuttal ready for the harrumphers. "When I took over, many felt I was too inexperienced to lead the government but today the same people say I have proved myself. So opinion can change over a period of time. But there is a vested interest group in India with intellectual ability that opposed Sardar Patel, Morarji Desai, Atalji, Advaniji and now me. So the belief that I am a polarising figure is not justified," he tells Newsindia.

This indomitable faith in himself is not totally misplaced, for he is still the BJP's best bet for 2014. A Modi showcased as India's best administrator with a mass base, and communication skills to match, will be a formidable force. His strength is Gujarat, as much as it is his curse. He now wants a bigger gallery to mount his bestselling portrait as a clean ruler and a development fanatic. Gujarat is the development model that industry moguls continue to toast and The Economist writes about. Under Modi's stewardship, the state has become an economic powerhouse whose growth rate is higher than the country's. Gujarat generates 16 per cent of India's industrial output and 22 per cent of its exports. From infrastructure to agriculture, from education to green technology, Gujarat has taken huge strides, showing the rest of India what focused leadership can achieve.


Says industrialist and president of the Gujarat Chamber of Commerce and Industry Mahendra Patel: "Modi's greatest asset is his missionary spirit, which has forced the bureaucracy and industry to act. His development model has a trickle-down effect to the lowest levels." A tough administrator, he refused to slow down the drive against farmers indulging in theft to draw ground water for irrigation on the eve of the 2007 polls despite pressure from BJP MLAs. He has become an apostle of participative development. "If you look at India's past 40 years, you will find that ruling parties tailored their budget with a view to strengthen vote banks. They created models that made people dependent on Government. But in Gujarat, we rejected the vote-bank based model and created a new model," he says.

As an organiser and a campaigner who can play with the mass mind, he now wants to sell the slogan "Sab ka saath, sab ka vikas" to a wider audience. And within the BJP, in spite of the charioteer-in-chief Advani's refusal to retire from the roadshow, no one is more qualified to do so. As a senior BJP leader tells Newsindia, "Ultimately, who else is there?" Publicly, though, party leaders maintain that it is too early for the party to choose a prime ministerial candidate.


Arun Jaitley, in the run-up to the 2009 elections, had queered the pitch by endorsing Modi's name for prime ministership in 2014. Today the opposition leader in the Rajya Sabha, who is himself emerging as a national leader worthy of the top job, says the focus is on putting the BJP house in order. "The elections are still three years away," he adds. Party president Nitin Gadkari too says no decision has been taken yet to project anybody as the prime minister candidate for 2014. "We have not decided on Narendrabhai's name. His fast was not to become the prime minister. It is to clear the misunderstanding about Gujarat," he says.

He admits that there are problems in endorsing Modi's name because of the 2002 riots taint. "He cannot do much about it" but the party is making efforts to focus more on his development agenda, administrative skills and dynamic leadership, he says. "If Modi can prove that he can defeat Congress by a decisive margin in the Assembly elections, it will become a little easier for him," Gadkari says. But he is categorical about the possibility of Nitish as usurper: "He may be a key ally but remains an outsider. No worker in the party will campaign for him." Will allies accept Modi? "Ultimately votes count. If we get more votes, allies will automatically come. BJP reaching 165-170 seats is important. And when you go to war, you go with your best General. Modi is the best General that the party has," says a senior party leader.

The General must first win the war within. Modi has hardly been on talking terms with Gadkari ever since rss pracharak Sanjay Joshi was reinducted into the party to strengthen BJP in Uttar Pradesh against the Gujarat strongman's wishes. His weight-reducing bariatric surgery was a well-timed excuse for the party boss to avoid the photo-op with Modi during the Sadbhavna mission. Sushma Swaraj, who made it to Ahmedabad, was visibly uncomfortable in the company of the man who she thinks is responsible for her stint in the wilderness after her defeat from Bellary in 1999. Party insiders feel that Modi agreed to give a Rajya Sabha berth to Smriti Irani only to counter Swaraj.


Apart from Advani, Jaitley is the only central leader with whom Modi enjoys a good rapport, though Jaitley himself has prime ministerial ambitions. The rss is already working on a succession plan for Gujarat as Modi is convinced that he deserves an office higher than the one he occupies now. The new generation, swayed by the political zeitgeist, is sceptical about the Modi brand. "While the youth of the country may be on a warpath against corruption, demanding an honest administration, they are also looking for a more inclusive social structure. In this day and age, Modi may never be able to wish away the 2002 blot. It is there to stay. The party will have to do better than a Modi," says a young BJP leader.

That is why Modi's desperation is Nitish's hope. Parties like TDP, Biju Janata Dal and agp-traditionally anti-Congress but wary of alienating minority support in BJP's company-would be happy embracing NDA if Nitish Kumar is at the helm. Apart from his proven record in winning Muslim votes, he is winning, like Modi, in the politics of development as well. As an administrator, he has addressed critical areas ranging from restoration of law and order to health, educational services and building roads.


As a leader, he has pushed targeted social welfare schemes. According to his acolytes, if Nitish can make Bihar a functional state, he has the potential to change India too on behalf of NDA. Nitish's biggest disadvantage, though, is his electoral base. He may have the credibility and character to become a national leader, but JD-U, with only 20 members in 543-memberLok Sabha, is not a political force beyond Bihar. Though he has a good political chemistry with leaders like Naveen Patnaik, no regional satrap has come forward to propose his leadership.

The biggest roadblock for him will be Modi himself. With less than six months' age difference-the elder of the two, Modi, turned 61 only last week-the two can neutralise each other. There is no love lost between the two. The relationship worsened on May 10, 2009 when Modi, during an NDA rally at Ludhiana, clasped Nitish Kumar's hand and forcibly raised it as a show of solidarity.


