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India: Hindu supremacist BJP forms government in Karnataka
By Kranti Kumara
14 June 2008
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The Bharatiya Janata Party or BJP has come to power in Karnataka,
after falling just short of winning a parliamentary majority in
last months state assembly elections. This marks the first
time the rightwing Hindu supremacist party has formed a government
on its own in a south Indian state.
At a triumphant ceremony in Bangalore that was attended by
much of the BJPs national leadership, BJP stalwart B.S.
Yeddyurappa was sworn in as Karnatakas Chief Minister on
May 30th.
With a population of 52 million (2001 census), Karnataka is
Indias ninth most populous state. Its economy, however,
is Indias fifth largest. Nicknamed Indias Silicon
Valley, Karnatakas capital Bangalore is the heart of Indias
IT- and IT-enabled industries and a choice destination for transnational
companies.
The official opposition in Indias national parliament,
the BJP captured 110 of the 224 Karnataka assembly seats. The
Congress Party, the dominant partner in Indias United Progressive
Alliance coalition government, took 80 seats, while the Janata
Dal (Secular) [JD(S)], which had previously ruled the state in
alliance with the BJP, won just 28 seats. The remaining six seats
were won by independent candidates or rebels from
the three large parties.
The BJPs triumphalist claims notwithstanding, its victory
in Karnataka hardly constitutes a popular mandate for its pro-big
business and communalist agenda. The BJP won only 33.8 percent
of the vote, barely one in every three votes cast. With a 34.5
percent vote share, the Congress Party actually won 0.7 percent
more of the popular vote than the BJP. If it trailed the latter
in seats, this is because the Congress vote was more evenly
distributed across the state.
Unlike the Congress, the BJP did increase its share of the
popular vote from the 2004 Karnataka election, when it first emerged
as the largest party in the state assembly, winning 79 seats and
28.5 percent of the vote. The Congress, by contrast, won 15 more
seats in the just concluded election due to a fall in support
for the JD(S), but its share of the vote actually fell by 0.8
percent.
The electoral turnout in the three-phase election was 65 percent.
But in the state capital, Bangalore, it was just 45 percent, indicating
difficulty with getting to polling stations because of the citys
choked roadways or dissatisfaction with the unsavory electoral
choices.
The lack of popular enthusiasm for the elections stands in
inverse proportion to the amounts of money various big business
cliques showered on the main contenders. Referring to the role
big money plays in US politics, a veteran Congress
Party leader was quoted by Rediff.com as saying: A similar
situation is emerging in Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka. The
BJP election effort in Bellary and Bangalore, for example, was
massively bankrolled by the Reddy mine-owning family.
The Congress Partys loss to the BJP in Karnataka is a
major blow and has given rise to a mood approaching panic within
the partys high command.
The Congress had hoped to reverse a mounting tide of state
election defeats by regaining power in Karnataka, a state whose
politics it has traditionally dominated. Only in 1984that
is, more 35 years after independencedid a non-Congress government
first take office in Karnataka.
Since early 2004, the Congress has lost 16 of the 24 state
assembly electrons held across India. (Much to its own surprise,
the Congress won a plurality of seats in the May 2004 national
elections and with a collection of smaller parties was able to
form the UPA government.)
Adding to the Congress leaderships concern over its Karnataka
defeat is that fresh national elections must be held by the middle
of next year.
The Congress-led UPA government, like the BJP-led coalition
that preceded it, has pressed forward with neo-liberal policies.
But in contradistinction to the BJP, the UPA has sought to camouflage
its championing of big business interests by claiming to pursue
inclusive growth and to represent the common man.
The Congress leadership has been banking on populist programs
such as the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA)which
guarantees 100 days of minimum-wage employment per year to one
member of every rural household and the recently announced
loan-forgiveness program for poor farmers to help it avert the
fate of the BJP, which crowed in 2004 about India Shining,
then suffered a massive rebuke from Indias toilers at the
polls. But to the Congress dismay it has repeatedly been
electorally sideswiped by popular anger over mounting economic
insecurity and social inequality.
The impact of soaring food prices
In the Karnataka elections, the BJP was able to capitalize
on the widespread anger of the electorate over the rising cost
of living and, in particular, double-digit food price increases.
According to UNICEF and other welfare agencies, the rising cost
of food is already leading to an increase in undernourishment
among the 800 million Indians who live on less than $2 US per
day.
While the BJP made gains across the state, it did particularly
well in the states more northerly districts, which have
not been touched by the investment boom in Bangalore.
In wooing the Karnataka electorate, the BJP did not highlight
key elements of its Hindu supremacist agenda. Rather it emphasized
the price-rise issue and complaints over the lack, or dilapidated
state, of public infrastructure.
The BJP denounced Bangalores inadequate water supply,
garbage disposal, and sewage system and its traffic-choked roads,
coining the vapid slogan Save Bangalore, vote BJP.
In the final days of the campaign, the BJP also seized on the
terrorist atrocity in Jaipur to repeat its communally-charged
claim that the Congress Party is soft on terrorism.
This may have resonated with some sections of the electorate,
as Bangalore has experienced several terrorist incidentsand,
thanks in no small part to the BJP, increased communal frictionsin
recent years.
Historically, the BJP has been a north Indian party, with its
base of support in the so-called Hindi belt. Not surprisingly,
the BJP, which has been riven by divisions since falling from
national office in 2004, is touting its first-ever election victory
in a south Indian state as an historic turning point, despite
its quite narrow support base and dependence on independent legislatorsfive
of whom have been given cabinet postsfor its parliamentary
majority. In a patent attempt to drum up election partners and
popular enthusiasm, the BJP leadership is boasting that the Karnataka
results are a harbinger of the coming national election.
