COVER STORY: ATAL BIHARI
VAJPAYEE
Crown of ThornsThe PM-aspirant will have to impart some coherence to a
coalition of parties with separate agendas.
By Swapan Dasgupta
and Saba Naqvi Bhaumik
During the election campaign, a pesky reporter asked the BJP's
prime minister-designate what would happen if his party lost the election. Unfazed, and
with a clear twinkle in his eye, Atal Bihari Vajpayee retorted: "Then it will be agli
bari, Atal Bihari." It was black humour at its best. Since its formation in 1980, the
BJP has persisted with its agli bari refrain for Vajpayee. It clicked -- well almost -- in
1996 when the BJP and its allies pushed the mighty Congress to second place by winning 187
seats. But Vajpayee's glory lasted exactly 13 days and included one of the most memorable
performances on television. This time, after cobbling together a series of strategic
alliances with regional parties, the BJP-led combine did better. Spectacularly better. As
Vajpayee sat at his Safdarjung Road residence watching the results on television and L.K.
Advani nursed a sore throat, it was clear that the BJP was only a whisker away from making
it -- finally. "The moment of truth. The moment of BJP", as the party
advertisement put it.
AIADMK (18): The new alliance has reaped a bounty, but
Jayalalitha is a sticky customer.
Samata (12): The alliance clicks again, the tally has gone up.
BJD (9): Impressive debut. An alliance that will endure.
SAD (8): The partnership is running smoothly in Punjab.
Trinamool (7): Common hatred of the CPI(M) is the bond.
Shiv Sena (6): Much chastened and reduced to a rump.
Lok Shakti (3): Ramakrishna Hegde's image bigger than tally.
PMK (4): P. Ramdoss is known for his unpredictable ways.
MDMK (3): Also comes into the alliance via the AIADMK route.
TRC (1): The only party in the alliance to carry Rajiv's name.
JP (1): Maverick Subramaniam Swamy is a one-man show.
HVP (1): Will stay on despite the shock of four MPs from Chautala's HLD(R) backing
BJP. |
Tragically for Vajpayee, it has been a pyrrhic victory. Despite reverses in
Maharashtra and Rajasthan, the BJP won 178 seats to retain its status as the single
largest party in the 12th Lok Sabha. By itself, it has also polled almost as many votes as
the Congress. If the votes of its allies are added, 37 per cent of the electorate has
reposed its faith in a Vajpayee-led government. That implies a staggering swing of 12 per
cent over 1996. That is the good news. The bad news is that if President K.R. Narayanan
invites Vajpayee to head the next government, the BJP leader will be a prisoner of his 13
disparate pre-poll allies who hold 73 seats and a score of post-poll friends who will
inevitably extract a steep price for their support. There is already an ironic ring to
Vajpayee's much used Hindi aphorism for the United Front (UF) during the election
campaign: "Kahin ka eent/kahin ka roda/Bhanumati ne kunba joda (a brick from
here/a brick from there/that's how Bhanumati got her flock together)".
Vajpayee may find that the last laugh is on him. Trapped between two formidable ladies
whose promise of "outside support" sounds ominously like a threat, he may indeed
end up as no more than the most agreeable face of a messy coalition. Besides his several
allies, Vajpayee will also be coping with the pulls and pressures of leading a BJP
government without being in the position to implement the undiluted Hindutva agenda.
The silver lining is that the BJP is reasonably confident of surpassing its earlier
record of longevity. The Congress is divided between those who want to rush into another
"secular" experiment and those who want to grab the opposition space and wait
for the next round. Likewise, the UF is torn between those who want to prevent a BJP-led
government at all costs and those who are fearful of losing out to the BJP in the
anti-Congress stakes. Given these contradictions, Vajpayee, like P.V. Narasimha Rao in
1991, looks like getting through the vote of confidence by sheer default.
Even if the numbers don't quite add up for the BJP at present, the prospects of forging
an anti-BJP combine are even more daunting. No party wants to be seen hijacking the
mandate by denying Vajpayee a stint in South Block. "We are not in a hurry" is
the present refrain of even those Congress and UF leaders who initially reacted in panic
to the news of the BJP's near-victory. Says a BJP leader: "We may not be in the best
position but the Congress and the UF are so divided that even if we were to move a
no-confidence motion, most of the newly-elected MPs would rather abstain than vote against
us." Party General Secretary Pramod Mahajan is more forthright: "It's not as if
the President will call anyone who stakes a claim. Then anyone can go to the street corner
and stake a claim. Even if the BJP does not get a brute majority or a simple majority, it
will manage a working majority." But for how long?