Many considered it as Modi's revenge because Nitish had earlier scuttled Modi's plans for campaigning in Bihar for the Lok Sabha elections. Senior jd-u leaders seeking anonymity maintain that Nitish is mentally prepared to pull the plug on the alliance if Modi is named the BJP's prime ministerial candidate. With 117 jd-u MLAs in the 243-member Bihar assembly-besides a handful of Independent supporters-he thinks he can afford to take the risk. (BJP is his ally in Bihar.) Nitish has succeeded in keeping Bihar offlimits for Modi.

Since taking over as Bihar Chief Minister in November 2005, Nitish has put his foot down on Modi campaigning in the state. Nitish does not even mention Modi's name on public platforms, and considers the Gujarat chief minister as a communal leader unacceptable to his inclusive brand of politics. In June 2010, Nitish raged against advertisements carrying a picture of them together at Ludhiana which were placed in Bihar newspapers by Modi supporters. The advertisements had boasted about Gujarat's flood-relief aid to Bihar. Nitish took no time to withdraw his dinner invitation to BJP top brass then present in Patna for BJP's national executive meet.


He not only refused to attend the BJP rally held at the conclusion of the meet but also returned the Rs 5 crore given by the Gujarat government. Besides derailing the BJP's national executive meet, Nitish almost rocked the alliance. He knows that BJP cannot afford to lose someone like him who continues to be wooed by the Congress. He now hopes to keep Delhi inaccessible to his rival, though, while talking to Newsindia, he is characteristically diplomatic: "The BJP is yet to officially declare anyone as its prime ministerial candidate. We can express our opinion only after an announcement is made."

The opinion is unlikely to please Modi. Come 2014 and it will be a clash between the socialist and the saffronite in the opposition for the highest political position. It will be a battle to behold.

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Modi’s Poll Strategy Blunder Unveils Sheer 'Communalism'

By Rajinder Puri | Delhi

OPINION While Mercury across the length and breadth of the country is soaring up, the histrionics of the political parties and their key leaders is also showing a rising graph. It’s a season of pledges, speeches and rhetoric which electorate of this great land experiences every five years. Perhaps this is the only time when the common man has opportunity and due importance to adjudge the candidates in the election fray, if they are well intentioned and speaking truth or simply playing to the gallery. 

First it was BJP Bihar MLA  Giriraj Singh. Next it was Vishwa Hindu Parishad leader  Pravin Togadia. Latest it was Shiv Sena MLC  Ramdas Kadam. All three made virulent hate speeches against Muslims and Pakistan.  Kadam made his hate speech while BJP prime ministerial candidate  Narendra Modi was sharing the stage with him.  Kadam told the public rally that when  Modi becomes Prime Minister he will “destroy Pakistan within six months of assuming power”. 

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Vibrant Gujarat: Modi is king of kings for India Inc


The sixth edition of the multi billion dollar investment summit, Vibrant Gujarat 2013, began at Gujarat’s state capital Gandhinagar. The biennial summit that brought in excess of Rs 20 lakh crore investments in 2011, amid economic blues, would yet again attempt to attract huge investment proposals over the next two days. This time about 14000 MoUs are likely to be signed.

At the summit, apart from the Chief Minister of Gujarat Narendra Modi,  a number of  who’s who of India Inc are in attendance. Ratan Tata, Mukesh Ambani, Anand Mahindra, Adi Godrej, Chanda Kochar are just a few of them.

During his address, Adi Godrej, chairman of the Godrej group, said Gujarat is heading in the right direction if India is to emulate China’a growth story. Mahindra Group chairman Anand Mahindra agreed, saying, “In future we will talk not just of China model in India, but Gujarat model in China.” Mahindra also added that as Gujaratis “think big, they are free from the fear of failure”.

Calling Reliance a ‘Gujarati company’, Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani said that he planned to invest Rs 100000 crore in Gujarat. Anil Ambani was even more effusive in his praise for Narendra Modi and called him a “leader of leaders, king of kings.” He said, “Narendrabhai Modi dreams with his eyes open, and has an open heart and mind.” He also said “Gandhi, Patel, Dhuribhai, and Modi are the key Gujarat heroes.

But it’s not just the Indian corporates who think Gujarat has set a benchmark.

Ron Somers, President of of the US-India Joint Business Council said that the success of Gujarat was because of predictability and stability. “Modi has set a new benchmark for progress all over, not only India.”

Patrick Brown, a Member of Parliament in Canada, said that 30 percent of Indians in Canada are in fact, Gujaratis and they have led to the development of the country.

Amitabh Kant, Ceo, DMIC (Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor) said that Gujarat has shown most energy in implementing DMIC. “Gujarat is creating new cities to benefit from DMIC,” he said. Japan Envoy Takeshi Yagi added that India is the key export base for Japan firms; and Gujarat is the key to DMIC infrastructural investments.

Vibrant Gujarat, Narendra Modi‘s showpiece global show, ostensibly intended to lure global investments into India’s western-most state, got off to a mela-like start yesterday. This summit, the sixth of Modi’s biennial jamborees that started in 2003, may not look like a game-changer for the state, but it nevertheless marks a watershed.

The inaugural session, which had a surfeit of speeches by businesspersons, foreign business delegations, and assorted people, served to emphasise one simple reality: the world is beating a path to the state. Thus, even while the session was more eulogy-oriented than business-focused, there is a tale to tell.

One, Brand Gujarat now vies with Brand India in the global sweepstakes. It is now being mentioned in the same breath as China and Singapore, with the Rt Hon Patricia Hewitt of the UK-India Business Council, a former British minister, saying Gujarat is growing faster than China. While some Indian states are growing even faster than Gujarat, the point is Gujarat’s track record has been stronger over longer periods of time, unlike other states, and unlike India itself.

Anand Mahindra probably went overboard in suggesting that just as we now talk of the China model, someday the Chinese will talk of the Gujarat model, but many speakers made similar points: if India has to grow like China, Gujarat is the state to watch.

