Looking at you BJP - Indian Express
Sure enough, in two of the three BJP-ruled states the party was in power for too long and the law of change was bound to catch up with it sooner or later. Besides, vote shares, seat difference in MP and margins of victory, all show the thinness of the “victory” of the Congress in Rajasthan and MP. Add to this the Congress’ inability to retain Mizoram (or even remain a strong contender) and failure to dent the TRS in Telangana and the limitations of the Congress appear stark. So, there is ground to doubt if the Congress “won” but the BJP’s defeat is an undeniable reality.
As such, the story of this round of elections boils down to the sudden crisis faced by the BJP. With Lok Sabha elections only months away, this setback will haunt the party in the run-up.
One reason for this is the number of seats it may now lose from these states where it won as many as 62 last time. Even if it loses half of these, the dream of returning to power would have receded. But it is not merely the mechanical calculation of loss of seats in these states; it is also about image and optics — weapons the party relies heavily on. Since Gujarat, the invincibility of the party has been under a cloud. Now these defeats will send a message across the country that the BJP, too, is subject to electoral ups and downs.
Thirdly, its defeat and the limited Congress surge would have a combined effect on the non-BJP coalition. Indeed, non-BJP parties would be making a mistake if they carry the coalition logic too far and harp on an all-India non-BJP coalition. Nevertheless, the recent election results open up rich possibilities of localised or state-level coalitions that would effectively stop the BJP from picking seats in many states.
But these are contingent factors that the BJP may hope to overcome with clever political moves. Yet, the outcomes of the recent assembly elections still signify critical times ahead for the party — and for a far more serious reason. Ever since the results started trickling in, the party has suddenly become orphaned. Barring a curt and formal note by the PM, there is silence. In contrast to chief ministers owning up responsibility, the real leadership of the party seems to have taken the maun vrat. This silence may be due to genuine shock; since December 2013, Narendra Modi has been the flagbearer of the party’s machismo and aggression. Defeat is something this image cannot accommodate easily. But one suspects that the reason for silence and confusion is deeper. From the time he rose on the national scene, Modi has presented a consistent narrative. There are four core elements of the Modi-narrative: Exaggerated reading of the 2014 result, permanence of popularity, claims about performance and vilification of the Opposition.
When the BJP won the 2014 elections, it had an option of focusing on governance and interpreting the results as a product of the electoral cycle in a democracy. Instead, the party wove a folklore around the victory and understood it as a “mandate” to build a “new” India. The same over-reading was attached to the UP results later. For its cadres, this narrative became the core motif and BJP supporters, on the ground or in virtual spaces, began going berserk. Building a new India involved destroying much of the older regime in an ideological and physical sense. So, Nehru-bashing and removing any façade of institutional governance became the programmes of the party and government. The assumption behind this assault has been that popularity is permanent — or can be made permanent using every trick in the trade. The idea of Congress-mukt Bharat was not only an over-reading of 2014, it was also overconfidence in the durability of the popularity and ability of the leader to deliver electoral victories always and everywhere more