The era of coalitions, as former Marxist  leader Jyoti Basu described the metamorphosis of the political landscape that  began in the 1970s, continues and poses a puzzle for the Bharatiya Janata Party  as well as for the partners of the Indian National Developmental Inclusive  Alliance. The two sides are affected by the permutations and combinations of  this mutating process.    At one level, the INDIA bloc is a natural  coalition; at another, specifically at the regional level, there are not many  natural partnerships. Since coalitions are crafted to consolidate votes and  multiply the collective impact of the coalition by winning more seats than the  parties would have had they contested separately, the failure to reach seat  sharing agreements is bad for the INDIA bloc and good for the BJP.    The disarray of the parties of the  coalition is a function of the ways in which they originated. Some like the  Left parties, the DMK, the Samajwadi Party and the Rashtriya Janata Dal, even  the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha and the Shiv Sena, are rooted in specific  ideologies. Others have originated as breakaways like the Trinamul Congress and  the Nationalist Congress Party. Many were originally anti-Congress and remain antagonists  of the party at the regional level, like Mamata Banerjee in West Bengal and  Pinarayi Vijayan in Kerala, while Arvind Kejriwal plays it both ways; friends  in Delhi and foes in Punjab. All of them currently are anti-BJP.    The BJP has focused on the differences  between the partners of the INDIA bloc and delivered a judgment that the  alliance is a non-starter because it has already disintegrated. It has also  pointed out that they are in cahoots to swindle the public. By clubbing one  with the other, the BJP has drawn attention to the complexity of the dynamics  of coalition formation in a difficult political landscape.    The dynamics has gifted the BJP the  advantage of appearing to be uncomplicated, stable, organised and well-endowed  with a masterful single leader, that is, a helmsman who calls the shots. In  contrast, the INDIA bloc appears to be unstable, disorganised, hopelessly  complicated by cross cutting interests and too many leaders, but no  identifiable icon.    The inevitable problems and failures of seat-sharing,  the exit of Nitish Kumar and the breakup of the “Mahagatbandhan” in Bihar have  contributed to the idea that the INDIA bloc is precarious and unfit to function  as an alternative to the BJP led by its helmsman.    The idea of the new formation mutating into  a coherent, organised merged entity was a myth; Mamata Banerjee said so; and  her friends including Arvind Kejriwal and Akhilesh Yadav agreed. As an  alliance, all the stakeholders and even the BJP knew that the differences at  the regional level would not end just because INDIA had been birthed. The  formula proposed by Mamata Banerjee that each regional and dominant party fight  the BJP on its home turf, preferably in one-on-one contests, was not entirely  wrong; but it was not realistic either.    Assessing the potential and the capacity of  the coalition is therefore a more complex task. Is the coalition so powerful  that even Prime Minister Narendra Modi can be intimidated? In Meerut, on the  same day as the INDIA bloc’s huge rally at Delhi’s Ramlila Maidan, Mr Modi said  that “I am not scared”, implying that the Opposition was trying to instil fear  to prevent him from taking action against their many acts of corruption.    In other words, the public discourse has  two images of the Opposition and of Mr Modi: the first is a collective of the  powerful and the second is a shambolic collective, full of internal  contradictions, that can come apart. The carefully cultivated twin images of Mr  Modi are first, the man who means business; purposeful and powerful enough to  deliver on his guarantees; and second, a lonely, tireless crusader against the  evils of corruption, dynastic politics and divisiveness.    The absurdity of the image of a scared  Narendra Modi is striking and deserves to be deciphered as a tactical move.    Is the BJP’s helmsman calling his core  support base to rally for him? If that is so, he must feel less confident about  winning his target 370 seats out of 543 seats in the Lok Sabha in this  election. But that cannot be true, because Mr Modi’s campaign has focused on  his “guarantees” of delivering a fully developed economy to the masses in his  third term, which implies that he is supremely confident of returning to the  job as Prime Minister.    Confounding as these twists and turns are  in the BJP’s campaign narrative, the reality is the Opposition is neither  nimble nor quick-witted enough to checkmate these moves. Expressing fears that  the elections will be like a “fixed” cricket match where the field is staged  for a victory of the BJP and the return of Mr Modi as Prime Minister for a  third term is not a response that says anything new or even says the same thing  differently.    The Ramlila Maidan rally was an opportunity  for the collective Opposition to make its pitch to voters across the country as  all the coalition partners from the different states were part of the meeting.  Its failure to do so exposes the absence of a strategy to counter the BJP’s  narrative and present a new alternative narrative to voters.    Asking voters to choose between  dictatorship and democracy is not the same as asking voters to choose between  keeping Arvind Kejriwal incarcerated or releasing him; the first is an abstract  idea, the second is specific and is a call to act. Talking “match-fixing” does  not engage with voters proactively. The INDIA bloc leadership obviously has not  worked out exactly what it expects voters to do, beyond suggesting “No Vote to  the BJP”.    In contrast, the BJP’s campaign is in two  registers, simultaneously inviting voters to take its side against the  collective Opposition on the one hand and the regional parties on the other  because it is the only choice that guarantees stability in uncertain times. By  crafting the conditions of uncertainty, the BJP has converted the  destabilisation of the Opposition, especially the state ruling parties, into a  new strategy of stripping political capital by engineering defections,  splitting parties and arresting chief ministers, both present and past, namely  Mr Kejriwal and Hemant Soren, who resigned before his arrest by the Enforcement  Directorate.    The INDIA bloc has been so distracted by  the destabilisation strategy that it has not found the time to evolve into an  alternative and remains stuck in its role as the Opposition; always the  challenger and never the new champion.
Source link 
 
                बिहार में राहुल ने कहा, मोदी ट्रंप का जवाब देने से डरते हैं
गांधी ने अपनी दादी, पूर्व प्रधानमंत्री इंदिरा गांधी के विरासत का उल्लेख किया था ताकि नेतृत्व शैलियों के…


 
                 
                