If Brand Gujarat now rivals Brand India, it is largely because of external perceptions about who is running the governments: Manmohan Singh’s reformist credentials have faded over the last nine years, while Modi’s have grown stronger over the same period.

Two, Brand Gujarat is now acquiring a life of its own, beyond Brand Modi. Most of the speakers at yesterday’s inaugural, while making laudatory references to Modi’s role in pushing Gujarat’s image up the global investment consideration list, have now come to realise that Gujarat has strong pro-business credentials even without Modi.

This has happened for three unrelated reasons. One is Modi’s own efforts to drum up Gujarat as an investment destination over five previous Vibrant Gujarat summits. The second is the result of Modi’s critics: most of them have tried to rubbish his claims of taking Gujarat to double-digit growth by pointing out that the state has always had a tradition of entrepreneurship unknown in some other states. The third reason is the existence of a very strong Gujarati community in the west: the UK, Canada and US have connected the dots from strong Gujarati entrepreneurship in their own countries to Modi’s Gujarat. This is what has enabled them to end his global diplomatic isolation.

But, in the process, what has really got established is Brand Gujarat’s uniqueness in the global and Indian firmament. Brand Gujarat is thus delinking from Brand Modi – though they were inextricably linked over the last decade.

Three, Vibrant Gujarat is no longer about big investment commitments running into thousands of crores – all promised through memorandums of understanding with foreign delegations, many of which don’t finally end up as real projects. As this Firstpost report notes: “Only about 15 percent of the total investment pledged during the first four summits actually materialised. There has been a steady dip in the commissioning of large scale projects of over Rs 10 crore in the past few years. While in 2005, 422 projects worth 16,500 crore began commercial production, the number dipped to 75 projects in 2011.”

While Modi’s critics have rightly pointed out that the big investment claims have not always materialised, what they miss is the big picture: ceremonial occasions are about hype, hoopla, networking and brand building. The real investments happen quietly, when a Maruti makes Gujarat its “second home”, or when a Nano project shifts from Bengal to Gujarat.

What has really happened in the last five Vibrant Gujarat summits is simple: Modi has successfully positioned Gujarat for big-time investment. Whenever large investments start reflowing into India, Gujarat will get more than its fair share. This is not a mean achievement. Modi has repositioned Gujarat as the place to be within the matrix of interest in India.

Four, Modi himself was more muted this time. Perhaps it had something to do with the fact that he had to speak in English for a global audience. He is more comfortable in Gujarati and Hindi – where he is able to connect and communicate. But Modi did not even try to hardsell Gujarat this time. His speech talked of the broad goals and vision, not about getting someone to invest in his state. Is this because he thinks his job is done? That there is no point trying to hype something that seems self-evident? It either marks quiet confidence, or possibly a realisation that understatement may work better on the global stage.

Five, the Modi-for-PM talk was more muted this time. Unlike previous summits, this time the eulogies for Modi were devoid of references to Modi’s national ambitions. The Economic Times notes this with the headline: “India Inc invests in praising Modi, but not in his PM hopes.” In the past, the Ambanis and Mittals have vied with one another to say that Modi was fit to lead the country.

In 2009, Anil Ambani said: “Narendrabhai has done good for Gujarat and what will happen if he leads the nation.” Sunil Bharti Mittal said: “Chief Minister Modi …is running a state and can also run nation.”

This time, Ambani was equally profuse in his praise, but there were no references to Modi leading the country. Ditto for Mukesh Ambani or many of the others.

Does this mean India Inc is not so convinced about Modi now that his national aspirations are clearer after the recent Gujarat victory, amid much media speculation about a Rahul versus Modi fight in 2014?

This writer’s reading is more nuanced: Business leaders were more open in talking about Modi’s suitability for Delhi when that was not a near-term prospect. So it didn’t matter if they laid it on a bit thick – as business leaders usually do with all politicians, including Mamata Banerjee.

This time, though, the prospect appears more real in 2014, and the last thing businessmen want is to be victimised by the current central government for endorsing Modi in the run-up to the next election.

The non-reference to Modi’s national ambitions tells its own story.

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Focus: Why 'Narendra D Modi' Suit Was A 'PM Sized Flop'?

How many ways can you say Narendra Damodardas Modi? According to his suit, countless times. Modi’s suit has almost overshadowed the Obama visit. 

The couture buzz was supposed to be about Michelle Obama’s dress but Narendra Modi has eclipsed the First Lady and turned the spotlight on himself by showing up in a bandhgala embroidered with his own name. His suit got international coverage but here are four reasons why he might have just let stripes remain stripes.

Friday, January 25, 2013

BJP’s Dilemma: Is Modi Its Best Bet Or Highest Risk?

The latest “Mood of the Nation” survey by AC Nielsen has thrown up interesting results. Gujarat CM Narendra Modi was by far the most popular leader to be the next Prime Minister. His rating of 36 percent was higher than the combined ratings of Rahul Gandhi (21), Sonia Gandhi (5) and Manmohan Singh (4).

In a presidential style poll choice, Modi was favoured by 56 percent of respondents as compared to 41 percent for Rahul Gandhi. The survey, done in partnership with two news channels, was aired yesterday.

However, within the BJP, the survey throws up a new challenge: will the party now start acknowledging what the polls are telling it and give Modi a more elevated role? Despite the misgivings of some senior leaders, can the BJP ignore this kind of popular mood and not announce its prime ministerial candidate ahead of the next parliamentary elections? Should it not give Modi at least a symbolic position that would suggest he was the BJP’s face in 2014?

survey grabbed eyeballs because it has been the first to gauge the national mood after Modi’s victory in December. Even though it was conducted before Rahul Gandhi’s official elevation as No 2 in the Congress party and the accidental elevation of Rajnath Singh to the BJP’s presidentship, the Rahul versus Modi issue was in any case being debated in the public domain.

