Has
The Opposition Peaked Too Soon?
The keystone of the Congress Party’s “tarnish Modi’s
incorruptible image” strategy has fallen out, despite the hysterically high-decibel
campaign. This was the one that was designed to destroy Modi’s credibility and
send him tumbling, head-first from the tower. Instead, it is Rahul Gandhi that
seems to be slipping, his ice-thin plausibility denied in the full glare of the
national and international media.
And this, most damagingly, long months before the general
election. It was a risky, desperate gambit to start with, and has become a
festering self-inflicted, possibly mortal wound for the Congress.
Gandhi’s theatrical hullabaloo is about the 36 fighter
Rafale government-to- government deal and its “offsets” involving Anil Ambani
and others. This campaign of calumny has been going on from before the monsoon
session of parliament, and is gasping for oxygen now.
Even HAL, the spurned suitor, on who’s behalf Rahul
Gandhi says he’s out jousting, is not willing to engage in the debate. Well aware of its shortcomings, despite being
well invested, staffed and government owned, it does not want to involve itself
in this controversy. It wants no part of the argument on whether Dassault, the
French makers of the Rafale aircraft, if not the Modi government itself,
unfairly sidelined it to favour Anil Ambani’s firm. Perhaps it knows itself
better than Rahul Gandhi does.
But Gandhi, in an
“in for a penny, in for a pound” avatar, has not hesitated to call the prime minister
a “chor”, and Dassault CEO Eric Trappier a “liar”.
He has sought to whip up a misinformation campaign that
suggests that the Modi government has contracted the 36 Rafale fighters in
fly-away condition, armed to the teeth with sophisticated weapons and gadgetry
as they are, at a much higher price than was being negotiated with the previous
UPA administration. The inapplicability of the apple and orange comparisons are
deliberately ignored.
Gandhi’s inner coterie and analytics team are probably
telling him the age-old strategy of- “fling enough mud around and some of it
will stick”, is working.
The attempt to treat the Rafale purchase deal as Narendra
Modi’s Bofors moment, is crumbling in the face of increasing divergence from
the facts.
Ironically, the first howitzers from America and
field-guns from South Korea, since Bofors supplied some 30 years ago, have just
been introduced, greatly strengthening Indian artillery capabilities at the
borders.
Meanwhile, the Supreme Court is now appraised of the deal
process and detailed pricing under sealed cover, and will shortly be faced with
the inevitability of giving the government a clean chit – except for perhaps
some points of procedure at best. Gandhi wanted the details in the media or at
least before a select committee in parliament, but will have to settle for an
SC verdict without knowing what it is based upon.
By way of contrast, watching a CNN programme on the
celebrated and enduring fragrance Chanel No.5 recently was edifying. The
current “Nose” was asked what it is about the complex perfume that made is such
a favourite. He said it was a mystique best not put into words.
Chanel No.5 is known to be made of a host of ingredients,
including the light pink “May Rose” grown at Grasse in the South of France. It
contains our own Sandalwood, a large, possibly accidental dose of aldehyde,
natural civet and musks, jasmine, orris root, iris root, other Grasse flowers.
Yet it remains a formulation secret.
If only the present Congress Party, like Coco Chanel’s perfume,
knew anything about holding back and leave people wondering.
Indira Gandhi was secretive and naturally very good at it.
She often left friend and foe guessing. Narendra Modi, a loner, also plays his
cards very close to his chest. He is also lucky- oil prices are descending once
again.
But Rahul Gandhi, once shy and tongue-tied, has developed
a programmed and spiteful motor-mouth. And his very persona has evidently
induced matching parental anxiety. It has elicited an ill-conceived volubility
in his usually reticent and Sphinx-like mother.
Sonia Gandhi boasted coarsely that she would not allow
Modi to come back in 2019 “under any circumstance”. And this was as far back as
the India Today Conclave 2018. She said it with a twisted, vainglorious smirk
on her face, even as the Cambridge Analytica scandals, not just here, but in
the West, had already been outed.
