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India: Advani resigns as BJP president amid party crisis
By Jake Skeers
28 October 2005
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Amid intense inner party turmoil, Lal Krishna Advani announced
late last month that he would resign his post as president of
Indias Hindu chauvinist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in
December. Advani will remain the BJPs parliamentary leader,
but media speculation is rife that he will be compelled to exit
gracefully from this position sometime in 2006.
Advani was forced into the announcement after a campaign against
his leadership within the BJP, backed by the Rashtiya Swayamsevak
Sangh (RSS). The RSS is an extreme right-wing, militia-style organisation
based on Hindu supremacism that was instrumental in the BJPs
formation in 1980 and has a long history of fomenting communal
violence.
The widespread condemnation and undermining of Advani inside
the BJP began in June after he made conciliatory remarks about
Pakistan during a trip to that country. His comments, which dovetailed
with demands by global and Indian companies for a more stable
relationship between Pakistan and India, were part of an attempt
by Advani to demonstrate to the ruling class that the BJP could
act as viable opposition party.
Advanis remarks came after 12 months of crisis in the
BJP following its surprise loss in the May 2004 election. Resorting
to continued boycotts and walkouts of parliament, the BJP, including
Advani, refused to accept the Congress Partys victory, unlike
the corporate elite who wished to see their economic and political
agenda proceed under the new Congress-led United Progressive Alliance
(UPA) government.
Advani first attempted to heed the media criticism about the
BJPs obstructionism at a meeting of business
leaders in May. In a speech at the annual meeting of the Confederation
of Indian Industry, a powerful business lobby, Advani downplayed
the 12 months of trouble-making by the BJP, saying the party would
support any reform that is vital for Indias economic
progress.
One of the Advanis messages was that BJP would be willing
to pass Congress legislation that benefited business if any elements
of the UPA government or the Left Front, which is supporting the
UPA from the outside, threatened to block it.
Advani visited Pakistan in late May where he described Mohammad
Ali Jinnah, who is officially revered in Pakistan as the founder
of the Muslim state, as secular and a great
man. Such comments are anathema to Hindu chauvinists who
blame Jinnah and the Muslim League for the 1947 communal partition
of British India that blocked Hindu domination of the entire subcontinent.
Advani also distanced himself from the destruction of the Babri
Mosque in Ayodhya in 1992 by Hindu fanatics, even though at the
time he was in the forefront of urging on the mob. The demolition
of the mosque, which provoked communal bloodletting in India,
Pakistan and Bangladesh, helped to propel the BJP to political
prominence. The demand to build a temple to the Hindu god Ram
remains a key element of the BJPs Hindutva agenda.
Advanis comments in no sense amounted to a renunciation
of the rightwing communal agenda on which his entire political
career has been based. Advani is a long-time RSS cadre whose name
is synonymous with anti-Muslim communalism. Even as he attempted
to soften the partys attitude to Pakistan and pacify business
circles, Advani has staunchly stood by Narendra Modi, the chief
instigator of the 2002 anti-Muslim pogroms in Gujarat that claimed
hundreds of lives.
Advanis remarks provoked sharp criticism inside the BJP,
as well as from the RSS and World Hindu Council (VHP), leaving
him isolated. Other than former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee,
no one in the BJP leadership openly backed Advani. He even resigned
in June for three days before withdrawing that resignation in
a desperate attempt to draw support.
In mid-July, Madan Lal Khurana, former Delhi chief minister,
began a destabilising campaign against Advani after receiving
clearance from the RSS leadership. He wrote letters to Advani
demanding his resignation over the comments about Jinnah and stating
he could not work under Advani. Khurana also called for the resignation
of Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, who is in the midst of
a power struggle over his position.
On 7 September, the BJP suspended Khurana for gross indiscipline
and criticising the party leadership openly. But this move
sparked a further crisis for Advani, particularly when Vajpayee
stated that Khurana should have been given one more opportunity
to explain his point of view. Advani had been relying on
Vajpayee to shore up his position inside the party.