Rajnath Singh’s return as BJP President has evoked a great deal of interest both among Modi baiters and Modi supporters. Will the emergence of a leader as strong as Rajnath, a former UP chief minister and two-time party president, make it difficult for Modi to shift to Delhi? “I called up Shri Rajnath Singhji and congratulated him. He brings with him vast experience of both organisation and administration. Rajnath Singhji served as agriculture minister in Atalji’s government. He has always been associated with farmers. BJP will gain from this,” Modi said in two tweets on the day Singh was “elected” as party president.

The underlying message was Singh had his goodwill. The stress on Singh’s son-of-the-soil image is also open to varied interpretation. Party patriarch LK Advani also referred to this point. Given Modi’s strong attraction for urban youth and the middle class, the two could make for an interesting combination if they decide to work together – Modi as PM and Rajnath as party chief and organisational boss. Singh had played that precise role when Advani was the party’s PM candidate in 2009.

Inside the BJP, it has always been clear that Modi was not keen on the party president’s job. And he was certainly not keen to leave Gujarat at this stage. But there is little doubt he would like to be the face of the party and its leader in the 2014 parliamentary polls.

Modi’s supporters believe his popularity rating can only go up as the elections approach. But in the face of Bihar Chief Minister and NDA ally Nitish Kumar’s threat to walk out of the alliance if Modi is projected as PM-in-waiting, can the BJP and RSS take the risk of naming Modi? Former BJP President Nitin Gadkari had earlier said that the PM candidate would only be from those who contested the Lok Sabha polls. That assertion could die a quiet death with his exit from office. Also politics is a dynamic business where a year is too long a time.

But history is on Modi’s side. The BJP has always projected a leader as PM candidate. It has also fought both national and state elections in a presidential style. Second, there is no example in recent times where a popular leader has not been the face of the campaign. Can the BJP ignore the “wishes of the people”, asks Modi supporter GVL Narasimha Rao?

But there is a catch. It is one thing for polls to indicate Modi’s popularity and his ability to fetch votes everywhere. In the Nielsen poll, Modi and the BJP may manage to get a good number of respondents backing them even in states like Tamil Nadu, Kerala, the Telangana region of Andhra, Hyderabad or West Bengal, but the party has no organisation worth the name to tap into his popularity. It may not have winnable candidates in these states.

There is, however, a counter to that argument in the example of Vishwanath Pratap Singh, who was Rajiv Gandhi’s finance minister and later turned his critic over the issue of Bofors payoffs. He rode to power on a popular wave virtually without any organisational presence. It was only his name that enthused voters in different parts of the country. He became PM with the outside support of both the BJP and the Left. It didn’t last.

A key factor that will impact Modi’s projection is the sentiment of the BJP’s rank and file. For them, Modi is the leader, whether or not this is announced formally. The kind of enthusiastic reception Modi got on his first visit to the party headquarters in Delhi last month after the Gujarat poll showed his connect with the grassroots. The Nielsen survey will raise the decibel level on pro-Modi chants emanating from the bottom.

Friday, August 09, 2013

Hyderabad As Launchpad, Modi Set To Take Poll Position

By Sanjay Singh / Delhi

The event is scheduled in Hyderabad. But it has caught the fancy of party workers in Delhi. Reason enough for them to put up posters of their hero, Narendra Modi, in solus, minus other party leaders. There’s no doubt that Modi sets pulses racing in the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Hoardings have come up at various vantage points in Delhi with only Modi in the picture. Their message: “Nayi Soch, Nayi Ummeed (New thinking, new hope)”.

Thursday, June 06, 2013

Commentary: Modi: Neither Monster, Nor Messiah!

By Rajinder Puri / Delhi

Within a couple of days by the end of the BJP national executive meeting in Goa starting on June 7, 2013  Narendra Modi may be declared as chairman of the party’s election campaign committee or perhaps even as the party’s prime ministerial candidate. In either event it will be perceived with near certainty that he will become eventually the BJP prime ministerial candidate. This prospect fills his supporters with glee and his detractors with alarm. One section thinks that his ascent to the post will bring deliverance. The other section believes it denotes disaster. Who is right? Seldom has an individual polarized public opinion thus.

Monday, March 11, 2013

Modi Has Still To Cross The ‘Advani Hurdle’

Barely a fortnight ago, Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi delivered a speech to his diehard support base within the BJP, which was intended to fire them up and get them battle-ready. In the language of political lexicon, it was pure “red meat” – hardcore political conservatism that appealed squarely to the foot soldiers who look upon their General to go for the jugular, even if it made political commentators queasy for its “bully boy” tirade.

In contrast, Modi’s video-conference address to the Overseas Friends of BJP in Chicago and New Jersey on Sunday was far less edgy, far more “white meat”. Given that his audience on Sunday was sartorially different – to the extent that they were suited-booted and bandhgala-ed – Modi tailored his speech to appeal to their sensibilities. He pointedly steered clear of  direct criticism of the UPA government and the Congress, and pitched an overarching ‘India First’ narrative that seemed calculated to unite rather than divide.

In his speech at the BJP national council, for instance, Modi likened the Congress to a termite infestation upon the country. In contrast, in his address on Sunday, even the animal menagerie metaphors he invoked were intended to signal inclusiveness. The snake, he said, is known to prey upon the mouse. But the snake that is wrapped around Shiva’s neck, and the mouse that is the mascot of Shiva’s son Ganesha, symbolised the co-existence that characterises a “secular” India, Modi said. And a people who feed ants before they feed themselves need no lecturing from the West on what it means to be humanistic, he noted.

With his three recent public speeches – at the Delhi college, at the BJP national council, and to the party faithful in faraway continents – Modi has in many ways set the terms of the political discourse for the next general elections. And, increasingly, for all the efforts of Modi’s critics, that discourse pivots around ‘development’ as the overarching campaign theme.

