Master-Strokes At Amateur Hour
There were always two
strings to the bow of the Shiv Sena. One, that of Hindutva, has been carried
off-stage bound in chains by its “secular” partners. But, there is still the
other, unfettered- that of the Marathi Manoos.
Uddhav Thackeray,
Chief Minister of Maharashtra, as of the evening of the 28th of
November, asserted as much.
Amongst his first
acts was the allocation of another Rs. 30 crores towards the 600 crore
restoration of Chhhatapati Shivaji’s fabled fort in the Raigad mountains.
Uddhav announced this
in front of a statue of Shivaji, at Shiv Sena’s own Shivaji Park, made the
party’s launch pad from the 1960s. The stage for the oath-taking was built in a
day to resemble the self-same Raigad Fort, by one of Uddhav’s Bollywood set-making
friends.
Meanwhile, the former
Chief Minister, Devendra Fadnavis, who looks more like a well-fed temple priest
with a pretty wife, than a dynamic politician, is looking for another house.
One to lead his 105 seat strong Opposition from. Fadnavis has made an
unmitigated mess of round two, or is it three, in less than a fortnight, duped
by the senior Pawar, and let-down by the junior one.
But Fadnavis has
completed a full term of five years, very successfully, a rarity in Maharashtra
politics, not seen since VP Naik of Congress, who was CM for 11 years. Sharad
Pawar himself never lasted a full term, not once in three stints.
This time, Sharad
Pawar, at 79 going on 80, has humbled the political acumen and dexterity, not
only of the portly Fadnavis, but that of Prime Minister Modi, Home Minister and
Party President Shah and his understudy Nadda, Governor Koshyari, and President
Kovind too.
He was
indefatigable,starting on Saturday the 23rd of November, soon after
the Devendra Fadnavis- Ajit Pawar swearing in, and stopping only three days
later, on the 26th, when the duo were forced to resign.
Sharad Pawar
conducted the entire orchestra of leaders, including Sonia Gandhi in Delhi and
Uddhav Thackeray, pretty much at his side.
This, plus over 162
MLAs in all three parties, that make up the Maha Aghadi. He personally exhorted
them to stick together, herding them into pens in a number of five star hotels
in Mumbai. He trooped them on or off buses, and into an anti-defection
oath-taking ceremony under the gaze of national TV. Sharad Pawar also
relentlessly pressurised rebellious nephew Ajit Pawar for all three days, till
he had no option but to cry uncle.
But, now, after the
restrictions have been lifted, and the spectacular oath taking ceremony for the
chief minister and just six others has been concluded, can the surveillance and
unity be sustained?
Sharad Pawar seems to
think so, by virtue of ensuring all three parties are involved in the
government. But, since this alliance is largely to do with the loaves and
fishes of office, what about those MLAs who do not get a ministry or other
jagir to milk? Will they remain loyal through the projected five years of the
Aghadi government?
The threat of being
thrown out of the party if any of them resign is balanced by the relatively
slim majority the Aghadi will command at the floor-test on December 3rd.
Ajit Pawar, though
back in the NCP fold without punishment, and possibly the Deputy Chief Minister
and Leader of the NCP legislative party once more come the 4th of
December, has demanded a rotational CMship after 2.5 years. Congress too has
also asked for a second Deputy CMship,
instead of the Speaker’s post offered to it. How long therefore before the
Congress, with 44 seats, to the Shiv Sena’s 56 and the NCP’s 54, also demands a
turn as Chief Minister- perhaps in a 2-2-1 year formula?
If some 15 or 20
MLA’s in aggregate, depending on how many independent MLAs are roped in, from any
or all of the three parties were to resign, the Aghadi government would fall.
Given the strictures
of the anti-defection law, this would trigger a fresh election. If these 20 odd
MLAs resign with the encouragement of Fadnavis’s BJP, they would probably be
assured of BJP tickets and funding for their re-election.
In the meantime the BJP will hopefully win the forthcoming assembly elections, both in Jharkhand and later in Delhi, to restore their prestige somewhat.
The hyper-critical
intelligentsia and BJP backing middle-class, disillusioned by the recent
unprincipled but failed power grab, may yet be mollified by a good budget, with
sops in their favour. The general economy too may be in for a cyclic if not a
reform fuelled revival. Public memory is best served by success.
Will the BJP try to
wrest power back in Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, both lost very narrowly to
the Congress, to restore their diminishing national foot-print? The answer is
probably yes, given the opportune moment. And then there is the battle for West
Bengal.
In the potentially $1
trillion economy of Maharashtra, from the BJP point-of-view, there will be no
redemption short of winning back the state. If this comes about, it will be not
only payback to the old war-horse, but a significant setback to Opposition
dreams, including those of Uddhav, of coming to power at the centre in 2024.
(873 words)
For: WIONEWS
November 29th, 2019
Gautam Mukherjee
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