Just a fortnight later, Advani, at the end of the BJPs
national executive meeting on 18 September, announced that he
would retire in December after the BJPs silver jubilee political
session in Mumbai. In his speech, after first praising the history
of the RSS, Advani made clear that he would maintain a degree
of independence as BJP parliamentary leader. [L]ately an
impression has gained ground that no political or organisational
decision can be taken without the consent of the RSS functionaries,
he said.
Since Advanis resignation announcement, the haggling
and speculation over the leadership position has dominated the
BJP, including discussion that the RSS would take more direct
control over appointing positions in the BJP. No clear choice
of a new president has emerged.
The BJPs dilemma
The BJPs turmoil goes deeper than the immediate leadership
problems or even the fallout from the 2004 election defeat. Like
other parties around the world, its crisis stems from its inability
to establish a popular base of support to carry through the free
market policies required by the ruling elite.
The BJP has never had widespread national support. Even when
it came to power in 1998 on the back of its best-ever result,
the BJP received less than 26 percent of the vote. Its main support
was in the Hindi-speaking north, northwest and central parts of
the country. To form government, it had to rely on a coalition
of over 13 parties in the National Democratic Alliance (NDA).
Even the 26 percent vote in 1998 was more the result of popular
hostility to Congress, than positive support for the BJP. Congress
had implemented a program of privatisation, slashing public sector
jobs and cutting food and fuel subsidies from 1991 under the so-called
New Economic Policy.
In power from 1998 to 2004, the NDA government continued the
previous policy of opening up the Indian economy as a cheap labour
destination for foreign investors. At the same time, the BJP attempted
to divert attention from the devastating social impact of this
policy by stirring up nationalist and communal sentiment. One
of the first actions of the NDA government was to heighten tensions
with Pakistan by conducting a series of nuclear tests.
However, the implementation of pro-market policies provoked
sharp opposition, raising concerns within the BJP leadership as
the party lost one election after another at the state level.
The 2002 riots in Gujarat were a deliberate strategy by Modi to
inflame communal sentiment, divide working people and bolster
the party to prevent yet another state election loss later that
year.
The NDA was widely predicted to win the May 2004 national elections
under conditions of high economic growth and foreign investment.
Its $US20 million advertising campaign under the slogan of India
Shining hailed the successes of the Indian economy and featured
the smiling faces of contented middle class Indians.
The BJP, along with much of the Indian ruling elite, was shocked
when the electorate rejected the BJPs policies and its claim
that India was prospering. The opening up of the Indian economy
had benefited certain privileged strata but had hurt those, particularly
the poorest, affected by cuts to public services, the loss of
public sector jobs, the undercutting of the viability of whole
industries and the removal of subsidies to small farmers.
The BJP was also shocked that the ruling elite quickly concluded
that a Congress-led government, supported by the Left Front, would
be the best means to press forward with its economic policies
in the face of widespread popular opposition.
Advani and the BJP refused to accept the election outcome.
Firstly it railed against the foreign born Sonia Gandhi
who was expected to become Prime Minister. After Congress installed
Manmohan Singh as Prime Minister, the BJP attempted to make government
impossible by disrupting parliament with various walkouts and
scandals.
Recently, the BJP attacked the government over allegations
that KGB documents showed that various Congress members received
money from the former Soviet Union. These actions, however, have
gained little traction in the Indian ruling elite, or improved
the partys standing in opinion polls.
Advanis resignation as party president hightlights the
dilemma confronting the BJP. The BJPs Hindu supremacist
agenda was central to its formation and its political advances.
In power, however, the BJP was compelled to shelve these policies
to form an alliance with other parties and to gain the support
of key sections of the ruling class. At the same time, the governments
economic measures impacted on layers of the BJPs own supporters.
Having lost office, the BJP is floundering around looking for
a strategy to rebuild its base of support. Advanis attempt
to respond to the requirements of big business has only angered
those who demand that the party return to its rootsthat
is, the stirring up of communal hatred and violence. Advanis
resignation as party president, far from solving this crisis,
will only exacerbate it.
See Also:
India: 14 months after falling
from power, BJP in turmoil
[5 July 2005]
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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