Modi has redrawn the contours of the developmental discourse in a way that has political commentators wondering if he is “India’s Ronald Reagan”  who is pointing to a “shining city on a hill” and inspiring India’s impressionable youth to believe that it is an eminently attainable goal.

Even Modi’s political detractors, including Congress leaders, evidently feel compelled to respond to his invocation of the ‘India First’ slogan – and to claim it as their own! Barely hours after Modi’s address, Minister of State for Home Affairs RPN Singh put out this Tweet: Singh’s Twitter profile does, of course, say “India, First, Always” .  Except that Singh was evidently unaware that Modi has been trotting out this definition of secularism for many years now. For instance, at the Pravasiya Bharatiya event in New Delhi in January 2011, he gave the same working definition of secularism. Since then, he has invoked it at least twice – at this event (in Gujarati) and at his Google+ Hangout in August last year.

RPN Singh’s suggestion that Modi appropriated the slogan from his Twitter profile (which he put up only in January 2013) ranks of me-too pettiness, which reflects the Congress’ challenge in countering Modi’s manifest success in setting the terms of the political discourse for the next election. Where once Modi was, in their estimation, a mere regional satrap whose political pronouncements held no significance beyond his vocal army of supporters, today, his voice gets amplified national and internationally – and even scales the walls of the Delhi durbar. Modi represents arguably the most potent threat to the perpetuation of Congress rule. And it doesn’t help that unlike other leaders in the BJP, Modi resorts to “bully boy” tirade and directly targets the Congress.

Former Disinvestment Minister Arun Shourie is normally wary of speaking on behalf of the BJP – since he knows that he is a bit of an outlier in the party, and that his views are oftentimes publicly refuted by more senior leaders in it.  But even he reckons, as he did in Vadodara on Sunday, that the “leadership issue in the BJP is settled” and that Modi is the “most viable candidate” for prime ministership.

Shourie argues that senior BJP leaders will be unable to go against the groundswell of popular support from party cadres to name Modi as the party’s official candidate. But it appears that Modi has at least one big hurdle to scale within the BJP in the physically towering but politically shrunken form of LK Advani.

Everything about Advani’s recent pronouncements suggests that he is playing a Chanakyan game, at the core of which is a calculation that under certain circumstances, he can yet realise his long-unfulfilled ambition to become Prime Minister.

And since that evident strategy revolves around ensuring that Modi doesn’t get into full stride, Advani has ever-so-slyly been chipping away at the Modi-for-PM idea. In his national council speech, for instance, Advani pointedly praised Sushma Swaraj’s eloquence and suggested that the BJP’s strategy in the next election should be focussed on forming an NDA-plus coalition. Given that Modi’s candidature (if it comes about) will be premised on the BJP securing enough seats by itself, without being weighed down by coalition partners’ political sensibilities, Advani’s intervention has been read, correctly, as being intended to stall Modi’s momentum.

Likewise, in an interview to The Week magazine over the weekend, the erstwhile ‘Iron Man’ displays a rusty political diffidence about the BJP’s prospects of winning the 2014 contest (report here), which contrasts sharply with the ‘Yes We Can’ enthusiasm that Modi seeks to instill in party cadres.

Political analysts reckon that Advani will no longer be central in the BJP decision-making process. But Advani has, with his discordant comments, indicated that he is not willing to hobble into a political old-age home. The tide of popular opinion within the BJP may be rolling in Modi’s favour. Yet, Advani perhaps reckons that he can roll back the tide – and, even better, ride it to political fortune.

Friday, November 08, 2013

Congress To Win: Is Modi ‘Wave’ An Overhyped Myth?

By M H Ahssan / INN Live

Narendra Modi needs to take an urgent break from his frequent-flier programme to consider a few uncomfortable questions that are popping up everywhere. Have his rallies turned into political clones of T-20 games where people get together, scream, shout, clap, cheer and then go home after having a good time? Have Modi shows been reduced to item numbers in the overall tamasha of electioneering? And, finally, is Modi actually a factor in the ongoing Assembly elections? 

Friday, January 25, 2013

Rahul vs Modi: Who Has The Edge in Mahabharat 2014?

Pollsters and psephologists must be smacking their lips in anticipation. With the coronation of Rahul Gandhi at the recent Congress Chintan Shivir, it is becoming increasingly apparent that the title bout in 2014 will be between Narendra Modi and Rahul Gandhi, though both sides will be eager to play down this angle for their own reasons.

Nobody can, of course, predict how the next general election will pan out – there is simply too much time between now and 2014 or even late 2013. But it is not unreasonable to presume that Modi and Rahul will be their parties’ respective standard bearers, even if they are not officially declared their prime ministerial candidates.

It is thus worth speculating on how such a battle will be fought, and what strategies the two sides will adopt.

A preliminary Swot analysis is in order: Rahul Gandhi starts with an initial advantage, for in his party there is no challenger. The Congress’s refusal to allow any alternative power centre to emerge – whether in the youth wing or in the central leadership or in the states – will ensure that he has a free run.  Rahul will get whatever he asks for.

Modi has strong grassroots party support, and is certainly first among equals in the party, but unlike the Congress, the BJP is not a single-power-centre party. Every BJP Chief Minister is a power centre, and the party is India’s most federated organisation. Plus, there is parental interference – from the RSS. Modi will have more challenges before the anointment than Rahul.

So score 1-0 for Rahul on his initial challenges.

But Rahul is no match for Modi as a communicator. Modi will probably make mincemeat of Rahul when he is in form.

Score 1-1.  

Modi and Rahul also have similarities of a sort. Neither Congress nor BJP is likely to announce their candidatures in advance – for the former because it does not want to saddle Rahul with any defeat, and the latter to avoid deterring potential allies. It is more than probable, therefore, that both Rahul and Modi will be their parties’ chief campaign managers with a major say in who gets to run and who does not in the next elections. They will also crucially determine campaign strategies.

Scores still level. But next come the crucial differentiators.

