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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Wednesday, May 09, 2001 |
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State Elections
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Stage set for a tough fight
By C. Gouridasan Nair
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, MAY 8. It is a grim scenario that Kerala
presents on the election eve for the ruling Left Democratic Front
(LDF), but the electoral battle in most constituencies in the
State is closer than many of the pre-poll surveys suggest.
The LDF leaders refuse to admit it, but incumbency has been
weighing down on them towards the latter part of the campaign for
the May 10 election. The Congress-led Opposition United
Democratic Front (UDF) has naturally found it the best campaign
plank and the chances of the LDF returning to power would depend
mainly on how successful the UDF leadership has been in
exploiting this factor besides, of course, the way the BJP tilts
the balance in the score in odd constituencies where the margin
of victory of the two fronts is marginal.
The LDF is giving it a big heave on the home stretch in the hope
that people would once again repose faith on it.
The LDF argument is that if at all there is an anti-incumbency
sentiment among the electorate, it is more perceived than real.
It has valid reasons to think so.
An objective analysis would reveal that the LDF had acquitted
itself reasonably well in Government. However, it also remains a
fact that where it faltered, it did so miserably.
On the positive side, it could carry out decentralisation of
powers with remarkable success, make the State power-surplus, add
new vigour to the tourism sector and keep the public distribution
system intact shouldering a heavy financial burden.
But pluses seldom stay imprinted in public memory. The minuses
do. The Plus Two imbroglio, for instance. Thousands of families
across the State were on tenterhooks for days on end on account
of the messy manner in which the whole issue was handled by the
Government.
It was a case of the tail wagging the dog as the CPI(M) and the
rest of the front had to follow the course charted out for it by
the Kerala Congress (J).
No different was the eminently avoidable controversy over
sanctioning of new engineering colleges in the private sector.
The alleged links between some middle-rung CPI(M) leaders and the
liquor mafia and the severe financial crunch that the State
experiences now have all contributed to create the impression
that the Nayanar Government was bad from start to finish.
When the poll campaign began, the LDF seemed to have little to
worry on the incumbency front. The CPI(M) decision to field a
relatively new team was received well by the masses. The LDF's
success in bringing out its manifesto and candidate list without
much ado was also widely appreciated.
But when the UDF got its act together and began mounting a
scathing attack on the Government over issues such as alleged
corruption in the sanctioning of Plus Two courses, the Nadapuram
incidents, financial profligacy and alleged use of power by the
CPI(M) to amass wealth, the LDF found itself on the defensive.
On top of all this, almost every other community save the Nair
Service Society (NSS) and some of the Christian denominations
came out in support of the UDF. The effectiveness of such calls
might be marginal, but taut political divide, even marginal
shifts, can make or mar the chances of individuals and parties.
The UDF's alleged nexus with the BJP and its open alliance with
the PDP have made things even more difficult for the LDF. Both
the UDF and the BJP leadership have been professing innocence
about the LDF charge, but the commonality of their interests is
there for all to see.
There could be a subtle divergence in the BJP and the RSS
perceptions of options available to them in Kerala, but that
would be more in terms of nuances than in the general intend.
The BJP leaders have been speaking about a hung Assembly and some
"surprise results", the insinuation being that some important
leaders from both sides will be defeated this time.
The hung Assembly theme may have to do with the BJP-RSS combine's
hopes of whittling the two major players, Congress and the
CPI(M), thereby emboldening their partners to assert themselves.
The combine's gameplan appears to be have an Assembly where the
winning combination would have only a majority of a few. Kerala
has already been witness to the convulsions in the UDF during the
1982-87 period under similar circumstances.
If the BJP plan works, Kerala would be in for a period of serious
instability. That is where the LDF call for a vote for stability
acquires more than ordinary significance.
The BJP-RSS combine might be hoping to fish in these troubled
waters. The "surprise results" may also have to do with this
agenda and might mean that the combine has targetted leaders on
both sides of the divide.
The question whether the BJP would make it to the Assembly this
time, a subject of intense speculation in the media, would depend
on whether or not it has entered into a deal with either of the
two Fronts.
In the 1991 Assembly election, there was a deal between the
Congress and the BJP, but it fell through because the Congress
did not hold its end up. The BJP is unlikely to fall for such
wiles now.
The possible outcome apart, there have been two interesting
aspects to the poll campaign this time. The first is that the
question of local development has by and large overshadowed the
larger political issues in many parts of the State.
This has made the electoral contest in many places constituency-
specific. Even in a constituency like Cherthala, Mr. A. K. Antony
is on the defensive because of the widespread feeling that he
could not deliver as an MLA.
The ruling front nominees are also not free from such worries
because the financial crunch had resulted in several projects
getting stuck at the final stage leaving the people unhappy.
The second is the legitimisation of the PDP which was, till the
other day, a political untouchable for most parties. The PDP
cadres have taken upon themselves the task of mobilising Muslim
votes on behalf of the UDF, particularly in southern Kerala.
What this would imply for the Muslim League in the days to come
would be interesting to watch.
The emergence of the INL from the shadows of the two major
fronts has also added to the charm of the political battle this
time. After fighting a bitter faction feud over, among other
things, the INL, the CPI(M) has now been forced to seek out Mr.
Ebrahim Sulaiman Sait's party to mobilise the anti-Muslim League
vote in the Muslim belt.
Whether and how the CPI(M) would carry the tie-up to its logical
conclusion would also be interesting to look out for.
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Section : State Elections Previous : Candidate alleges bid to disrupt election Next : Social and political wind in favour of UDF | |
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