India: 14 months after falling from power, BJP in turmoil
By Sarath Kumara
5 July 2005
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Sudheendra Kulkarni resigned Sunday from all three leadership
posts he held in the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP): party national
secretary; secretary to BJP president L.K. Advani; and member
of the national executive.
According to press reports, Advani, who doubles as the leader
of the official opposition in Indias parliament, pressed
for Kulkarnis resignation in an attempt to shore up his
own embattled leadership.
Advani, who himself quit as party president June 7, only to
withdraw his resignation three days later, apparently chose to
sacrifice Kulkarni, in the hopes that his purging
from the party leadership will appease elements in and around
the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS)the shadowy, Hindu
supremacist organization that helped found the BJP and provides
many of its cadres.
The hard-line Hindu supremacists, particularly the RSS-affiliated
Vishwa Hindu Parishad (World Hindu Council), have accused Advani
of betraying the Hindu nation for remarks he made
while on an official visit to Pakistan May 31 to June 5. A member
of the RSS since his adolescence, the 77-year-old Advani is notorious
for his baiting of Indias Muslim minority and saber-rattling
against Pakistan. Yet the VHP is demanding he retire from politics
and has vowed to launch an agitation in his home parliamentary
constituency, located in the state capital of Gujarat, to force
his resignation.
The top brass of the RSS, for its part, has failed to give
Advanis leadership unqualified support. RSS leaders have
indicated that Advani should soon relinquish one of his two top
leadership posts and earlier this year RSS supremo K.S. Sudarshan
suggested that the time was rapidly approaching when the BJP should
make a generational change in its leadership. (Apart from Advani,
the other top BJP spokesperson is the octogenarian former Prime
Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee.)
The RSSs relations with, and aspirations for, the BJP
reportedly top the agenda of an RSS conclave being held in Surat
this week.
A key consideration for both RSS and BJP leaders is the impact
that a flagrant assertion of RSS power against Advani and his
close ally Vajpayee (the latter was among the few first rank BJP
leaders to unequivocally endorse Advanis leadership after
his Pakistan remarks) will have on the National Democratic Alliance
(NDA), the multi-party coalition that the BJP heads and without
which it would have no real chance of returning to power at the
next election. Several top leaders of the Janata Dal (United),
the second most important NDA constituent, have said their party
will be compelled to quit the NDA if the RSS and its allies force
Advani out on the grounds that he is insufficiently committed
to Hindutva, the Hindu supremacist ideology championed
by the RSS-BJP.
George Fernandesthe senior-most Janata Dal (United) leader
and convener of the NDAmet with the RSS chief
at its Nagpur headquarters for two-and-a-half-hours June 29 to
plead for and end to the tension between the RSS and
BJP. Fernandes refused to publicly divulge anything more about
the talks, but the following day he briefed both Advani and Vajpayee
about his discussions with Sudarshan.
The BJP in permanent crisis
The BJP has been buffeted by crisis since it and the NDA were
driven from power in the May 2004 general election. Having secured
the backing of big business by pressing forward with its neo-liberal,
export-led growth agenda and bested the opposition Congress in
a number of state-elections, the BJP and, indeed the entire political
establishment, were confident the NDA would win re-election with
an increased majority. Instead the elections became a means for
Indias masses to vent their anger over mounting economic
insecurity and social inequality and their disdain for the BJPs
Hindu chauvinism.
No less great was the BJP leaders shock when the most
powerful sections of Indian big business embraced the coalition
government put together by the Congress with the help of the Left
Front, a multi-party bloc led by the Stalinist Communist Party
of India (Marxist).
Having seen the poll results and reassured by the Congress
decision to name as the new prime minister the finance minister
who in 1991 launched the drive to dismantle Indias nationally-regulated
economy, Indias business elite quickly concluded that a
government led by the Congress, its traditional ruling party,
and enjoying the support of the official left would be the best
means of deflecting and dissipating social discontent, while pressing
forward with the drive to transform India into a cheap labor haven
for world capital.
Embittered and disoriented by its sudden fall from power, the
BJP has for all intents and purposes refused to accept the results
of the elections. Its spokesman have repeatedly predicted the
imminent collapse of the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance
coalition and sought to hasten it by paralyzing parliament with
walkouts and boycotts and by trying to blindside the government
with various smears and phoney issues.
But its rank chauvinist and anti-communist appeals have had
no traction. Not with the public. Not with big business. Rather
the corporate-controlled media has become increasingly critical
of BJP obstructionism, accusing the party of failing
to fulfill the role of a loyal opposition, and, with
the notable exception of the state elections in Bihar and Jharkand,
the BJP has suffered a non-stop series of electoral reversals
since the ouster of the NDA government.
The Bush administration, which the BJP assiduously courted
when in power, has also, to the BJP leaderships chagrin,
embraced the Congress-led government. In fact, Washington, which
had no difficulty working with the Hindu supremacists when they
held power in New Delhi, recently denied the BJP Chief Minister
of Gujarat, Narendra Modinotorious for his role in inciting
a pogrom against Muslims in 2002a visa to visit the US.
All of this has only deepened the crisis within the BJP, ultimately
prompting Advani to conclude that the BJP needs to reposition
itself if it is to recapture the support of Indias economic
elite.
Advanis attempt to reposition the BJP
This shift was first signalled by a speech Advani gave to the
Confederation of Indian Industry (CIU) and then much more boldly
in the carefully scripted departures he made from traditional
BJP-RSS ideology during his tour of Pakistan.