There is no doubt at all that the Congress will make communalism its major plank to overcome anti-incumbency. After making a mess of the economy and facing serious corruption charges, the Congress is hardly in great shape to defend its record in governance. Its best chance is to shift the focus of the debate to communalism, where it believes it has a natural advantage. The entry of Modi will allow this to happen naturally.

Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde’s remarks on BJP-RSS terror camps were not an innocent slip of the tongue. The decision to include the BJP (and not just the Sangh) in his linkage with terror is deliberate. What he is trying to do is to force the BJP on the defensive on terror, even if it means giving Pakistan a free ride on this propaganda self-goal. It will also allow him to defer a decision on the hanging of Afzal Guru – something Shinde does not appear keen to do.

The Congress strategy on communalism will thus be two-fold: while Rahul will take the high ground and talk about meeting the aspirations of youth, development, etc, party’s political attack dogs – the likes of Digvijaya Singh, Shinde, etc – will go hammer and tongs at the BJP-RSS connection and try to force Modi and his supporters to hit back in ways where there can only be further complications.

The Congress will harp on this theme outside Gujarat, and especially in UP and Bihar, in order to polarise the Muslim vote. The central idea will be to put the BJP permanently on the defensive on communalism, and force it to make dangerous statements to polarise votes further. For the BJP, communalism is a no-win game, for the harder it tries to defend itself, the more it will get caught in the same perception that it is communal.

Modi may himself be tempted to play a subtle communal card in the hope that there is a reverse Hindu polarisation in states like UP, Bihar, Telangana and Assam to the BJP’s advantage, but the task is more complicated since there are serious regional players in the game.

The score now tilts 2-1 in favour of Congress, unless Modi is able to force a focus on different issues. Modi’s best hope must be to keep absolutely quiet on communalism and focus only on development and governance in the hope that the Congress will lose credibility by attacking the BJP too much.

Next, it’s worth looking at the youth factor. In theory, a 42-year-old Rahul should be streets ahead of a 62-year-old Modi in garnering the youth vote, which will be very significant in 2014.

But in practice, Modi demonstrated in Gujarat that youth is about an attitude of mind, not age. Rahul is far behind in understanding the aspirations of the middle class and the youth – as the BJP’s sweeping victories in Gujarat’s urban centres showed.

Rahul looks youthful, but has an old feudal mindset. His party is even more feudal, and believes in old-style freebies and sops to win votes. Modi entices youth with his energy and understanding of what they want. But in his recent Chintan Shivir speech, Rahul did acknowledge the importance of looking at the causes of urban anger and disenchantment. One assumes he will address their concerns.

On balance, both Modi and Rahul will perhaps draw level on this count. A lot would depend on how the two parties try to woo the urban, youth and middle class vote – and both parties will probably have strong manifesto promises for youth and urban India. Modi probably has a small edge on the youth vote.

Scores:  3:3 at this stage.

Now, let’s look at the strategy that could come from the Modi camp. If there are real strategists here, their best bet would be to focus on the Congress governance record and economic failures of UPA-2 – where Modi stands out as a performer in his home state.

Modi’s could focus on economic governance where he scores over the Congress record at the centre. However, success in Gujarat is not easily going to rub off in other states. In fact, too much talk of the Gujarat model will only irritate voters outside Gujarat as they would want to know what is in it for them and their state.

Given the strong undercurrent of regionalism, Modi should articulate his Gujarat model and development policies in regional terms rather than a repeated invocation of his own state’s approach.

As against this, the Congress will continue to hold the high card of rural empowerment, freebies and cash transfers – which may continue to give Congress an edge in rural areas while Modi gets an edge in urban areas.

Scores 4-4.

The most important element in the Rahul-Modi clash will not about ideas or policies, but their ability to tailor state-level strategies that will work for them. A Lok Sabha general election is often a bunch of state elections aggregated as a national vote.

Here, Rahul has the advantage of not raising hackles among any sort of ally – from Nitish Kumar to Navin Patnaik, the Congress would be an acceptable option at the centre.

For Modi, the search for allies has to be more strategic. The general assumption that he will find it tougher to get allies is not founded on any realistic assessment of post-poll political realities, even if pre-poll rhetoric needs allies to keep their distance from him.

If he is hoping for a reverse Hindu consolidation, Modi has to seek it through proxy – for example, in Assam, he could talk of the Bangladeshi influx. In UP, he can talk of Hindu-Muslim unity to build the Ram temple in Ayodhya.

But one point is important: at 150-plus seats, the Congress can still form a government like UPA-1, with outside Left support. At 150-plus seats, the BJP will have to provide a leader other than Modi to run a government. At less than 140 seats each, we are more likely to see a Federal or United Front of regional parties in power with outside Congress support.

This arithmetic implies that Modi has a higher hurdle to cross than Rahul. Without 180 seats, Modi is a not a realistic contender for PM.

This tilts the final score at 5-4 in favour of Rahul.

However, a purely neutral analysis is unlikely to be anywhere close to a realistic assessment of what will happen in 2014. Too many things can change, and too many new imponderables may emerge out of the blue.

As things stand now, the following conclusions seem likely.

One, secular versus communal will be a major campaign element in this battle. One cannot rule out a bitter and dirty fight over this issue.

Two, rich versus poor will be a major issue while discussing development. The Congress will try to paint Modi as pro-rich, while the BJP will try to tie Rahul to the Congress’ actual economic track record.

Three, Modi’s personality will be both a plus and a minus, but Rahul’s will be neutral.

Four, governance will be a bigger issue than corruption, now that both Congress and BJP seem tainted by it.

Five, the key to 7 Race Course Road will run through state capitals – Modi will have to have a viable state-level strategy, both to get the BJP more seats in hitherto weak states (UP, etc), and to create future allies. Rahul has the luxury of making his plans after the elections and choosing allies with the right numbers. He also has the option of anointing a PM – like his mother did with Manmohan Singh.

