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India: Hindu-communalist BJP wins assembly elections in Gujarat
and Himachal Pradesh
By Ajay Prakash and Kranti Kumara
5 January 2008
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The Hindu supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has retained
power in Gujarat despite a major drive by the Congress Partyled
by its president and the current head of the Gandhi-Nehru political
dynasty, Sonia Gandhito wrest control of the west Indian
state.
Under Narendra Modi, the BJP won 117 of the 182 seats in the
Gujarat assembly.
Gujarats chief minister since October 2001, Modi instigated
the anti-Muslim pogrom that convulsed the state in February-March
2002, leaving 2,000 dead and 100,000 homeless.
The Congress Party, for its part, captured 59 Gujarat assembly
seats, eight more than in the last election in 2002, while the
National Congress Party, a Congress ally, took three. The Communist
Party of India (Marxist) or CPM was partnered with the Congress
in the Gujarat election. It failed to win a single seat. The CPM-led
Left Front is helping to sustain the Congress-led United Progressive
Alliance (UPA) government in office in New Delhi.
In a crude adaptation to the BJPs foul communal politics,
the Congress sought to defeat Modis government by allying
with dissident BJPers. Not only are these dissidents themselves
as committed to Hindu communalist ideology as Modi himself (as
attested by the open support given them by the VHP and other Hindu
supremacist organizations); many of them played important roles
in fomenting and facilitating the 2002 anti-Muslim pogrom. But
whether running as Congress candidates, independents or under
the banner of a BJP split-off, the Bharatiya Janshakti Party,
all the Congress-supported BJP dissidents, with just one exception,
failed to win their seats.
In the second state assembly election held last month, the
Congress was ousted from office in the north-western state of
Himachal Pradesh by the BJP. The BJP took 41 of the 68 seats in
the Himachal Pradesh assembly, while the Congress saw its seat
tally slashed by 20, to 23.
With a population of 6 million (2001 census), Himachal Pradesh
is considered a minor state. Gujarat, with a population of over
50 million, is, by contrast, one of Indias larger states.
It is also one of the more industrialized and urbanized.
The twin election defeats in Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh constitute
a major blow to the Congress. The Congress leadership and a significant
section of the Indian elite had hoped that a Congress victory
in Gujarat would give the party the political momentum it needs
to trigger and win early parliamentary elections and thereby short-circuit
the Left Fronts opposition to the Indo-US nuclear cooperation
treaty. Such calculations now lie in tatters.
Immediately following its stinging defeat in Gujarat, the Congress
leadership gathered for an introspective session.
Predictably, it drew the conclusion that its campaign had not
been reactionary enough, terming its calibrated attacks on the
BJP government over the 2002 anti-Muslim pogrom, including suggestions
the central government might reopen its inquiries into the massacre,
a mistake.
The BJPs win in Gujarat has sparked triumphalist declarations
from its top leaders.
The BJPs parliamentary leader and newly named prime ministerial
candidate L.K. Advani termed the election victory a turning
point in national politics because it signals the BJPs comeback
as the frontrunner in the next parliamentary election.
BJP president Rajnath Singh claimed the election results were
a decisive endorsement of its Hindu supremacist ideology, Hindutva.
Said Singh, The partys thought and ideology have
won as much as the leadership and performance of its Gujarat government
under Narendra Modi.
The BJP has been in almost perpetual crisis since its unexpected
fall from office, as the dominant partner in the National Democratic
Alliance coalition, in the May 2004 Indian election. And as Singhs
remarks indicate, there is much dissension within the BJP over
Modis leadershipover his ambitions to some day become
the partys foremost national leader and his attempt to cast
himself as the personification of Hindutva.
The corporate media has been sharply divided over Modis
bid to monopolize control of the Gujarat BJP and win a second
full-term as the states chief minister. While some sections
view his extreme communalism and advocacy of street justice
as dangerously destabilizing, others hail him for good administration,
that is, for ruthlessly implementing the neo-liberal reforms
advocated by the most powerful sections of Indian and foreign
capital.
Gujarat has now become the top investment destination of all
Indias states, dethroning even Maharashtra, which is home
to Indias financial center, Mumbai (Bombay). According to
statistics from Indias central bank, Gujarat attracted a
quarter of all foreign investments made in India in 2006-2007.
