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India Today
March 16, 1998

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My Buddy's Best

Nani PalkhivalaIf a thing's worth doing, it's worth doing well. So        Nani Palkhivala -- jurist, economist and industrialist -- not only makes it a point to vote, he takes a keen interest in the candidate from his constituency. And if it's his buddy, Murli Deora, who's standing, the level of interest shoots up. This time Palkhivala went a step further: he released a letter to the citizens of Mumbai-South constituency endorsing Deora's candidature. "I did what I believed in," says the ever-modest man. What he "believed in" happens to be (and these are the words of his letter) that "Deora has a track record of useful public service and a distinguished career as a corporator, mayor, MLC and MP for three consecutive terms". Deora, of course, was grateful. Yes, he won. No, Palkhivala didn't do the campaign rounds. His letter did. It was a certificate worth its weight in votes.

Rajni Can't

Rajnikant with KarunanidhiThis may be the end of the cine blitz in Tamil politics. Matinee idol Rajnikanth faced the flop show of his life last week when the DMK-TMC combine was routed in his state. "If Jayalalitha is voted back to power, even God cannot save Tamil Nadu," he had thundered in the last elections. The Lord thought differently this time. Not only did Amma's AIADMK win, even heavyweight movie star Sarath Kumar -- a DMK candidate -- lost. A humbled Rajni has reportedly gone underground, and the joke in certain political circles is that a missing-persons' ad must be put out in the papers. Thank god that's not a wanted ad.

Pitching in for a Friend

Kapil Dev"It doesn't matter which party they are from," says           Kapil Dev, speaking like no voter should. Of course, what he means is that he'd campaign for a friend "whether the person's standing from the BJP, the Congress or as an Independent". The friend this time happens to be Kamal Nath. Touring the Congressman's constituency -- Chhindwara in Madhya Pradesh, which he lost last time round -- the ace cricketer was asked: When will you come here to play? "The next time I'm here," he replied, "I hope I'm playing cricket, not politics." But in case you're wondering, Kapil's not out to help himself. "I don't want any publicity for myself," he insists. "I enjoyed playing cricket, but now, all I want is to be with my family, and that good, committed people should go to Parliament." Nice shot, friend.

The Number Cruncher

Bian RamaniThere's nothing like post-election hindsight. Businesswoman Bina Ramani, best known for her lavish bashes, put her interest in numerology to political use this time. She claims she predicted that "good friends" Vasundhara Raje Scindia, Naveen Patnaik and Akbar "Dumpy" Ahmed would win. "I wouldn't mind doing this seriously if the BJP wants me to," says Ramani, "but I'm not a BJP person. I did this because Vasu's a good friend." Vasu, she continues, has stronger numbers in her chart than the dapper Madhavrao. Aw, come on, that's an easy one, we all know brother Scindia suffered a few tense moments when the counting of votes was on. Would madam venture to look into the future for us? Yup, here goes: Sushma Swaraj is in for troubled times, Atal Bihari Vajpayee will be at the top very briefly, and Pramod Mahajan "will go through a brilliant phase" after three tough years. Here's a test: re-read this column three years from now. Then again, read it next week.

 

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