Even if Rahul has a theoretical edge, all bets are off when it comes to the final battle where guts, grit and gumption count for as much as elevating rhetoric.

In the ultimate analysis, both Modi and Rahul will try and convince the electorate that they are more than their past – or their parties’ past.

Rahul will try to distance himself from his government’s recent record. Modi will try to get the electorate’s mind off 2002. The winner will be whoever succeeds  more in making voters forget their past.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Hindutva Track: Is Modi Going For Broke This Time?

By M H Ahssan / INN Bureau

From the little clues available from here and there, the Narendra Modi campaign theme appears to have shifted to a high-risk, all-or-nothing approach, where Hindutva is a key part of the message. When Modi’s trusted aide, Amit Shah, went to Ayodhya and talked about wanting to build a Ram Mandir, one could have dismissed it as an aberration, someone talking out of turn. When the “puppy” remark surfaced, one could discount it as a deliberate attempt to create controversies over a statement that could have been interpreted in multiple ways. And so too for the “burkha of securlarism” remark.

Saturday, September 14, 2013

The Stroy Of Narendra Modi: From 'Chaiwallah' To PM-Pick

By Narersh Patel / Ahmedabad

For one who sold tea as a boy at a railway station in Gujarat, Narendra Modi has had a meteoric rise in Indian politics, catapulting from an untested chief minister of 2001 to the prime ministerial candidate in just 12 years.

Wedded to Hindutva - or the ideology of Hindu nationalism - from a young age, the 62-year-old Gujarat strongman, who evokes emotions like no other politician, is uncompromising vis-à-vis his goals, with an ability to transform every adversity into an opportunity, colleagues say.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Rahul vs Modi: Who Has The Edge In Mahabharat 2014?

Pollsters and psephologists must be smacking their lips in anticipation. With the coronation of Rahul Gandhi at the recent Congress Chintan Shivir, it is becoming increasingly apparent that the title bout in 2014 will be between Narendra Modi and Rahul Gandhi, though both sides will be eager to play down this angle for their own reasons.

Nobody can, of course, predict how the next general election will pan out – there is simply too much time between now and 2014 or even late 2013. But it is not unreasonable to presume that Modi and Rahul will be their parties’ respective standard bearers, even if they are not officially declared their prime ministerial candidates.

It is thus worth speculating on how such a battle will be fought, and what strategies the two sides will adopt.

A preliminary Swot analysis is in order: Rahul Gandhi starts with an initial advantage, for in his party there is no challenger. The Congress’s refusal to allow any alternative power centre to emerge – whether in the youth wing or in the central leadership or in the states – will ensure that he has a free run. Rahul will get whatever he asks for.

Modi has strong grassroots party support, and is certainly first among equals in the party, but unlike the Congress, the BJP is not a single-power-centre party. Every BJP Chief Minister is a power centre, and the party is India’s most federated organisation. Plus, there is parental interference – from the RSS. Modi will have more challenges before the anointment than Rahul.

So score 1-0 for Rahul on his initial challenges.

But Rahul is no match for Modi as a communicator. Modi will probably make mincemeat of Rahul when he is in form.

Score 1-1.
Modi and Rahul also have similarities of a sort. Neither Congress nor BJP is likely to announce their candidatures in advance – for the former because it does not want to saddle Rahul with any defeat, and the latter to avoid deterring potential allies. It is more than probable, therefore, that both Rahul and Modi will be their parties’ chief campaign managers with a major say in who gets to run and who does not in the next elections. They will also crucially determine campaign strategies.

Scores still level. But next come the crucial differentiators.
There is no doubt at all that the Congress will make communalism its major plank to overcome anti-incumbency. After making a mess of the economy and facing serious corruption charges, the Congress is hardly in great shape to defend its record in governance. Its best chance is to shift the focus of the debate to communalism, where it believes it has a natural advantage. The entry of Modi will allow this to happen naturally.

Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde’s remarks on BJP-RSS terror camps were not an innocent slip of the tongue. The decision to include the BJP (and not just the Sangh) in his linkage with terror is deliberate. What he is trying to do is to force the BJP on the defensive on terror, even if it means giving Pakistan a free ride on this propaganda self-goal. It will also allow him to defer a decision on the hanging of Afzal Guru – something Shinde does not appear keen to do.

The Congress strategy on communalism will thus be two-fold: while Rahul will take the high ground and talk about meeting the aspirations of youth, development, etc, party’s political attack dogs – the likes of Digvijaya Singh, Shinde, etc – will go hammer and tongs at the BJP-RSS connection and try to force Modi and his supporters to hit back in ways where there can only be further complications.

The Congress will harp on this theme outside Gujarat, and especially in UP and Bihar, in order to polarise the Muslim vote. The central idea will be to put the BJP permanently on the defensive on communalism, and force it to make dangerous statements to polarise votes further. For the BJP, communalism is a no-win game, for the harder it tries to defend itself, the more it will get caught in the same perception that it is communal.

Modi may himself be tempted to play a subtle communal card in the hope that there is a reverse Hindu polarisation in states like UP, Bihar, Telangana and Assam to the BJP’s advantage, but the task is more complicated since there are serious regional players in the game.

The score now tilts 2-1 in favour of Congress, unless Modi is able to force a focus on different issues. Modi’s best hope must be to keep absolutely quiet on communalism and focus only on development and governance in the hope that the Congress will lose credibility by attacking the BJP too much.

Next, it’s worth looking at the youth factor. In theory, a 42-year-old Rahul should be streets ahead of a 62-year-old Modi in garnering the youth vote, which will be very significant in 2014.

But in practice, Modi demonstrated in Gujarat that youth is about an attitude of mind, not age. Rahul is far behind in understanding the aspirations of the middle class and the youth – as the BJP’s sweeping victories in Gujarat’s urban centres showed.