BJP election posters emblazoned with the slogan Resurgent
Gujarat featured Modi alongside Indian capitalists Mukesh
Ambani and Ratan Tata.
In the aftermath of the Gujarat elections, the corporate media
was all but unanimous in praising Modi, arguing that his well-timed
and skilled use of communal appeals had overwhelmed an incompetently
managed Congress campaign. In a December 24 editorial, the Times
of India proclaimed the election a referendum on Modi.
And he won it hands down.
Reading the corporate presss election analyses, one gets
the impression that Gujarat is a seething cauldron of Hindu communalism.
The reality is far more complex.
The voter turnout in the December 2007 election was close to
60 percent, down marginally from 2002. The BJP won around 49 percent
of the votes cast as compared with 38 percent for the Congress
Party. The BJPs vote-share thus works out to 29.4 percent
of the registered electorate. If the states unregistered
voters are taken into account, the BJPs vote-share is even
smaller. Nevertheless, the BJP won 64 percent of the 182 assembly
seats.
That being said, there is no doubt that Modi and the BJP did
command the electoral support of the bulk of the urban middle
class. Much of this layer has materially benefited from the neo-liberal
reforms of the past 15 years, especially the recent investment
boom. And, in the absence of any progressive alternative, the
BJPs claims of development resonated among wider
layers who are desperate for some improvement in their lives.
The BJPs electioneering notwithstanding, the investment
boom has almost entirely bypassed rural Gujarat and in the cities
it has resulted in deepening social inequality. Moreover, this
investment boom is highly unstable, tied as it is to a world capitalist
economy fraught with contradictions and imbalances.
The BJP has also had some success in channeling the frustrations
of the most impoverishedthe tribals and sections of the
so-called lower castesagainst the states Muslim minority,
having previously exploited the absence of elementary public and
social services, to develop, through various Hindutva-ite
social service organizations, a base of support.
The Congress Party represented no alternative to the BJP in
Gujarat.
Despite ample evidence to indict and convict Modi and other
BJP leaders for their role in instigating the anti-Muslim pogrom
and shielding its perpetratorsas underscored by a recent
Tahelka magazine exposéthe Congress-led UPA
government has failed to even mount a proper investigation into
the 2002 events. (See In
run-up to Gujarat elections: Magazine exposé shows BJP
state government organized 2002 pogrom)
And with its courting of the BJP dissidents, one of whom was
the minister in charge of the state police at the time of the
pogrom, the Congress has taken a further step right and into the
cesspool of communal politics.
Nor could or would the Congress make the growth of economic
insecurity, social inequality and poverty in the state a major
election issue. After all, the UPA government is pursuing similar
pro-investor policies and hopes, once it can free itself from
dependency on the parliamentary support of the Left Front, to
more aggressively to gut remaining restrictions on layoffs, plant
closures and contracting out.
That the Congress Party should have acted in this manner is
not in the least surprising. It is the Indian bourgeoisies
oldest party and its historically preferred party of government.
Yet the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and its Left Front
allies have systematically subordinated the working class to the
Congress and the UPA government on the grounds that they constitute
a secular bulwark against the BJP and can be pressured
into tempering the bourgeoisies neo-liberal reform program.
The Gujarat elections have once again exposed the politically
criminal character of this policy, with the Congress facilitating
the BJPs return to power and further legitimizing its noxious
Hindu supremacist ideology.
But the Stalinists, no more than the Congress, can change their
spots. They have responded to the Congress defeat in Gujarat by
ratcheting up their calls for the unity of secular forces,
that is, for the working class and toilers to rally behind the
right-wing UPA government, and by making tepid appeals to Sonia
Gandhi and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to see the error of their
ways and adopt pro-people policies.
See Also:
Gujarat elections:
BJP chief minister reverts to Muslim-baiting
[13 December 2007]
In run-up to Gujarat
elections: Magazine exposé shows BJP state government organized
2002 pogrom
[5 December 2007]
Indian Stalinists
reverse course, allow Indo-US nuclear deal go to IAEA
[21 November 2007]
India: Five years
after 2002 Gujarat pogrom: While the victims languish, the perpetrators
go unpunished
[10 April 2007]
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