The tone had been
set much before, in parliament, at public meetings, and on the street. There
has been an unending display of brattish and entitled rage, but not much else.
“Before & After” Rafale, has been bracketed by a
series of loud-mouthed rabble rousers,
arsonists and murderers, gathered together to assist. There is the toxic trio
of the Gujarat campaign - Jignesh Mavani, Hardik Patel, Alpesh Thakor.
Thakor
was identified recently as the instigator of an exodus of Bihar and UP workers
from Gujarat, an action that will not help Congress prospects in both the very
important states electorally. There is the sly catch from JNU- Kanhaiya Kumar,
reportedly going into the electoral fray from Bihar soon. There are other
criminal elements, lesser known, from Bhima-Koregaon.
And the Congress senior leadership- dignified while in
office, has had to pony up with their own version of heckling coarseness to
match their intellectually challenged leader.
Mini-fires, treasonous and anti-national, were brazenly
set at New Delhi’s Far-left infestations in JNU. And a suicide, that of Rohith
Vemula, was exploited amongst the Dalit students at Hyderabad. Pro-Pakistan and
Kashmiri separatist movements were encouraged. Award Wapsi tantrums were
orchestrated.
Infantile campaigns were unleashed on the social media.
All this was gloated over by the nearly 50 year-old Rahul
Gandhi in person. But despite national media coverage, these taunting antics,
including winks and insincere hugs, have collectively failed to conflagrate.
The divisive Lingayat controversy raised did more to put
HD Kumaraswamy into the CM’s chair than help the Congress. There have been
bizarre attempts at juneaudharism,
and temple hopping in saffron. The Congress has also developed a recent
affection for cows and gaushalas. It is yet to make up its mind on which way to
jump on the Ram Mandir, probably trying to guage the reaction of its remaining
Muslim vote banks.
If there was a solitary hook-or-by-crook success for
Gandhi and the Congress, it was in Karnataka. And another probable, if the
in-fighting amongst the state Congress leaders permit, is widely expected to
come in Rajasthan. Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh however, are likely to be
retained by the BJP. Mizoram too may well slip into the BJP camp along with the
rest of the North East.
If this is the outcome, where are the sweeping results
the campaign of vilification was expected to yield?
Congress has also been depicting the BJP as a destroyer
of institutions and the economy, a culturally divisive force at home, and
foolish in foreign affairs. So much so, that it must be uprooted if the “Idea
of India” is to survive. Much as it tries to fish in troubled waters - at the
CBI, RBI, the banks and their defaulters/absconders, most of the finger
pointing backfires. Its top leadership is being indicted and tried in the
courts right now even as it bleats “vendetta”.
Meanwhile the Modi government scores with the GDP,
infrastructure development, improved defence preparedness, ease of doing
business, farmers and SMEs. Foreign policy gains are evident in Iran, Russia,
the US, Israel, UAE, Saudi Arabia, the ASEAN, even China. GST is a massive
economic reform accomplished, as are acts like the bankruptcy code. Terrorism
in Kashmir and Maoist violence in Central India has been hit hard.
The broader
opposition’s attempts to form a mahagatbandhan suffers from a lack of conviction, and an agenda beyond
wanting to oust Modi.
Modi, on his part, is poised to make the better battle of
it in the 2019 elections. He controls the central government and a large number
of BJP/NDA states. He has a massive war chest of campaign funds. He is popular
at home and influential abroad. Very
importantly, he has, as yet, kept his powder dry. Nobody quite knows where or
what he will attack, nor its intended intensity.
This, while Rahul Gandhi and the disparate opposition has
fired almost every bullet in its possession, ruining anticipation and the
element of surprise . It stands exposed, transparent, obviously craving power, but has peaked
altogether too soon to seize it.
For:
The Sunday Guardian
(1,392
words)
November
14th, 2018
Gautam
Mukherjee
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