The importance the BJP attaches to its Karnataka win was underlined
by the attendance at the Chief Ministers swearing-in ceremony
of most of the partys principal leaders. These included
BJP President Rajnath Singh, L.K. Advani, the former Home Minister
and the BJPs candidate for prime minister in the coming
national election, Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, who fomented
the 2002 pogrom against the states Muslim minority, and
the extremist leader of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (World Hindu
Council), Ashok Singhal.
On taking office, BJP Chief Minister Yeddyurappa promised to
implement socio-economic policies to the exclusive benefit of
domestic and foreign businesses along the lines of those implemented
by Modi in Gujarat. Said Yeddyurappa, I will send a team
of officials to Gujarat to see the developmental activities there
for implementation in Karnataka.
Big business is looking to the new government to siphon funds
from public services and social support programs into commercially-significant
infrastructure projects hoping thereby to maintain the states
recent high growth rate. We have had a recent history of
infrastructure neglect, said the president-elect of the
Federation of Karnataka Chambers of Commerce and Industry. The
result is beginning to show up in infrastructure deficits. We
want that situation corrected.
Caste and communal appeals
The Congress Party laid the blame for its defeat on a purported
failure to adeptly manipulate and exploit caste identities. Congress
Party leader and Union Urban Development Minister Jaipal Reddy
was quoted as saying: The Congress has to get its caste
arithmetic righta formula for even more reactionary
and socially divisive politics.
There is no doubt that Indias political partiesall
of which have been complicit in the Indian bourgeoisies
drive to make India a haven for cheap labor production and services
for the world economyhave become ever more dependent upon
reactionary caste and communal appeals to rally popular support.
In Karnatakas case, the elite of two rival caste groupsthe
Lingayat and Vokkaligahave played an inordinate role in
the states politics.
Traditionally the Lingayat elite has supported the Congress,
but over the last few elections it has apparently switched its
allegiance to the BJP. The new chief minister, Yeddyurappa is
a Lingayat and, for at least four decades, has been involved in
the Hindu nationalist and virulently anti-socialist Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).
The JD(S) has long claimed to be the political representative
of the Vokkaligas.
While caste identities play a major role in the internal politics
of the various parties, including their choice of candidates,
polls showed that in urban areas caste played no significant role
in determining voter preference. Rising food prices, for which
the Congress-led UPA government has offered no solution, were
the pivotal issue.
The Stalinist Communist Party of India (Marxist) or CPM lost
its sole seat in the Karnataka assembly. The CPM is the dominant
partner in the Left Front, a multi-party alliance that has sustained
the Congress Party-led UPA in power for the past four years, even
as it has pursued the bourgeoisies neo-liberal reforms
and a global, strategic partnership with Washington.
The Stalinists justify their support for the UPA on the grounds
that it is the only means to prevent the coming to power of a
BJP-led government. Similarly in Karnataka, the CPM claimed that
the chief issue was to prevent the election of a BJP government,
implying support for both the Congress and JD(S).
In the aftermath of the elections, CPM Politburo member Sitaram
Yechury wrote an op-ed piece for the Hindustan Times in
which he decried the failure of the Congress, the Indian bourgeoisies
traditional party of government, to pursue pro-people polices
and termed the Karnataka election results a warning about
a split in the secular vote bank.
In other words, the Stalinists response to the resurgence
of the BJP is to plead for the Congress and JD(S) to join forces,
claiming that they constitute a secular bulwark to the BJP.
The Congress has a decades long history, stretching back at
least to the 1947 communal partition of the subcontinent, of adapting
to, and conniving with, the Hindu right. As for the JD(S), only
last year it was in a coalition government with the BJP in Karnataka.
Over the last four years Karnatakas official politics
plunged to new depths, as the three major parties engaged in back-stabbing
and other sordid maneuvers in pursuit of the pelf and patronage
that comes with governmental power.
In the aftermath of the 2004 state elections, the JD(S) and
Congress formed a coalition, with the Congress Party, by virtue
of its having 5 more seats than the JD(S), allowed to lay claim
to the Chief Ministership. However, two years later the JD(S)
bolted from the coalition, which had been increasingly discredited
by its pursuit of right-wing policies, corruption, and sheer incompetence.
The JD(S) next threw in its lot with the communalist BJP. The
two parties agreed to split the Chief Minister post for the remaining
40 months of the assemblys term, with the JD(S) assuming
the chief ministership for the first 20 months and the BJP slated
to lead the government for the last 20 months.
But the deal fell apart when the JD(S), at the end of its 20-moth
term as head of the coalition, refused to back the BJP choices
for chief minister, Yeddyurappa. This precipitated an immense
political crisis, prompting the Karnataka governor to request
the Congress Party-led UPA government impose presidents
or central government rule. In November 2007, the UPA dismissed
the state legislature and imposed central government rule.
Unquestionably, the JD(S)s cynical maneuvering between
2004 and November 2007 was a factor in its recent electoral drubbing.
As for the new BJP government, events are already revealing
its true character. Last Tuesday one man was killed and three
more injured when police in Karnatakas Haveri District opened
fire on farmers protesting against a shortage of fertilizer.
See Also:
India: Fuel price hikes deepen political
crisis of Congress Party-led government
[11 June 2008]
India: Stalinist CPMs
triennial meeting to reiterate support for Congress Party-led
government
[29 May 2008]
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