The operative word is "manage". At the best of times, a coalition is beset by
problems. A coalition that is also a minority government is certain to be riddled with
absurdities. The BJP will perforce have to cohabit with some of the most mercurial
personalities of Indian politics. Besides old friends like the temperamental Shiv Sena
chief Bal Thackeray and the voluble George Fernandes, the BJP will have to cope with the
autocratic AIADMK supremo J. Jayalalitha and the firebrand Trinamool Congress leader
Mamata Banerjee, not to mention a vengeful maverick like Subramaniam Swamy who feels the
finance minister's job is his rightful due. And, while the UF constituents had control
over several state governments, most of the BJP's new allies are not in power in their
respective states. A predicament that can only imply increased demands on the Centre.
Such pulls and pressures are already in evidence.
Jayalalitha, who along with her four allies in Tamil Nadu, commands the loyalty of 27 MPs,
is giving the BJP sleepless nights even before Vajpayee has been sworn in. She stunned the
BJP by announcing unilaterally that she would extend "outside support" to a
Vajpayee government. This, after announcing on television that she would like to play a
major role at the Centre. True, she effected a minor retreat by announcing subsequently
that "I am very firm in my support to the BJP which alone can give a stable
government at the Centre", but her rider that "at different times we have to
take different decisions in keeping with the current situation" was ominous.
Jayalalitha is certain to keep up her pressure on the BJP to effect "a change of
government in Tamil Nadu" even if that entails riding roughshod over constitutional
niceties. Keeping Amma in good humour is certain to be one of the major preoccupations of
Vajpayee and party President Advani.

REGIONAL PULL: Mercurial personalities like AIADMK chief Jayalalitha are likely
to make unreasonable demands that the BJP leadership may find difficult to concede
|
CONCENSUS |
CONFLICT |
Keeping contentious issues
on the backburner.
Going slow on the probes into the various criminal cases Jayalalitha is
involved in.
Focus on populist schemes |
AIADMK demand to use
Article 356 to sack DMK Government.
Jayalalitha's early decision to give outside support instead of joining a
Vajpayee government.
Jayalalitha's autocratic ways |
|
Likewise, Haryana Lok Dal-Rashtriya (HLD-R) leader Om Prakash Chautala surprised
everyone by announcing his instant "unconditional" support to the BJP despite
its alliance with Bansi Lal's Haryana Vikas Party (HVP). It is unlikely that Chautala --
best remembered for his strong-arm tactics during the Meham by-election in 1990 -- did so
because he is concerned with stability. He is certain to demand his pound of flesh in good
time. In a similar vein, the BJP has to constantly kowtow to Mamata and her Trinamool
Congress for two reasons. First, because this was one understanding that was limited to
seat sharing -- although it worked like magic on the ground in Calcutta and its adjoining
suburbs. Secondly, because Mamata is certain to be the first target of any poaching game
by the Congress.
The BJP-led coalition embraces the entire gamut of Indian politics -- from Naveen
Patnaik to Chautala, and from Ramakrishna Hegde to MDMK leader V. Gopalasamy. The mere
task of forging these divergent strands into a cohesive unit and still maintain a
semblance of good governance involves superhuman effort. An easy-going leader, Vajpayee is
not known for either cunning or ruthlessness. He is most comfortable in mass politics, but
the problems of coalitions are not resolved through thundering speeches. Nor is the party
of much help. Most BJP leaders are inward looking and used to RSS-inspired orderliness.
They are usually at sea in dealing with people from a different political milieu. For
governing with a wafer-thin majority, Vajpayee will need all the wily ingenuity of a
Bhairon Singh Shekhawat. The breakthrough could come if Vajpayee succeeds in elevating a
political coalition to a cultural coalition.
It is not that the BJP has glossed over these problems in the euphoria of near-victory.
Says party General Secretary K.N. Govindacharya: "We need extraordinary steps for an
extraordinary situation. It is a difficult task but not impossible." At the core of
the BJP's grand plan to cope with the contradictions of coalition government is its
National Agenda for Governance, its variant of the UF's Common Minimum Programme. The
document, drafted by Govindacharya with direct inputs from Vajpayee, Advani and Fernandes,
makes a pitch for avoiding the politics of confrontation and ushering an era of national
reconciliation and consensus. This is in line with Vajpayee's statement on television that
"this is a time for healing, not conflict".
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