Rahul looks youthful, but has an old feudal mindset. His party is even more feudal, and believes in old-style freebies and sops to win votes. Modi entices youth with his energy and understanding of what they want. But in his recent Chintan Shivir speech, Rahul did acknowledge the importance of looking at the causes of urban anger and disenchantment. One assumes he will address their concerns.

On balance, both Modi and Rahul will perhaps draw level on this count. A lot would depend on how the two parties try to woo the urban, youth and middle class vote – and both parties will probably have strong manifesto promises for youth and urban India. Modi probably has a small edge on the youth vote.

Scores: 3:3 at this stage.
Now, let’s look at the strategy that could come from the Modi camp. If there are real strategists here, their best bet would be to focus on the Congress governance record and economic failures of UPA-2 – where Modi stands out as a performer in his home state.

Modi’s could focus on economic governance where he scores over the Congress record at the centre. However, success in Gujarat is not easily going to rub off in other states. In fact, too much talk of the Gujarat model will only irritate voters outside Gujarat as they would want to know what is in it for them and their state.

Given the strong undercurrent of regionalism, Modi should articulate his Gujarat model and development policies in regional terms rather than a repeated invocation of his own state’s approach.

As against this, the Congress will continue to hold the high card of rural empowerment, freebies and cash transfers – which may continue to give Congress an edge in rural areas while Modi gets an edge in urban areas.

Scores 4-4.
The most important element in the Rahul-Modi clash will not about ideas or policies, but their ability to tailor state-level strategies that will work for them. A Lok Sabha general election is often a bunch of state elections aggregated as a national vote.

Here, Rahul has the advantage of not raising hackles among any sort of ally – from Nitish Kumar to Navin Patnaik, the Congress would be an acceptable option at the centre.

For Modi, the search for allies has to be more strategic. The general assumption that he will find it tougher to get allies is not founded on any realistic assessment of post-poll political realities, even if pre-poll rhetoric needs allies to keep their distance from him.

If he is hoping for a reverse Hindu consolidation, Modi has to seek it through proxy – for example, in Assam, he could talk of the Bangladeshi influx. In UP, he can talk of Hindu-Muslim unity to build the Ram temple in Ayodhya.

But one point is important: at 150-plus seats, the Congress can still form a government like UPA-1, with outside Left support. At 150-plus seats, the BJP will have to provide a leader other than Modi to run a government. At less than 140 seats each, we are more likely to see a Federal or United Front of regional parties in power with outside Congress support.

This arithmetic implies that Modi has a higher hurdle to cross than Rahul. Without 180 seats, Modi is a not a realistic contender for PM.

This tilts the final score at 5-4 in favour of Rahul.

However, a purely neutral analysis is unlikely to be anywhere close to a realistic assessment of what will happen in 2014. Too many things can change, and too many new imponderables may emerge out of the blue.

As things stand now, the following conclusions seem likely.

One, secular versus communal will be a major campaign element in this battle. One cannot rule out a bitter and dirty fight over this issue.

Two, rich versus poor will be a major issue while discussing development. The Congress will try to paint Modi as pro-rich, while the BJP will try to tie Rahul to the Congress’ actual economic track record.

Three, Modi’s personality will be both a plus and a minus, but Rahul’s will be neutral.

Four, governance will be a bigger issue than corruption, now that both Congress and BJP seem tainted by it.

Five, the key to 7 Race Course Road will run through state capitals – Modi will have to have a viable state-level strategy, both to get the BJP more seats in hitherto weak states (UP, etc), and to create future allies. Rahul has the luxury of making his plans after the elections and choosing allies with the right numbers. He also has the option of anointing a PM – like his mother did with Manmohan Singh.

Even if Rahul has a theoretical edge, all bets are off when it comes to the final battle where guts, grit and gumption count for as much as elevating rhetoric.

In the ultimate analysis, both Modi and Rahul will try and convince the electorate that they are more than their past – or their parties’ past.

Rahul will try to distance himself from his government’s recent record. Modi will try to get the electorate’s mind off 2002. The winner will be whoever succeeds more in making voters forget their past.

Saturday, August 08, 2015

Weekend Tadka: How Modi Fell Into RaGa's Political Trap?

"This is a suit-boot-ki-sarkar", said one Rahul, the Congress Dynast. "This is not the Modi government", said another Rahul, a patriarch of the Bajaj Auto group. The two statements are pregnant with meaning. The Dynast's meaning was to suggest that Narendra Modi's government favours crony businessmen. Rahul Bajaj’s quip was intended to suggest that Modi was not proving to be the friend of business that he was thought to be.

All the current problems faced by Modi – the parliamentary gridlock, failure to pass key legislation, the lack of new energy in the economy, and growing business disillusionment with him - can best be explained by the wide gulf between the statements of the two Rahuls.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Congress Vs Modi: Who Is Falling Into Whose Trap?

By M H Ahssan / INN Bureau

Whether Narendra Modi wins or loses the grand electoral battle of the 2014 general elections, what demands attention is his attempt to trigger a major paradigm shift in Indian politics.

The Gujarat chief minister and BJP’s Chief Poll Campaigner for the 2014 elections is not just attempting to decisively win over non-Muslim voters but go beyond into hitherto uncharted waters. Given the RSS-BJP blood flowing through his veins, seeking to unite and consolidate Hindu votes is a given. That was something that even the BJP patriarch LK Advani attempted with the Rath Yatra in 1990. What Modi is attempting today is to focus on redefining secularism in India as it has been preached and practised for decades in Indian politics.

Sunday, August 07, 2016

Cow Calculus: What Modi Stood To Lose By Keeping Silent On 'Gau Rakshaks'

By AJAZ ASHRAF | INNLIVE

The prime minister deserves praise for criticising cow-protection vigilantes. Now he must walk the talk.

Regardless of whether you endorse the Bharatiya Janata Party’s ideology, one cannot but appreciate Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s decision to belatedly emerge from the cocoon of silence to condemn cow-protection groups.