Speaking in mid-May before the annual meeting of the CII, one
of Indias most powerful business lobbies, Advani backed
away from the near-total obstructionism the BJP has pursued since
the last general election, saying his party would support any
reform that is vital for Indias economic progress.
While touting the BJPs record in promoting the agenda of
big business, including its pre-1991 opposition to Congress socialism,
Advani pledged to work hand-in-glove with the Congress if it ditched
its left allies so as to more aggressively pursue neo-liberal
reforms. Assuming the pose of an elder statesman, Advani declared,
A nation can achieve great goals and ambitious targets only
through broad national consensus.
Less then two weeks later, Advani chose his visit to Pakistan
to make a series of remarks that clearly were calculated at provoking
a crisis in the BJP and distancing it from the most rabid Hindu
supremacists. Advani lavished praise on Mohammed Ali Jinnah, who
is officially revered in Pakistan as the founder of the Muslim
state and reviled by Hindu nationalists as the architect of the
1947 partition. First he called Jinnah a great man.
Then in a subsequent speech, he declared him a secularist.
As proof he cited a speech Jinnah gave after his Muslim League,
the Indian National Congress, and the British had agreed to partition
India on communal lines in which Jinnah called for equal citizenship
rights for persons of all faiths in Pakistan.
Further challenging traditional RSS-BJP ideology, Advani told
the Pakistani press the question of Akhand Bharatan
India embracing the entire subcontinenthad long ago been
settled. Even more provocatively, he called the day in 1992 when
Hindu chauvinist militants, who had been whipped into a frenzy
by a campaign led by none other than himself, razed the Babri
Masjid mosque in Ayodhya the saddest day of my life.
To underline the point Advani went onto describe his Pakistan
trip, which included a visit to his native Karachi, The
best week of my whole life.
Advanis remarks were tied to reminders that it was the
BJP leadership that, at least from the Indian side, initiated
the current rapprochement with Pakistan. Advani is well aware
Indias corporate elite is solidly behind the Indo-Pakistan
peace process, for it believes war crises, like that provoked
by the BJP in 2001-02, are a barrier to foreign investment and
that Indias larger and more technologically advanced companies
are well-positioned to dominate a future South Asian economic
bloc incorporating Pakistan.
But if Advani was willing to endure some dissidence within
the BJP and complaints from the RSS and VHP so as to renew the
BJPs bond with big business, he was in for a surprise. Apart
from Vajpayee, virtually no one in the BJP leadership rallied
to this defence when his remarks elicited the expected outcry
from Hindu chauvinist hardliners. On arriving back in India, Advani
found himself forced to tender his resignation, so as to pressure
those whom he had counted on to rally behind him in his efforts
to refashion the BJPs image to issue declarations of support
for his leadership.
As a condition for the withdrawing his resignation, Advani
forced the BJP to issue a resolution praising his Pakistan trip
as path-breaking. But he had to make a major concession
to his critics. The resolution effectively repudiated Advanis
statements about Jinnah. It proclaimed the state Jinnah founded
theocratic and non-secular and reiterated the Hindu
chauvinist/Indian nationalist contention that Muslim communalists
like Jinnah and British imperialism alone bear responsibility
for the 1947 partition.
How the crisis in the BJP will unfold in the coming weeks and
months is impossible to predict. The petty bourgeois elements
around the VHP and RSS are highly volatile. Moreover, they are
incensed at their marginalization with the BJPs fall from
power and now the efforts of Advani, whom until recently they
considered one of their own, to put them on a tighter leash. It
is certainly possible that sections of the Hindu supremacist right
may take steps that cut across the attempts of the RSS top brass
to pressure the BJP leadership to remain true to the partys
Hindutva roots.
While support for Advani within the BJP has been tepid, the
press is all but unanimous in supporting him in trying to distance
the BJP from the divisive and destabilizing politics of the most
extreme Hindu chauvinists. Declared the Indian Express
in a June 8 editorial: What is at stake in this contest
is the very soul of the BJP. Will it be a party that is dominated
by rabble rousers, fanatics and pinched-up ideologues of the sort
the VHP and RSS support? Or will it become a genuine right of
center party that is capable of governing India in the twenty
first century?
Two things, however, can be said with certainty.
The 1998-2004 BJP-led NDA government, in which Advani served
as the home minister, was far and away the most right-wing government
in the history of modern India. It pursued a neo-liberal socio-economic
agenda, nuclearization and a massive military build-up, authored
a draconian anti-terrorism law, sought a strategic alliance with
US imperialism, presided over the 2002 communal pogrom in Gujarat,
and engaged in nuclear brinkmanship with Pakistan.
The makeover of the BJP that Advani is attempting is aimed
at making it a more pliable instrument of Indian big business
socially incendiary agenda: the dismantling of whatever remains
of the nationally-regulated economic and associated social-welfare
programs and the pursuit of the Indian elites ambitions
to make India a major military power and player in world geo-politics.
The BJP, like its predecessor the Jana Sangh, is a party imbued
in Hindu chauvinism. While it may find it convenient to temper
its chauvinist appeals it cannot dispense with the Hindu nationalist
ideology that animates its cadres and through which it seeks to
blur class and caste distinctions, the better to deflect social
antagonisms against Indias minorities and rival statesnot
least because the agenda of Indian big business so manifestly
conforms with the interests of only a tiny, privileged layer.
See Also:
India: further evidence Hindu-supremacist
BJP culpable in Gujarat pogrom
[9 March 2005]
India: Hindu supremacist
BJP in disarray
[18 August 2004]
Political earthquake
in India
Hindu supremacist BJP falls from power
[15 May 2004]
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