12-20-2009, 06:19 AM
A challenge for BJPââ¬â¢s GenNext
Kanchan Gupta
Kanchan Gupta
Quote:On a late spring evening more than a decade ago, some of us had gathered at Pramod Mahajanââ¬â¢s apartment ââ¬â he hadnââ¬â¢t moved into a Lutyensââ¬â¢ bungalow till then ââ¬â to discuss ideas for the 1996 general election campaign. Mr LK Advani had already declared Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee as the BJPââ¬â¢s prime ministerial candidate and there was a palpable surge of support for the party which corresponded with the waning of the Congress. Despite the framing of Mr Advani and other senior leaders of the BJP in the Jain hawala scandal by a desperate PV Narasimha Rao (he even turned on his colleagues in the Cabinet who in turn turned against him and resigned from the Congress) there was great enthusiasm among party cadre. Mr Advani had seized the moral high ground and converted what Rao had thought would be a disadvantage into a clear advantage. In that election, Mr Advani was the non-playing captain though he led his team from the front.
Over chai and samosas ordered from an eatery downstairs, ideas were tossed around on how to package the BJPââ¬â¢s core message ââ¬â good governance ââ¬â and portray it through the persona of Mr Vajpayee. Till then, the BJP had not projected any single leader in any election; it was always the partyââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëcollective leadershipââ¬â¢ that was projected as an alternative to the Congressââ¬â¢s dynastic leadership. The tragic assassination of Rajiv Gandhi midway through the 1991 general election had forced a break in the Congressââ¬â¢s tradition, catapulting Narasimha Rao to power. Since the Ram Rath Yatra days, Mr Advani had emerged as the most prominent face of the BJP; to suddenly weave a campaign around Mr Vajpayee posed a challenge to even Pramod Mahajan who was never short of ideas, especially when it came to election campaigns.
Among those invited for that meeting was an impetuous young man representing a big advertising agency which had offered to help plan the campaign ââ¬â as had some others. This man suddenly said, ââ¬ÅIt would have been a lot easier had Mr Vajpayee been a younger man.ââ¬Â There was stunned silence. Obviously ignorant of the esteem in which Mr Vajpayee was ââ¬â and still continues to be ââ¬â held in the party, he had clearly upset everybody. Pramod Mahajan looked at him coldly and bitingly said, ââ¬ÅThis isnââ¬â¢t America where young upstarts are elected to high office. We value experience and we respect age. Please tell your agency we arenââ¬â¢t interested in its services.ââ¬Â The poor sod was halfway through his samosa and didnââ¬â¢t know what to say. ââ¬ÅAb aap jaaiye,ââ¬Â Pramod Mahajan added, literally asking him to leave the meeting.
I donââ¬â¢t recall whether anything concrete emerged from that particular meeting, but over the following weeks a campaign was painstakingly put together centred around Mr Vajpayee and based on the theme, ââ¬ËThe man India awaitsââ¬â¢, which, incidentally, was the headline of an interview-based article I had written at that time. That election saw the BJP emerge as the single largest party and form a Government led by Mr Vajpayee. The Government lasted for a fortnight, but it helped the BJP come to power two years later. The rest, to quote a cliché, is history.
The reason I cite this particular incident is to highlight the point that too much is made of a leaderââ¬â¢s age by the New Delhi-based commentariat, more so when it comes to the BJP. Voters are less persuaded by a candidateââ¬â¢s age than by his or her perceived ability to deliver on promises. It is the sum total of a leaderââ¬â¢s qualities that matters, not his or her age. Equally important is a leaderââ¬â¢s ability to connect with the masses, to strike a rapport and secure their confidence.
Mr Vajpayee was not a young man when he became Prime Minister, nor was Mrs Indira Gandhi in the prime of her youth when she swept back to power in 1980. If Mr Manmohan Singh is widely respected at home and abroad, it has nothing to do with his age but his ability to project himself as an earnest and humble person of unimpeachable integrity. And, the BJPââ¬â¢s defeat in last summerââ¬â¢s general election was more on account of a poorly planned campaign and shoddy political management than either Mr Advaniââ¬â¢s age or his leadership which has been variously described as ââ¬Ëuninspiringââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëjadedââ¬â¢ by his critics within and outside the party. But for bogus pollsters, stupidly brash aides and a ââ¬Ëwar roomââ¬â¢ whose most creative contribution was the astounding promise of gifting every family living below the poverty line with a smart phone, perhaps the results would have been vastly different. Nor can we overlook the Congressââ¬â¢s surge in States where the BJP is at best a marginal player.
It would, therefore, be self-defeating for the BJP to believe that with Mr Advani standing aside for the next generation of leaders to take charge of the partyââ¬â¢s affairs, the 2014 general election will be a cakewalk. Todayââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëyoungââ¬â¢ leaders will be five years older when India votes to elect a new Lok Sabha, which means they will be pushing 60. If between now and then those who find themselves propelled to the frontline are unable to tackle the many illnesses that plague the party and fashion an alternative agenda distinctively different from that of the Congress and in tune with the aspirations of todayââ¬â¢s voters, the BJPââ¬â¢s tally could dip below the 100 mark. The battle for votes has always been a battle of ideas; in 1996, 1998 and 1999, Mr Advani and Mr Vajpayee had the right ideas largely because they went with their instincts. Itââ¬â¢s only when they allowed their ideas to be swamped by the mumbo-jumbo of courtiers and time-servers that they faltered and fell.
Contrary to what is being claimed, the BJPââ¬â¢s main problem is not the RSS but the BJP itself. Last weekââ¬â¢s transition will be meaningless unless it is accompanied by a tectonic shift in the way the BJP sees itself. It can either choose to position itself as the only alternative to the Congress by being distinctly, ideationally and ideologically different, or it can persist with fashioning itself as a clone of the Congress, a holdall party with neither beliefs nor commitments but driven by the cynical pursuit of power as an end and not the means to an end. Mr Vajpayee had vision; he was the ââ¬Ëbig pictureââ¬â¢ man who couldnââ¬â¢t bother about the details. Mr Advani had ideas; it was his job to fill in the details of Mr Vajpayeeââ¬â¢s vision. What the BJP needs to regain its position as an unassailable foe of the Congress is a new generation Vajpayee and a new generation Advani, if not a leader who can combine the qualities of the two stalwarts who still tower above everybody else in the party. Age wonââ¬â¢t be a criterion in deciding who qualifies as the new generation Advani or new generation Vajpayee.